DO YOU LOVE MY T-SHIRT ? YOU WANT ONE SO CHECK THIS DEADLEGACY
AND ALSO MY WOODY SUNGLASSES HERE POLETTE
READ ABOUT DEAD LEGACY
Dead Legacy was founded in 2010 in Manchester, UK by two brothers, Dan and Nick, who took the bold step away from their finance careers and invested voluntary redundancy money into a small fashion business. By 2014 the business has evolved from a simple t-shirt company into a global brand which is now stocked in over 250 stores worldwide.Dead Legacy specialises in superior quality t-shirts and sweats and has recently released their ‘Dead Legacy: Premium’ sub-brand to meet the demand for an extended range.We have a strong portfolio of celebrity clientele reflecting the superior fit, quality and distinctiveness of our garments.
ABOUT THIS LOOK
DEAD LEGACY in t-shirt
POLETTE in suglasses
HOODBOYZ in pants
EAST-DANE in sheos
ABOUT THIS LOOK
Jacket By Tinydeal
Shoes By Tinydeal
Sunglasses by Polette
Pants www.Hoodboyz.de
watch www.Skagen.com
http://www.skagen.com/us/en/men/new-arrivals/watches.html
watch www.Skagen.com
http://www.skagen.com/us/en/men/new-arrivals/watches.html
Let me tell you about this sweet watch brand
Skagen is a contemporary lifestyle brand that believes in modesty, purpose, and accessibility. They make functional designs inspired by the simplicity of the Danish lifestyle. The products are of the highest quality. Through simplicity and honesty, Skagen hopes to offer the world an escape from complexity and a breath of fresh air. The brand’s hometown, the seaside village of Skagen, Denmark, has a way of life that embraces simplicity in a complex world, and inspires the brand’s designs.
http://www.skagen.com/us/en/men/new-arrivals/watches.html
http://www.skagen.com/us/en/men/new-arrivals/watches.html
ABOUT THIS LOOK
Vest By Tinydeal
Shoes By Tinydeal
Sunglasses by Polette
Pant by Zara
polette.com is born from a man’s vision, a man who decided to put an end to the monopole of optics.
No more expensive eyeglasses. His idea? Break up the chain of intermediates and offer, using the internet, a massive selection of frames and lenses provided by his own factories.
C'est une révolution qui chamboule l'optique tel qu'on le connait en France..
The revolution is launched and upsets the field of French optic as we know it.
Website: http://www.polette.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/polette.eyewear?fref=ts
Instagram: @poletteeyewear
Twitter: @poletteeyewear
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/polette.eyewear?fref=ts
Instagram: @poletteeyewear
Twitter: @poletteeyewear
Shop my glasses here
To be honest we have really so sab organisation here in transport agencies , that's the only problem i had in my trip .
IFRANE CITY GOOGLE IT TO SEE MORE AND READ MY ARTICLE TO LIVE MORE
Located in the Atlas Mountains, Ifrane has a Mediterranean climate, shifting from cold in winter to warm days in the summer months of July–September. The nights are always cool (or cold in winter), with daytime temperatures generally rising about +6~12 °C (+10~21 °F) every day. The winter highs typically reach only 8 °C (46.4 °F) in December–January, whilst owing to the city’s elevation rainfall is very heavy whenever frontal systems affect the region .
The first permanent settlement of the area dates to the 16th century, when a sharîf by the name of Sîdî ‘Abd al-Salâm established his community in the Tizguit Valley, seven km downstream from the present town. In Tamazight, the regional Berber language, yfran means “caves”. Sîdî ‘Abd al-Salâm’s village, called Zaouiat Sidi Abdeslam (or simply the zâwiyah), consisted at first of cave dwellings hollowed out of the limestone valley wall. Only in the last fifty years or so have its inhabitants build houses above ground. The caves which now lie under these houses are still used as mangers for animals and for storage. By the mid-17th century Sîdî ‘Abd al-Salâm’s zâwiyah was well enough established to receive an extensive iqtâ’, or land grant, from the ‘Alâwî sultan Mûlây Rashîd b. Muhammad. The iqtâ’ extended from upstream of present Ifrane down the Tizguit valley all the way to El Hajeb escarpment. Late in the 19th century agro-pastoral groups of the Amazigh Senhadja Beni M’guild and Zenata the Ait Seghrouchen, crossing the Middle Atlas from the upper Moulouya Plain, started grazing their herds of sheep and goats on the surrounding plateau. The livelihood of the zâwiyah was based on irrigated agriculture on the valley floor, livestock grazing and forest resources.
Ifrane was planned according to the “garden city” model of urban design, fashionable in Western Europe between the two world wars. The concept of the garden city was originally developed in Britain as a model of social reform to solve the problems of 19th century industrial cities. By the 1920s however it had lost its social purpose to become an urban design type. Garden cities required low density housing consisting of fully detached or semi-detached single family homes surrounded by gardens.
In order to break with industrial-era grid plans, garden cities were always laid out with curving tree-lined streets. In fact, most garden cities were affluent suburbs, not true cities in their own right. They catered to the tastes of the upper middle classeswho could afford to own a private automobile and property in the suburbs. They gave the illusion of county life, with village-type architecture, curvy streets and lots of trees, to people who in reality worked in big cities. Ifrane’s initial garden city plan was designed in 1928 in Rabat by the Services Techniques of the Bureau de Contrôle des Municipalités, a division of the Direction des Affairs Politiques.
