RaeLynn’s Boutique Hosts Midnight Madness Prom Dress Sale
Put on your running shoes! RaeLynn’s Boutique will open its doors from 7 p.m.-midnight on January 4th, 2013 for their biggest sale on prom dresses of the season.
2013 prom dresses,” said Alison McDaniel, owner of RaeLynn’s. “We want our customers to be able to shop the huge selection we are known for with our top designers in stock like Sherri Hill, Faviana, Jovani, and Tony Bowls.”
According to McDaniel, this will be the only sale RaeLynn’s has this prom season. All instock dresses, including 100's of 2013 prom dresses, will be at least 10 percent off.
“When girls get up to the cash register after they have found their dream prom dress, they will draw from a jar to see how much off the receive,” McDaniel said. “Every dress is guaranteed 10 percent off, but there is a chance to receive more off or even a free dress.”
According to a McDaniel, a lucky customer has received a free dress every year they have had the sale.
“Last year, there were girls sitting outside our doors with blankets drinking hot chocolate as early as 6 p.m.,” said RaeLynn’s employee, Allie Meagher. “It is a big deal to these girls to get their prom dresses first since we don’t sell the same style to the same school.”
McDaniel and the employees at RaeLynn’s highly encourage customers to arrive early to start shopping their, over 1,000, dresses they have in inventory.
At RaeLynn’s you are guaranteed to find your perfect prom dress from top designers seen on red carpets across the globe.
About RaeLynn's Boutique:
RaeLynn’s Boutique is the largest social occasion dress boutique in Indiana, and a Top 10 Prom Store in the United States. RaeLynn’s Boutique offers all of the top dress designers such as Sherri Hill, Jovani, Faviana, Blush Prom, Tony Bowls, Mac Duggal, Mori Lee and more. Providing accessories, tuxedo rentals and even layaway. RaeLynn’s Boutique in Indianapolis is a one-stop shop for social occasion needs. RaeLynn’s is located on the south side of Indianapolis, Indiana, in Greenwood. Conveniently south of the Greenwood Park Mall, behind Kohls, on Fry Road, between US 31 and Madison Ave.
Trousers & Leggings
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Chong Wei gets down to business
Kuala Lumpur: Just two days after his big day, world number one
men's singles badminton player Datuk Lee Chong Wei is already down to
business.
The Olympic silver medallist resumed training Monday after a long break to prepare for his wedding with former national singles shuttler Wong Mew Choo.
National coach Tey Siu Bock told Bernama Chong Wei's performance was a little bit below par but it was not a cause for concern.
"There was a slight dip in his performance. It is expected after a long break but we are not worried.
"After four years focusing for the (London) Olympics, we are now giving him time to relax," he said.
He said the objective for the remaining of the year was to maintain Chong Wei's ranking as the world number one men's singles in the Badminton World Federation's (BWF) list.
"In the meantime, we are not targeting him to win any tournament.
Of course we want him to win, but as long as he plays his best it will be okay," he added.
Chong Wei has at least another three championships lined up for him this year, namely the Hong Kong Open (Nov 20-25), Macau Open (Nov 27-Dec 2) and the BWF Super Series Final in Shenzen (Dec 12-16).
Due to his busy schedule, the 30-year-old who recently held a two-day wedding reception (on Friday and Saturday), had to postpone his honeymoon to probably some time next year.
He is now gearing up for the Hong Kong Open next week in Kowloon where he is expected to face China's Du Pengyu in the semi-final.
The 24-year-old Chinese had given Chong Wei a hard time during the Denmark Open final last month before the latter charged up in the last minute to win the title.
In the Hong Kong Open, the top seeded Chong Wei will take on Boonsak Ponsana of Thailand in the first round, flower leather waistband dress before encountering opponents like Wang Zhengming of China, Hao Hsu Jen of Taiwan and Vietnam's Tien Minh Nguyen in the second round and quarter-final.
Other stars to be in action include China's Chen Long and Chen Jin, Kenichi Tago and Sho Sasaki of Japan, Jan O Jorgensen of Denmark and Taufik Hidayat of Indonesia as well as national singles Liew Daren and Chong Wei Feng.
