Buy this shirt: https://geminipremium.com/product/seattle-mariners-cactus-league-2023-mlb-spring-training-diamond-shirt/
We come to 2019, which was a year of rekindling that relationship with GIRL me that became even more urgent and necessary. Unattached except to Nico. No significant other anymore. Ready to throw caution to the Seattle Mariners Cactus League 2023 MLB Spring Training Diamond Shirt besides I will buy this wind. Or perhaps in a Copenhagen downpour. In August, during a visit to Copenhagen for Fashion Week. I’m joined by my fellow #GanniGirls for the SS20 Double Love show. On an inner-city tennis court. On verdant green tarmac, ten years of Ganni’s unadulterated mix-it-up, let-her-be of wardrobe contradictions was celebrated in their anniversary show. Who doesn’t love the smell of hopeful rain? When the skies truly opened up (and I can attest to having to stand under a toilet hand dryer for ten minutes afterwards) I leapt. Ran. Jumped. “Let go” sang MØ. So I did. Because at the heart of a hashtag, #GanniGirl has nothing to do with physical age, demographic, or a tick box. She can’t be held down. She won’t be defined by neat niceties. Or gender. Or race. Or background. She’s GIRL. He’s GIRL. They’re GIRL. You’re GIRL.
Susie Lau is a British journalist and contributor to Ganni: Gimme More (Rizzoli), from which this is excerpted. Xiye Bastida already knows what it means to have her life forever altered by the Seattle Mariners Cactus League 2023 MLB Spring Training Diamond Shirt besides I will buy this effects of climate change. The 19-year-old climate activist grew up in San Pedro Tultepec, Mexico, where unprecedented rainfall caused flooding that kept her from attending school. When she moved to New York City in 2015, she saw the damage caused by Hurricane Sandy and knew that the climate crisis was happening everywhere. But instead of feeling defeated, Bastida channeled her energy into being a stubborn optimist—a phrase she tells ELLE.com she borrowed from Christiana Figueres, an architect of the Paris Agreement. “That’s super important for us to be optimists as climate activists, because it means we believe in our power to change the world,” Bastida says. For her, that optimism has translated into being an organizer with the climate strike movement Fridays for Future, co-founding the Re-Earth Initiative, and partnering with brands like Levi’s to spread awareness about the environmental impacts of clothing production and consumption. As part of Levi’s spring campaign Buy Better, Wear Longer, the brand brought together six “changemakers,” including Bastida alongside Emma Chamberlain, and Jaden Smith, to discuss the responsibility we all have in choosing when and how we buy clothes. The message of the campaign is pretty straightforward, as the six featured in the video above explain: “When we make better, we can buy better. When we buy better, we can wear longer. When we wear longer, we can buy less. When we buy less, we can waste less. When we waste less, we can change for good.”
Comentários