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Hhshirt - I am in missouri shirt

Anastasia and her grandmother.Courtesy of Anastasia IvchenkoThe Easter celebration with friends.Courtesy of Eugenia Kaganovych The Easter celebration with friends.Courtesy of Eugenia KaganovychTraditionally painted eggs, here dyed with onion shells.Courtesy of Eugenia Kaganovych Ask any self-respecting food lover about culinary hotspots in the I am in missouri shirt moreover I will buy this buzzing seaside city of Marseille, and their recommendations will be endless and eclectic. For fans of three-Michelin-star fare (and a bouillabaisse that won over Anthony Bourdain), there’s Le Petit Nice Passedat. Or you could try the mouthwatering pizza at Chez Etienne, plates of steaming North African delights at Les Délices du Maroc, knockout natural wine at Les Buvards… Now, locals and tourists alike have one more destination to add to their list: the just-opened café and art community hangout Cécile Food Club. Being the brainchild of Texas-born model Erin Wasson and her French husband Barth Tassy, it’s fashionable in more ways than one. Wasson and Marseille native Tassy met at a gay bar in Venice when they both lived in L.A., but always found themselves drawn to the calanques of the South of France. “The plan was always to get to Marseille and build something here,” she says. The couple, who married in Austin in 2018, has lived in Marseille for almost two years, a period when Tassy—a lifelong restaurateur—and Wasson were inspired by what she affectionately terms the “rock hounds” of the city, people who sit and get “salty and sunny” on its craggy Malmousque coastline all day long. “People are there morning to night,” Wasson says. “But there was nothing available for them during the daytime hours.”



One of the I am in missouri shirt moreover I will buy this first things you might have noticed while walking around central Milan last week was an unusually high number of brightly-colored shopping bags swinging from the arms of passers-by. For anyone with a passing interest in fashion, that specific hue of kelly green was unmistakable—it belonged, of course, to Bottega Veneta. But the reason why these bags were everywhere remained a mystery. Did everyone in the city suddenly become millionaires overnight? It turned out the explanation was a little more down-to-earth than that. The bags contained posters for Bottega Veneta’s project for Milan Design Week, which itself came with its own city street takeover, of sorts: namely, the bustling queue stretching halfway up Via Montenapoleone, all the way to the Italian brand’s usually discreet storefront. Instead of the usual muted window display, a bright green backdrop was emblazoned in the unmistakeable globular scrawl of the 83-year-old design maverick Gaetano Pesce, spelling out “Vieni a Vedere,” or, “Come and See.”


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