National top pair Koo Kien Keat and Tan Boon Heong will lead Malaysia's charge in the men's doubles while third seeded Chan Peng Soon Chan and Goh Liu Ying will compete in the mixed doubles. - Bernama
The Olympic silver medallist resumed training Monday after a long break to prepare for his wedding with former national singles shuttler Wong Mew Choo.
National coach Tey Siu Bock told Bernama Chong Wei's performance was a little bit below par but it was not a cause for concern.
"There was a slight dip in his performance. It is expected after a long break but we are not worried.
"After four years focusing for the (London) Olympics, we are now giving him time to relax," he said.
He said the objective for the remaining of the year was to maintain Chong Wei's ranking as the world number one men's singles in the Badminton World Federation's (BWF) list.
"In the meantime, we are not targeting him to win any tournament.
Of course we want him to win, but as long as he plays his best it will be okay," he added.
Chong Wei has at least another three championships lined up for him this year, namely the Hong Kong Open (Nov 20-25), Macau Open (Nov 27-Dec 2) and the BWF Super Series Final in Shenzen (Dec 12-16).
Due to his busy schedule, the 30-year-old who recently held a two-day wedding reception (on Friday and Saturday), had to postpone his honeymoon to probably some time next year.
He is now gearing up for the Hong Kong Open next week in Kowloon where he is expected to face China's Du Pengyu in the semi-final.
The 24-year-old Chinese had given Chong Wei a hard time during the Denmark Open final last month before the latter charged up in the last minute to win the title.
In the Hong Kong Open, the top seeded Chong Wei will take on Boonsak Ponsana of Thailand in the first round, flower leather waistband dress before encountering opponents like Wang Zhengming of China, Hao Hsu Jen of Taiwan and Vietnam's Tien Minh Nguyen in the second round and quarter-final.
Other stars to be in action include China's Chen Long and Chen Jin, Kenichi Tago and Sho Sasaki of Japan, Jan O Jorgensen of Denmark and Taufik Hidayat of Indonesia as well as national singles Liew Daren and Chong Wei Feng.
National top pair Koo Kien Keat and Tan Boon Heong will lead Malaysia's charge in the men's doubles while third seeded Chan Peng Soon Chan and Goh Liu Ying will compete in the mixed doubles. - Bernama
Thursday, November 8, 2012
Kill Lists Will Continue
Outside of websites such as Antiwar.com, there has
been remarkably little commentary over the issue of the White
House–managed kill lists, which played no part in the election but will
nevertheless continue to be a keystone of security policy in the new
administration in Washington. Details on how the lists were
developed and maintained surfaced in the media on Oct. 23
in an article
in the Washington Post which described how the White House
has decided that targeted assassinations will continue to be
necessary for the next decade. The article provoked some negative
commentary in the usual places, but little in the way of genuine
outrage. In a saner world, one might even have expected that
extralegal targeted killing could have been used in a partisan
fashion by the Republicans to highlight Obama’s dismantling of
constitutional and legal protections, but Mitt Romney voiced nary a
word of criticism, suggesting that he too sees death by government
fiat as an essential tool against terrorism and approves of what the
president is doing.
The assassination by drone and special ops teams was a program initiated by President George W. Bush but it appears that it was not actually made operational until a former community organizer who promised change named Barack Obama entered the White House. Citing the difficulty of dealing with the Guantanamo prisoners, Obama apparently determined that it would be better to kill possible terrorists than to go through the tactical complications and extra expense entailed in trying to detain them and risk a trial in a court of law.
I would suggest that what media attention there has been has focused far too narrowly on the lists maintained by the White House and National Security Council that include American citizens. The reality is that kill lists have metastasized across the government to include the Pentagon and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and are symptomatic of a transformation of U.S. foreign and defense policies. They have all become part of a ten year government created master plan to confront Islamic fundamentalism worldwide using drones and special operations teams, without little or no consideration for the local conditions that have led to the rise of religious extremism nor any concern for the consequences unleashed by the American interventions.
