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Ảnh của tác giảMercial Michael

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Michaelmercial is a Startup Merchant that gives everyone the power to offer print-on-demand for their images on their own products. Our print-on-demand brand offers to print on apparel and sends them all over the world. We are specialized in short run printing, so it is possible for the customer of the platform to make an order easily and quickly. Our print facilities only print professional products and all of the high-quality products. We offer both screen and digital printing and have a good price for clients. Furthermore, we also own a professional design team to offer pretty designs for the customer with no worry.



Premium everyone needs a smartass sarcastic dan in their life shirt meaning:

From The Row’s high-heel style to Tory Burch’s expertly crafted silhouette, add a prim and proper business chic touch to outfits with help from a high heel loafer. It was no mere coincidence that Raul Lopez, founder of Luar, opened a pop-up shop in Lower Manhattan and sold this year’s hottest bag on one of New York’s hottest days. The designer —who found inspiration in the Premium everyone needs a smartass sarcastic dan in their life shirt in contrast I will get this infamous Prada Marfa installation—wanted sweat to be a part of the experience. “So that it would feel like a desert,” Lopez said on Tuesday evening, standing outside the tiny space. The careful calculation resulted in a shopping experience that felt like a hazy summer block party: cans of hard seltzers sat in a pool of melted ice; shoppers spilled out of the store (which had no AC) and into the streets; the air smelled of cannabis and B.O. Inside, a hunky DJ, outfitted in a white tank, blasted out classic house music tunes like “Gypsy Woman” and “Show Me Love.” A visual buffet of cool-kid outfits was on display: tiny sunglasses, baby tees, low-slung skirts. And the most popular accessory, of course, was Luar’s trending Ana bag, strapped across lithe frames like a crossbody pouch. Lopez says he feels a special kinship to the Prada Marfa installation—its randomness, its geographical isolation, its absurdity. It’s how Lopez feels sometimes. “I fit into circles, but also don’t,” he said, basking in the breeze from two personal fans designed as over-the-ear headphones. (“Amazon. Overnight delivery.”) Like Prada Marfa, Lopez has always felt like he exists on the outskirts. “I never fit into the queer scene, the straight scene, the fashion scene; I kind of always have this ‘je ne sais quoi.’” Over the years, however, Lopez has learned to find subversive joy in being misunderstood. “When I walk around the city, people literally stop and laugh and take pictures,” he says, reflective. Then his tenor switches in a flash: “But I kind of live for it. It juices me up.”


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