The 1928 plan - for the neighborhood known as Hay Riad today - had typical garden city features: curvy streets named for flora (Rue des lilas, Rue des tilleuls,etc.), and chalet-style houses. Houses could occupy only 40% of plots; the rest had to be planted as a garden. Moreover,large parts of the center of the town consisted of public gardens. Some of the original architecture can still be seen, especially in the neighborhood around the town hall and the Perce Neige Hotel. The summer homes built by the colons were designed by many of the same architects who built the European parts of Casablanca and Rabat. Whereas the European architecture in these big cities was innovative and intentionally modern, Ifrane’s houses were built in traditional European styles and resembled those in the suburbs of contemporaneous French cities.
Ifranes’s first public buildings were a post office and a Catholic church. The church, consecrated in 1939, was designed by Paul Tournon (1881–1964), a recipient of the prestigious Prix de Rome who had also designed the Sacré Coeur Church in Casablanca. The resort function of the new town was consolidated with the building of a number of hotels. Ifrane’s first flagship hotel was the Balima, which was demolished in the 1980s. The other main hotel was the Grand Hôtel, which has recently been refurbished. A Royal Palace was also built for Sultan Muhammad b.Yûsuf.
Ifrane is thus an “imperial” city in that it houses a palace and benefits from royal patronage.One final institution of Ifrane’s early years worthy of mention is the penitentiary which no longer exists, and the site, across from the Police Academy and the new police Commissariat, has been redeveloped as a summer camp for the Ministry of Justice. The penitentiary served as a Prisoner of War camp during WWII. The popular story of the origin of Ifrane’s lion sculpture involves an Italian inmate of this prison sculpting the lion out of an outcrop of limestone, however this is not true as the lion dates from at least 1936 thus predating WWII.
The garden city hill station high in the Middle Atlas was always going to be an illusion of suburban middle class France. The colonial reality of the place was manifest in two ways. First of all the inhabitants of Zaouiat Sidi Abdeslam, the original owners of the land on which the town was built, were never properly compensated for their loss. Secondly, the initial town plan was incomplete. Provisions were made for the housing and infrastructure of colon home-owners, but not for the Moroccan maids, gardeners or guards who worked for them. Finding no housing in the official allotments, these people had to build their own houses some distance away, across a ravine north of the town. As elsewhere in Morocco at the time, a shantytown thus grew up next to the colonial town. This is the origin of Timdiqin (officially called Hay Atlas).
ABOUT THIS LOOK
The tie by bowsNties
Vintage sweater in grey
Black coat the similar here eastdane
The watch by DW
1 Hug it Out:
Let's take it from the top shall we? A good suit should hug your shoulders, not fall off of them. To be sure your jacket actually fits try hugging someone. I'd suggest hugging someone you know as a non willing participant could make for an awkward moment. Just a thought. Now, if it feels like you're going to burst a seam and go all hulk mania on the person you're hugging then it's safe to say its not a good fit. A rule to remember? When buying a suit, go ahead and try sizing down. Trust me, just try it. Most men think they wear a size larger then they actually do which results in an overall sloppy look. Bottom line? When you pull on a jacket, there should be firmness to it that instantly makes you stand taller. A man in a well fitted suit is to be taken seriously. Be. That. Dude.
Let's take it from the top shall we? A good suit should hug your shoulders, not fall off of them. To be sure your jacket actually fits try hugging someone. I'd suggest hugging someone you know as a non willing participant could make for an awkward moment. Just a thought. Now, if it feels like you're going to burst a seam and go all hulk mania on the person you're hugging then it's safe to say its not a good fit. A rule to remember? When buying a suit, go ahead and try sizing down. Trust me, just try it. Most men think they wear a size larger then they actually do which results in an overall sloppy look. Bottom line? When you pull on a jacket, there should be firmness to it that instantly makes you stand taller. A man in a well fitted suit is to be taken seriously. Be. That. Dude.
2 Get Cuffed Up:
Your suit sleeves should end just above the hinges of your wrists, so a quarter to half inch of shirt cuff shows. Try the "curl up" test by pulling on your suit jacket and letting your arms hang relaxed at your sides. Curl your fingers up and make sure the jacket tail rests right in that crevice your fingers have made. If it's bunched up, the jacket's too long. A rule to remember? Your flat hand should slip easily into your suit under the lapels when the top (or middle) button is fastened and the jacket sleeves should fall where the base of your thumb meets your wrist.
3 Bring It In For the Real Thing:
Tapering is the name of the game. Your jacket should contour to the shape of your body. This is where your tailor comes in. If you don't have one, I'd suggest getting one...yesterday. Have your tailor nip your jacket at the sides to give you a waist, because yes, you have one and yes, you do want to accentuate it. By doing so, you'll also be highlighting your shoulders--whether you've got ones that say "welcome to the gun show" or not, a good tailor will make you look like you do.






























