We are seeing a series of wars unprecedented in scope that are carefully being disguised as non-wars, or, at best, limited objective constabulary actions, while the definition of terrorist has become increasingly elastic, permitting the listing of anyone who supports in any way or condones the activities of any group viewed as threatening to American interests. The CIA, which has recently requested a sharp increase in the number of drones it operates, is being transformed from an intelligence service into a paramilitary organization. It uses the unmanned aircraft in Pakistan, Yemen, and in Africa because those areas are not officially war zones for the U.S. The Agency engages in “plausible denial,” refusing to confirm that it is involved in any such activity, which enables the White House to wrap a shroud of secrecy around the attacks. Even if the plausible denial argument has, however, been rendered somewhat thin by repeated references to drone operations made by the administration itself, the CIA is also frequently the instrument of choice because it can operate by government fiat and is not required to go through the bureaucratic hurdles and congressional oversight that the Pentagon must undergo to carry out operations. The military is consequently most engaged in places like Afghanistan, where it attacks the Taliban and other targets that are considered to be part and parcel of an actual war situation.
The White House, CIA, and Pentagon all require intelligence information to generate targets that are to be killed, driving the bureaucratization of the process, and that is where the true weakness of the monster that has been created lies. This intelligence collection has morphed into a process which the administration has dubbed its “disposition matrix,” which pulls together all available information on potential targets while also identifying available resources ready to “dispose” of them. The information collected on targets flows to and from a newly created command center in northern Virginia run by the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), to the CIA and the National Counter Terrorism Center, and to the National Security Council ops center in the White House. The central resource, maintained by the NCTC, is a constantly evolving and expanding data base that basically tells you everything you want to know about who the enemy is, to include the best way to find and kill him. It also establishes linkages to all of the enemy’s friends and neighbors, just in case you should decide to add them to the list at some future point. Two weeks after American citizen Anwar al-Awlaki was killed by a drone in Yemen his sixteen year old son Abdulrahman was also killed, according to Obama adviser Robert Gibbs, because “he should have a far more responsible father.” The new set of interlocking bureaucracies has created both a mechanism and an imperative to add new names to the list, meaning that identifying and killing designated enemies sometimes based on little or no evidence has now become an everyday function of the United States government.
The NCTC relies on the worldwide data collection efforts managed by the National Security Agency which will eventually feed into an enormous computer complex that is still under construction in Bluffdale, Utah. U.S. citizens are not immune from the ever widening net information collection process as any establishment of a linkage, no matter how tenuous, can lead to inclusion in the pervasive computer-driven searches conducted by the government. Data on Americans can now be collected at will and retained for up to five years without having to demonstrate any reason for doing so.
As for who is actually a terrorist and deserving of a death sentence from a Washington bureaucrat, it should be observed that capabilities of the United States intelligence agencies vary from region to region and the ability to develop reliable information is not always a given. This is true even in places where considerable resources maternity pink party dress are in place, as Benghazi demonstrated two months ago. The long list of hellfire missile victims that has included wedding parties, farmers, travelers, or people who just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time provides testimony that the intelligence used to identify and kill suspected terrorists is often either erroneous or impossible to corroborate. So basically Washington is operating a vast killing machine, almost robotic in its technical efficiency, that actually rests on the garbage-in-garbage-out principle, meaning that there is no quality control regarding the potential victims. Any bit of information, be it gossip or even slander, can wind up in a file. Anyone can wind up on a list for disposition with no way to challenge the information that can lead to a death warrant. If the Obama legacy will be death from the skies, as it surely should be, it ought to strengthen the resolve in all of us to resist the kind of nation that we have become over the past eleven years and to reject the kind of leadership that has led us down this road.
From:http://original.antiwar.com/
The assassination by drone and special ops teams was a program initiated by President George W. Bush but it appears that it was not actually made operational until a former community organizer who promised change named Barack Obama entered the White House. Citing the difficulty of dealing with the Guantanamo prisoners, Obama apparently determined that it would be better to kill possible terrorists than to go through the tactical complications and extra expense entailed in trying to detain them and risk a trial in a court of law.
I would suggest that what media attention there has been has focused far too narrowly on the lists maintained by the White House and National Security Council that include American citizens. The reality is that kill lists have metastasized across the government to include the Pentagon and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and are symptomatic of a transformation of U.S. foreign and defense policies. They have all become part of a ten year government created master plan to confront Islamic fundamentalism worldwide using drones and special operations teams, without little or no consideration for the local conditions that have led to the rise of religious extremism nor any concern for the consequences unleashed by the American interventions.
