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Glamorous models sport dresses consisting of intricately entwined flowers, leaves, and vines in these 31 full-page images. Inspired by botanical drawings, the imaginative illustrations will charm colorists of all ages.
The Never Fairies love making clothing out of flowers. Now you can learn how, too! Read this beautifully illustrated 24-page guide to Never Fairy fashion, then make your very own fairy outfits! Press petals, leaves, and entire flowers using the flower press included in the kit, and glue them onto blank dress forms to create gorgeous fairy gowns. Then dress the fairy dolls in your own designs! This value-packed kit includes book, flower press, four sturdy cardboard dolls, sixteen blank dress forms, twelve clips, four doll stands, and an instructional poster. Plus, there's a tube of glitter glue to lend a little pixie-dust sparkle to each outfit! /DIVDIV
Beautiful blooms adorn these unique and romantic fashions inspired by nature. Thirty-one stunning illustrations feature models wearing gorgeous gowns and dresses detailed with lush florals, leaves, and vines. The imaginative drawings will enthrall colorists and fashionistas alike. The artwork is printed on one side only, and the pages are perforated for easy removal and display.
This gorgeous gallery of more than 120 imaginative illustrations features fashion models adorned with intricately entwined blossoms, clusters of water lilies and dragonflies, and much more. Includes perforated pages printed on one side only for easy removal and display.
Two willowy paper dolls model a wardrobe of imaginative costumes made from leaves, flowers, and vines. Fifteen pages of stunning outfits feature form-fitting sheath dresses as well as gowns with billowing skirts, all of them festooned with colorful roses, irises, tulips, and other blossoms. Accessories include dainty floral headdresses.
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Billions of fresh-cut flowers are flown into the United States every year, allowing Americans to choose from a broad array of blooms regardless of the season. Favored Flowers is a lively investigation of the worldwide production and distribution of fresh-cut flowers and their consumption in the New York metropolitan area. In an ethnography filled with roses, orchids, and gerberas, flower auctions, new hybrids, and new logistical systems, Catherine Ziegler unravels the economic and cultural strands of the global flower market. She provides an historical overview of the development of the cut flower industry in New York from the late nineteenth century to 1970, and on to its ultimate transformation from a domestic to a global industry. As she points out, cut flowers serve no utilitarian purpose; rather, they signal consumers’ social and cultural decisions about expressing love, mourning, status, and identity. Ziegler shows how consumer behavior and choices have changed over time and how they are shaped by the media, by the types of available flowers, and by flower retailing. Ziegler interviewed more than 250 people as she followed flowers along the full length of the commodity chain, from cuttings in Europe and Latin America to vases in and around New York. She examines the daily experiences of flower growers in the Netherlands and Ecuador, two leading exporters of flowers to the United States. Primary focus, though, is on others in the commodity chain: exporters, importers, wholesalers, and retailers. She follows their activities as they respond to changing competition, supply, and consumer behavior in a market characterized by risk, volatility, and imperfect knowledge. By tracing changes in the wholesale and retail systems, she shows the recent development of two complementary commodity chains in New York and the United States generally. One leads to a high-end luxury market served by specialty florists and designers, and the other to a lower-priced mass market served by chain groceries, corner delis, and retail superstores.