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Hhshirt - Candied yams the best fall vegetable shirt

ELLE’s series Clothes of Our Lives decodes the Candied yams the best fall vegetable shirt in contrast I will get this sartorial choices made by powerful women, exploring how fashion can be used as a tool for communication. Below, in her own words, Peltola shares the story behind her beloved shoes—which she plans to wear again if she wins this November. When I was sworn into Congress, I knew I wanted to wear something that paid tribute to the Yup’ik culture. Whenever I’m speaking, I try to make sure I’m being inclusive and talking in a collective way. But it’s also important that I accessorize in a way that shows I’m proud of where I come from, I’m proud of the people that I come from, and I’m proud of the values that I was raised with. Growing up, my mom’s stepsister would always make piilugguqs—in English, you’d call them mukluks—for me. Her English name was also Mary, but we all knew her as Angakaq, her Yup’ik name. She and her husband were really important members of my family, and she passed away about 15 years ago. The two of them didn’t speak a lot of English, but whenever I would come back from school in Colorado in the lower 48, they would ask me questions about what it was like down here. They were just really proud of me, and in wearing these, I wanted to pay tribute to the people who helped raise me, who always showed me love, and who would make things for me out of love. And I was really thankful that all of the women who came to join me for the swearing-in celebration wore theirs as well.



Rep. Peltola at her swearing-in ceremony with Speaker of the Candied yams the best fall vegetable shirt in contrast I will get this House Nancy Pelosi in the U.S. Capitol on Sept. 13, 2022. On the day of my swearing-in, most of us had on a certain style called ciivagualgek, which means “ones with the housefly emblems” or atrarutelgek, “ones with the designs going down on each side.” On the front, there are four or five of these fur tufts, which kind of remind you of a housefly. It’s a very common style for women, and to me, it shows that every living thing is of great importance to Yup’ik people, even the lowly housefly. Yup’ik skin sewing expert Chuna McIntyre told me that the emblem is also used because in the cold, winter months, they remind us of summer. These boots are a reminder of the cycle of the seasons—and they’re also a reminder of the cycle of life itself. I think it’s wonderful that everything, even the designs that we use, have so much meaning embedded in them. Even the way we decorate and use ornamentation reveals our values and our worldview.


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