We are seeing a series of wars unprecedented in scope that are carefully being disguised as non-wars, or, at best, limited objective constabulary actions, while the definition of terrorist has become increasingly elastic, permitting the listing of anyone who supports in any way or condones the activities of any group viewed as threatening to American interests. The CIA, which has recently requested a sharp increase in the number of drones it operates, is being transformed from an intelligence service into a paramilitary organization. It uses the unmanned aircraft in Pakistan, Yemen, and in Africa because those areas are not officially war zones for the U.S. The Agency engages in “plausible denial,” refusing to confirm that it is involved in any such activity, which enables the White House to wrap a shroud of secrecy around the attacks. Even if the plausible denial argument has, however, been rendered somewhat thin by repeated references to drone operations made by the administration itself, the CIA is also frequently the instrument of choice because it can operate by government fiat and is not required to go through the bureaucratic hurdles and congressional oversight that the Pentagon must undergo to carry out operations. The military is consequently most engaged in places like Afghanistan, where it attacks the Taliban and other targets that are considered to be part and parcel of an actual war situation.
The White House, CIA, and Pentagon all require intelligence information to generate targets that are to be killed, driving the bureaucratization of the process, and that is where the true weakness of the monster that has been created lies. This intelligence collection has morphed into a process which the administration has dubbed its “disposition matrix,” which pulls together all available information on potential targets while also identifying available resources ready to “dispose” of them. The information collected on targets flows to and from a newly created command center in northern Virginia run by the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), to the CIA and the National Counter Terrorism Center, and to the National Security Council ops center in the White House. The central resource, maintained by the NCTC, is a constantly evolving and expanding data base that basically tells you everything you want to know about who the enemy is, to include the best way to find and kill him. It also establishes linkages to all of the enemy’s friends and neighbors, just in case you should decide to add them to the list at some future point. Two weeks after American citizen Anwar al-Awlaki was killed by a drone in Yemen his sixteen year old son Abdulrahman was also killed, according to Obama adviser Robert Gibbs, because “he should have a far more responsible father.” The new set of interlocking bureaucracies has created both a mechanism and an imperative to add new names to the list, meaning that identifying and killing designated enemies sometimes based on little or no evidence has now become an everyday function of the United States government.
The NCTC relies on the worldwide data collection efforts managed by the National Security Agency which will eventually feed into an enormous computer complex that is still under construction in Bluffdale, Utah. U.S. citizens are not immune from the ever widening net information collection process as any establishment of a linkage, no matter how tenuous, can lead to inclusion in the pervasive computer-driven searches conducted by the government. Data on Americans can now be collected at will and retained for up to five years without having to demonstrate any reason for doing so.
As for who is actually a terrorist and deserving of a death sentence from a Washington bureaucrat, it should be observed that capabilities of the United States intelligence agencies vary from region to region and the ability to develop reliable information is not always a given. This is true even in places where considerable resources maternity pink party dress are in place, as Benghazi demonstrated two months ago. The long list of hellfire missile victims that has included wedding parties, farmers, travelers, or people who just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time provides testimony that the intelligence used to identify and kill suspected terrorists is often either erroneous or impossible to corroborate. So basically Washington is operating a vast killing machine, almost robotic in its technical efficiency, that actually rests on the garbage-in-garbage-out principle, meaning that there is no quality control regarding the potential victims. Any bit of information, be it gossip or even slander, can wind up in a file. Anyone can wind up on a list for disposition with no way to challenge the information that can lead to a death warrant. If the Obama legacy will be death from the skies, as it surely should be, it ought to strengthen the resolve in all of us to resist the kind of nation that we have become over the past eleven years and to reject the kind of leadership that has led us down this road.
From:http://original.antiwar.com/
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Julianne Moore & Olivia Wilde Wear Almost The Same Dress At The ACE Awards
Every girl lives with the fear that another person will show up to an
event in the same outfit as her. (Remember trying to pick out a prom
dress??)
Well, on Monday night, Olivia Wilde and Julianne Moore lived out our greatest style nightmare at the 2012 ACE Awards held at Cipriani 42nd Street on Monday in New York City. Both gorg ladies were wearing dresses from Calvin Klein's spring 2013 collection, so it's not surprise they looked pretty identical.
Wilde slipped into a white sheath hope dresses laced with a black belt, while Julianne wore... basically the same dress but with sleeves attached and no peplum.
Awwwwkward.
