Tuesday, July 27, 2021

Go Jesus It's Your Birthday Merry Christmas T Shirt

Go Jesus It's Your Birthday Merry Christmas T Shirt

This is our best seller for a reason. Relaxed, tailored and ultra-comfortable, you’ll love the way you look in this durable, reliable classic 100% pre-shrunk cotton (heather gray color is 90% cotton/10% polyester, light heather gray is 98% cotton/2% polyester, heather black is 50% cotton/50% polyester) | Fabric Weight: 5.0 oz (mid-weight) Tip: Buying 2 products or more at the same time will save you quite a lot on shipping fees. You can gift it for mom dad papa mommy daddy mama boyfriend girlfriend grandpa grandma grandfather grandmother husband wife family teacher Its also casual enough to wear for working out shopping running jogging hiking biking or hanging out with friends Unique design personalized design for Valentines day St Patricks day Mothers day Fathers day Birthday More info 53 oz ? pre-shrunk cotton Double-needle stitched neckline bottom hem and sleeves Quarter turned Seven-eighths inch seamless collar Shoulder-to-shoulder taping If you love this shirt, please click on the link to buy it now: https://hulktee.com/product/youre-spare-parts-bud-funny-pitter-t-shirt/ When In the Heights’s Nina Rosario, played by Leslie Grace, returns to her native Bronx from college at Stanford, one of her very first stops is the local neighborhood salon; she’s come to receive a makeover—“the skin-deep kind, and the emotional kind,” Anthony Ramos’s Usnavi de la Vega narrates. As it turns out, the primp-and-polish setting was familiar territory for Grace, a 26-year-old New York City–born actress who grew up in her own mother’s salon in south Florida. There, she picked up countless tips and tricks, a number of which she’s carried with her throughout her career as a Grammy-nominated singer and, now, actress. “I learned through osmosis how important it is to not only take time for yourself but [also] the importance and sacredness of sharing a moment where women are empowering how beautiful they are,” Grace says as she dives into her skin-care routine, which includes a deep cleanse bolstered by Foreo’s vibrating device, a handful of custom-blended serum combinations, and, importantly, Cetaphil sunscreen—a mainstay in her cosmetics arsenal since high school. “For someone like me who has freckles and gets splotches easily, I really take SPF serious, girl!” she notes.Her favorite part of the morning comes next as brushes, bronzer, and brow pencils enter the frame. “Through growing up in a salon and seeing how other women did their makeup, I started to learn, ‘Oh, makeup and hair and clothes and all these things we use to express ourselves, they’re adornments for what you already have,’ ” Grace muses, adding that she now embraces a lighter-touch pore-perfecting approach that still allows her freckles to peek through. But she does like to amp it up at eye level by way of mascara, false lashes, and a combination of shadow shades, the darkest of which she deftly applies at the outer corners of her lids—a pro technique passed down to her from her titi, a makeup artist. A wash of iridescent powder, brushed over her cheekbones and lips, provides a photo-ready glow effect. “Culturally, I feel like Dominican women are always trying to find the way that they can cut the corner and get the same look,” Grace explains before revealing her own secret weapon for prolonging the lifespan of her blowout: Dyson’s Airwrap Styler. “That’s something that I like to call ingenuity.”Lessless wrap silk dress, $850Below, shop Leslie Grace’s beauty secrets. Filmed at Hotel Casa Del Mar For starters, let’s get her name right: It’s pronounced EE-gah Shvee-ON-tek. But you’re forgiven if you’ve never heard of her. Świątek, 19, from Warsaw, Poland, came into the French Open unseeded and utterly unheralded, having never won a tourney on the WTA tour in the scant and wildly curtailed year she’s been playing in it (at the moment, she’s ranked 54th worldwide—a number which will dramatically improve very shortly).Her performance at Roland-Garros, though, has been nothing short of astonishing: More so than any other single player this year, Świątek has been utterly dominant in every match she’s played, crushing the tourney’s number-one seed and former champion Simona Halep 6-1, 6-2 in the fourth round and swiftly eliminating the qualifier Nadia Podoroska in the semis, 6-2, 6-1. Not only hasn’t she lost a set along the way—she hasn’t even lost more than five games in any match.