Shop Ladies Fashion
Shop Ladies Fashion. Fashion Industry Competition. Fashion Bracelets 2011.
Shop Ladies Fashion
- Make into a particular or the required form
- make out of components (often in an improvising manner); “She fashioned a tent out of a sheet and a few sticks”
- manner: how something is done or how it happens; “her dignified manner”; “his rapid manner of talking”; “their nomadic mode of existence”; “in the characteristic New York style”; “a lonely way of life”; “in an abrasive fashion”
- characteristic or habitual practice
- Use materials to make into
fashion
- A woman (used as a polite or old-fashioned form of reference)
- (lady) a polite name for any woman; “a nice lady at the library helped me”
- An informal, often brusque, form of address to a woman
- A women’s public toilet
- (lady) dame: a woman of refinement; “a chauffeur opened the door of the limousine for the grand lady”
- (lady) a woman of the peerage in Britain
ladies
- do one’s shopping; “She goes shopping every Friday”
- a mercantile establishment for the retail sale of goods or services; “he bought it at a shop on Cape Cod”
- patronize: do one’s shopping at; do business with; be a customer or client of
- A building or part of a building where goods or services are sold; a store
- An act of going shopping
- A place where things are manufactured or repaired; a workshop
shop
shop ladies fashion – Cable Knit
Tanaka Ladies Fashion
Yatsuo is a small and rustic town in Toyama Prefecture, famous for ‘Kaze no Bon’, a Japanese festival having a history of about three hundred years. Kaze no Bon roughly translates to ‘Bon Dance of the Wind’ and is recently becoming a popular tourist attraction to the otherwise sparsely populated mountain area. The original festival was held in order to appease typhoons and allow for a bountiful harvest of rice. What makes this festival so unique is that it is held at night. The streets are decorated with paper lanterns, and long rows of young men and women, their faces covered by low-brimmed straw hats, dance simultaneously to rather melancholic music. This particular style of music is also unique to the region, using an otherwise rare instrument, the kokyu. A well-aged female voice and a traditional shamisen often accompany the kokyu. The traditional, old-fashioned, shop-lined sloping streets and winding staircases of the small town make the festival quite spectacular, and the dark atmosphere of the festival is often described as rather ‘creepy’ to many people who have experienced it.
Shopping