Check out the dueling frocks below and cast your vote -- hopefully your SECOND one of the day -- for who looked better.
From:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/
Well, on Monday night, Olivia Wilde and Julianne Moore lived out our greatest style nightmare at the 2012 ACE Awards held at Cipriani 42nd Street on Monday in New York City. Both gorg ladies were wearing dresses from Calvin Klein's spring 2013 collection, so it's not surprise they looked pretty identical.
Wilde slipped into a white sheath hope dresses laced with a black belt, while Julianne wore... basically the same dress but with sleeves attached and no peplum.
Awwwwkward.
Check out the dueling frocks below and cast your vote -- hopefully your SECOND one of the day -- for who looked better.
From:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
‘Ben and Kate’ spoilers: Jane Seymour pays a visit!
As someone who finds “Ben and Kate” to be one of the funniest new comedies of the season,
this new makes us smile nearly as much as seeing Tommy and Kate almost
have a moment on the show every week: we’re about to meet BJ’s mom!
According to a new report from TVLine, former Bond Girl Jane Seymour has been cast to play the role of the mother to Lucy Punch’s character, who is described as a smart and even “sexy” middle-class British woman who discovers that her daughter has not been completely honest with her about every aspect of her life.
With this casting, there are really two hopes that we have for the Fox sitcom:
1. Seymour’s appearance inspires fans of Bond, “Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman,” or even “Wedding Crashers” to actually check out this show and improve some of its low ratings.
2. That she provides some memorable scenes that show us even more of BJ’s personality, and hopefully even breaks down some of her walls. We already know that she is clearly the zaniest character of the bunch and even at times a bad influence on Kate, but there has to be a reason that she ended up the way that she has in life.
Thanks in part to the Presidential election, “Ben and Kate” will not be on the air Tuesday night as is typically planned; instead, we will be waiting until next week to see some more adventures from this crazy brother / sister duo and their friends (which includes Lucy front and center).
What do you think about Seymour’s casting? Be sure to share some of your thoughts below! If you want to check out the latest “Ben and Kate” episode review
From: http://cartermatt.com/
According to a new report from TVLine, former Bond Girl Jane Seymour has been cast to play the role of the mother to Lucy Punch’s character, who is described as a smart and even “sexy” middle-class British woman who discovers that her daughter has not been completely honest with her about every aspect of her life.
With this casting, there are really two hopes that we have for the Fox sitcom:
1. Seymour’s appearance inspires fans of Bond, “Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman,” or even “Wedding Crashers” to actually check out this show and improve some of its low ratings.
2. That she provides some memorable scenes that show us even more of BJ’s personality, and hopefully even breaks down some of her walls. We already know that she is clearly the zaniest character of the bunch and even at times a bad influence on Kate, but there has to be a reason that she ended up the way that she has in life.
Thanks in part to the Presidential election, “Ben and Kate” will not be on the air Tuesday night as is typically planned; instead, we will be waiting until next week to see some more adventures from this crazy brother / sister duo and their friends (which includes Lucy front and center).
What do you think about Seymour’s casting? Be sure to share some of your thoughts below! If you want to check out the latest “Ben and Kate” episode review
From: http://cartermatt.com/
Monday, November 5, 2012
How to wear a sari
That is to say, wear it like it came from your mother’s closet, like it
was the same sari your grandmother wore on her wedding day many years
ago.
Never mind that you’re not really Indian, and your mother never really owned a sari, much less learned how to wear one.
Find
a mother in the woman who does teach you to wear one. If you are so
fortunate, there will be a group of them, all excited to educate you in
the mysterious science of pleating, tucking, folding, and draping.
Watch as the walls around them crumble and their reserved exteriors fade as they fall on you like bees to a blossoming flower. Watch their deft fingers make sense of the cumbersome cloth, and try to forget the fact that you will never be able to do what they are doing when you are on your own.
Watch them take a step back and sigh when they finish, the way an artist does when he admires a newly-completed masterpiece. Delight in the laughter you will hear for the first time as they twirl you around to admire their handiwork. Celebrate the truth that fashion has always been a bonding point for women across generations and time zones, and that this is especially true for the sari.
Wear a sari with the understanding that it is more than a piece of cloth, but a piece of history.
Remember that learning to wear it is an heirloom in itself, passed on from mother to daughter, from generation to generation.