“It seems unreal,” Świątek said after her semifinal victory. “It’s crazy.”Tomorrow at 9 am EDT, she’ll face 4th seed American Sofia Kenin, the Australian Open champion who is 16-1 this year in Grand Slam matches. And while it would be easy to call this a classic matchup of seasoned player vs. Cinderella-story upstart riding a wing and a prayer, everything about the way Świątek has played in this tournament says otherwise. Both her power and her unflappable poise suggest that she’s every bit capable of stealing this Slam and rocketing to tennis’s top 20—and beyond.But that’s only if she wants to. Świątek, who just finished high school, said before the tournament that she’s still undecided about whether she wants to devote herself full-time to the WTA tour or head off to college instead. (She’s certainly capable of making her own decisions—though something tells us that playing in the finals of a Grand Slam has a persuasive quality that can’t be denied.)Świątek and Kenin have never before faced each other on the WTA tour, but they did play once, as juniors, at the French in 2016. Świątek won that one, 6-4, 7-5. If she hopes to win again now with everything on the line, she’ll need to wield her booming serve and formidable forehand just as she has throughout the tournament so far—and she’ll need the kind mental fortitude that would seem to favor Kenin.Sunday’s men’s final matchup, of course, is the marquee event the sport has been yearning for, with Rafael Nadal vying to tie Roger Federer’s record 20th Grand Slam title and Novak Djokovic gunning for his 17th. Given the general unpredictability of both this tournament and the sport in general since it kicked up again after COVID suspension at the US Open, it would seem foolish to try to predict a winner. We’ll say only this: It would be foolish to bet against Nadal and his seeming ability to will himself to victory on clay, but it would also be foolish to think that Djokovic isn’t well-poised to outlast Nadal—if he doesn’t get out-hit first. I don’t often cry while watching a basketball game, so Tuesday’s WNBA final between the Seattle Storm and the Las Vegas Aces was definitely a first. As the game entered its final minutes, and the Storm closed in on their second championship in three years, the ESPN announcers threw to the on-court reporter, Holly Rowe, to ask her about the personal sacrifices the players and coaches had made this season, living in a bubble in Bradenton, Florida, since July, and unable to have contact with the outside world or to see friends and family members.Rowe, in a suddenly emotional moment, started talking about the Storm coach, Gary Kloppenburg, and the fact that he had to miss his daughter’s wedding. She explained that Kloppenburg, filling in as the Storm’s coach because the actual head coach, Dan Hughes, was still recovering from cancer and deemed not safe to enter the Bradenton bubble, had to choose: the season or the wedding. Kloppenburg chose the season, and as ESPN flashed a picture on the screen of his daughter, in her white wedding dress, being hugged by her new husband moments after their wedding vows had been exchanged, Rowe explained that the family planned to reenact the ceremony, complete with wedding gown, when Kloppenburg was able to finally return home.As Rowe told this story, trying to keep her own emotions in check, I thought of the video that Donald Trump had posted on his Twitter feed the day before, after being released from Walter Reed Hospital, telling people, “Don’t be afraid of Covid” and “Don’t let it dominate your life.” And I thought again of all the people, without the access to the medical treatment and experimental drugs administered to the president, who had to miss weddings, graduations, and even the funerals of loved ones because of this terrible pandemic. “Don’t be afraid”? What unbelievable cruelty was contained in that moment. And that’s when I felt that tear begin to drop. And then one more.There was another moment of genuine emotion after the game was decided, when Rowe interviewed the talented young player Jewell Lloyd about winning her second WNBA title and what this season meant to her. And she immediately began talking about the late Kobe Bryant.Loyd is one of many players who grew up idolizing the former Los Angeles Lakers player, who, largely after becoming a father to three daughters, had become a very public booster of women’s basketball. But Loyd was more than just a fan; she was a protégé of Bryant, who had worked closely with Loyd on her game and even gave her a nickname—the “Gold Mamba”—an echo of his famous “Black Mamba” moniker.On Tuesday, an emotional Loyd dedicated her second WNBA title to Bryant and his daughter Gianna, who were killed in a helicopter crash in January. “This year has been a lot for me,” Loyd told Rowe while fighting back tears. “This is for Kobe, Gigi, the Bryant family, and for Breonna Taylor. We had a lot of emotions coming into this game.”From the beginning of the season, moments before the first two teams took the court in late July, you knew this was going to be a WNBA season like no other.Minutes before the first game was played on July 25 between the New York Liberty and the Seattle Storm, players for both teams walked off the court together prior to the playing of the national anthem in a moment of protest tied to the league’s vow to dedicate its season to social justice issues.After the players left the court, two returned: Layshia Clarendon of the Liberty and Breanna Stewart of the Storm, both members of the league’s newly formed Social Justice Council. They spoke about Breonna Taylor, the 26-year-old woman shot and killed in Louisville, Kentucky, by police officers who had entered her apartment while she was sleeping.