Remember that it was in a sari that Indira Gandhi broke ground as India’s first female prime minister, that Sushmita Sen brought home the Miss Universe crown, that Mother Teresa cared for Kolkata’s poor.
Remember the Mahabharata, and how it was an endless sari that saved Draupadi from rape.
Wear a sari effortlessly. Forget that the cloth could fall off at any moment and that the drapes easily get caught in your sandals. Take your cue from the Indian women who do everything in their saris.
Watch the way they cook, clean, do the laundry, nurse babies, run after hyperactive children, teach, shop, and even clamber up the narrow ladders of a sleeper train, seemingly unhampered by the yards of cloth that cling precariously to their bodies. Watch how they keep their saris perfectly in place.
Take a nap in your sari. Find comfort in the soft silk as you drift off to sleep. Surprise yourself at finding it still held together when you wake up.
Wear a sari and dance. Test the strength of the folds and the pins that keep it together. Trust in them, and the women who put them on you.
Wear a sari with confidence.
Disregard the fact that the sari will hide all the parts you’d rather show off and magnificently expose that curry-fattened part you would rather hide—Indian women don’t apologize for their love handles. Listen to them congratulate you on your curves. Ride their excitement, let it sweep you away so that you don’t feel self-conscious as you strip bare and wear the cropped sari blouse.
Believe in that conspiratorial wink the women give when they say, “You have the body of an Indian woman.”
Bask in the sweetness of the compliments you will inevitably be showered with. Count the compliments but don’t let it get to your head—in a sari, everyone becomes Aishwarya Rai.
Trust when people tell you how beautiful you are, especially when the women say it, because they know better.homecoming dress stores
Wear a sari, because even while some say it is fading into obsolescence, it remains unparalleled in beauty.
Wear a sari, because wearing it turns strangers into mothers and sisters, and plain foreign girls into Indian princesses in exactly the same way that a formless swathe of cloth becomes a powerful garment of great design. – GMA News
From:http://www.gmanetwork.com/
Never mind that you’re not really Indian, and your mother never really owned a sari, much less learned how to wear one.
Watch as the walls around them crumble and their reserved exteriors fade as they fall on you like bees to a blossoming flower. Watch their deft fingers make sense of the cumbersome cloth, and try to forget the fact that you will never be able to do what they are doing when you are on your own.
Watch them take a step back and sigh when they finish, the way an artist does when he admires a newly-completed masterpiece. Delight in the laughter you will hear for the first time as they twirl you around to admire their handiwork. Celebrate the truth that fashion has always been a bonding point for women across generations and time zones, and that this is especially true for the sari.
Wear a sari with the understanding that it is more than a piece of cloth, but a piece of history.
Remember that learning to wear it is an heirloom in itself, passed on from mother to daughter, from generation to generation.
Remember that it was in a sari that Indira Gandhi broke ground as India’s first female prime minister, that Sushmita Sen brought home the Miss Universe crown, that Mother Teresa cared for Kolkata’s poor.
Remember the Mahabharata, and how it was an endless sari that saved Draupadi from rape.
Wear a sari effortlessly. Forget that the cloth could fall off at any moment and that the drapes easily get caught in your sandals. Take your cue from the Indian women who do everything in their saris.
Watch the way they cook, clean, do the laundry, nurse babies, run after hyperactive children, teach, shop, and even clamber up the narrow ladders of a sleeper train, seemingly unhampered by the yards of cloth that cling precariously to their bodies. Watch how they keep their saris perfectly in place.
Take a nap in your sari. Find comfort in the soft silk as you drift off to sleep. Surprise yourself at finding it still held together when you wake up.
Wear a sari and dance. Test the strength of the folds and the pins that keep it together. Trust in them, and the women who put them on you.
Wear a sari with confidence.
Disregard the fact that the sari will hide all the parts you’d rather show off and magnificently expose that curry-fattened part you would rather hide—Indian women don’t apologize for their love handles. Listen to them congratulate you on your curves. Ride their excitement, let it sweep you away so that you don’t feel self-conscious as you strip bare and wear the cropped sari blouse.
Believe in that conspiratorial wink the women give when they say, “You have the body of an Indian woman.”
Bask in the sweetness of the compliments you will inevitably be showered with. Count the compliments but don’t let it get to your head—in a sari, everyone becomes Aishwarya Rai.
Trust when people tell you how beautiful you are, especially when the women say it, because they know better.homecoming dress stores
Wear a sari, because even while some say it is fading into obsolescence, it remains unparalleled in beauty.
Wear a sari, because wearing it turns strangers into mothers and sisters, and plain foreign girls into Indian princesses in exactly the same way that a formless swathe of cloth becomes a powerful garment of great design. – GMA News
From:http://www.gmanetwork.com/
Friday, November 2, 2012
Shah Rukh Khan to have a low key 47th birthday
Mumbai: Shah Rukh Khan turns 47 today. However the
Bollywood star is not keen on a high-profile party to celebrate the
occasion. Though he is not known for throwing glamorous birthday bashes,
this decision has a lot to do with the passing away of his mentor and
filmmaker Yash Chopra last week.
Photos: 10 SRK acts that wowed the nation
Photos: Rare pictures of Shah Rukh Khan
Happy Birthday SRK, says Bollywood
SRK states, “I’m planning to work that’s all I know at least during the daytime. Besides, it has never been a special day for me. Of course, I’ll make sure that I thank all my well-wishers from radio stations and newspapers, as usual.”
Speaking about his many fans who throng his residence Mannat on special days, the actor says, “It has become a thing now. Every single year, I see people arriving with cakes and cards. It’s a simple joy. But I wake up late, so maybe I should set up a shamiana for them to help them avoid the sun. It’s a humbling experience to greet people.”
He may or may not spend the day with the who’s who of the industry, but the actor rues how the media is always there at his home to capture every moment of the day. “It’s funny how I end up celebrating my birthdays with them! In fact, whether there be a party or not, I somehow spend this particular day with the media. Isn’t that sad?” quips SRK.
Interestingly, SRK’s 21st wedding anniversary fell just four days after Chopra’s departure and as expected, the event turned out to be subdued. “With what happened, you don’t feel like celebrating and making noise. That night, Adi (Aditya Chopra) even asked me to go out for dinner with Gauri but you know how it feels like... having lost someone so close to your heart,” he sums up.
Unforgettable moments
Needless to mention, Shah Rukh Khan shared a strong bond with Yash Chopra and it’s more so evident when you ask him about a the most memorable moment he spent with his father-like figure. “Strange as it is, we rarely discussed a scene or a shot. On the contrary, we spoke about life in general. The most beautiful thing he ever said to me was ‘Of all the people I know, you love women in the most respectful way. I’ve known you for so long. I can’t be wrong about this’. That was heartening.”
From:
Photos: 10 SRK acts that wowed the nation
Photos: Rare pictures of Shah Rukh Khan
Happy Birthday SRK, says Bollywood
SRK states, “I’m planning to work that’s all I know at least during the daytime. Besides, it has never been a special day for me. Of course, I’ll make sure that I thank all my well-wishers from radio stations and newspapers, as usual.”
Speaking about his many fans who throng his residence Mannat on special days, the actor says, “It has become a thing now. Every single year, I see people arriving with cakes and cards. It’s a simple joy. But I wake up late, so maybe I should set up a shamiana for them to help them avoid the sun. It’s a humbling experience to greet people.”
He may or may not spend the day with the who’s who of the industry, but the actor rues how the media is always there at his home to capture every moment of the day. “It’s funny how I end up celebrating my birthdays with them! In fact, whether there be a party or not, I somehow spend this particular day with the media. Isn’t that sad?” quips SRK.
Interestingly, SRK’s 21st wedding anniversary fell just four days after Chopra’s departure and as expected, the event turned out to be subdued. “With what happened, you don’t feel like celebrating and making noise. That night, Adi (Aditya Chopra) even asked me to go out for dinner with Gauri but you know how it feels like... having lost someone so close to your heart,” he sums up.
Unforgettable moments
Needless to mention, Shah Rukh Khan shared a strong bond with Yash Chopra and it’s more so evident when you ask him about a the most memorable moment he spent with his father-like figure. “Strange as it is, we rarely discussed a scene or a shot. On the contrary, we spoke about life in general. The most beautiful thing he ever said to me was ‘Of all the people I know, you love women in the most respectful way. I’ve known you for so long. I can’t be wrong about this’. That was heartening.”
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