“We are dedicating this season to Breonna Taylor, an outstanding EMT who was murdered over 130 days ago in her home,” Clarendon said. “Breonna Taylor was dedicated and committed to uplifting everyone around her. We are also dedicating this season to [the] Say Her Name campaign, a campaign committed to saying the names and fighting for justice for Black women, Black women who are so often forgotten in this fight for justice, who do not have people marching in the streets for them. We will say her name.” Next she recited the names of Black women who have died at the hands of police: “Sandra Bland. Atatiana Jefferson. Dominique Remy Fells. And Breonna Taylor. We will be a voice for the voiceless.”Then Stewart called for a 26-second moment of silence, representing “the age [Taylor] was when she was killed.”A few weeks earlier, before it was known that the WNBA season would go ahead in a truncated form, Stewart told The New York Times that she and other players were determined to use their sport to to make their voices known. “We’re going to do our best to make sure [the season] happens, and also make sure we’re able to use our voice and platform to highlight the social issues that need to be fixed at the same time,” Stewart told the paper. “Will we be taking a knee during the anthem? You bet. I’m trying to get the league to put ‘Black Lives Matter’ on the court we’ll be playing on. Let’s have that on one baseline, and ‘Say Her Name,’ for Breonna Taylor, on the other baseline.”The move, while widely applauded, did not come without some controversy. Senator Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.), currently in a tight race to hold on to her seat, is one of the owners of the Atlanta Dream and was critical of both the Black Lives Matter movement and the league’s embrace of it.“The truth is, we need less—not more politics in sports. In a time when polarizing politics is as divisive as ever, sports has the power to be a unifying antidote,” Loeffler wrote in a letter to WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert. She added: “I adamantly oppose the Black Lives Matter political movement, which has advocated for the defunding of police, called for the removal of Jesus from churches and the disruption of the nuclear family structure, harbored anti-Semitic views, and promoted violence and destruction across the country.”That action prompted a tweet from the Liberty’s Clarendon, a former player for the Dream. “I can’t believe I ever stepped foot in Kelly’s house and shared a meal with her,” Clarendon tweeted. “It’s actually really hurtful to see her true colors. I had no idea while I played for ATL she felt this way. Happy to own us as long as we stay quiet and perform.” But this game, which gave Stewart and Sue Bird—two former University of Connecticut legends who played more than a decade apart for the Huskies—their second championship in two years, was a definite feel-good moment: the basketball sublime; the joy on the player’s faces totally infectious as the game entered its final seconds. It was a much-needed antidote to the insanity at the White House.And when victory was complete, the Storm players donned T-shirts with one simple word: vote. Product detail for this product: Fashion field involves the best minds to carefully craft the design. The t-shirt industry is a very competitive field and involves many risks. The cost per t-shirt varies proportionally to the total quantity of t-shirts. We are manufacturing exceptional-quality t-shirts at a very competitive price. We use only the best DTG printers available to produce the finest-quality images possible that won’t wash out of the shirts. Custom orders are always welcome. We can customize all of our designs to your needs! Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions. We accept all major credit cards (Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Discover), PayPal, or prepayment by Check, Money Order, or Bank Wire. For schools, universities, and government organizations, we accept purchase orders and prepayment by check Vist our store at: https://hulktee.com This product belong to hung1 Go Jesus It's Your Birthday Merry Christmas T Shirt This is our best seller for a reason. Relaxed, tailored and ultra-comfortable, you’ll love the way you look in this durable, reliable classic 100% pre-shrunk cotton (heather gray color is 90% cotton/10% polyester, light heather gray is 98% cotton/2% polyester, heather black is 50% cotton/50% polyester) | Fabric Weight: 5.0 oz (mid-weight) Tip: Buying 2 products or more at the same time will save you quite a lot on shipping fees. You can gift it for mom dad papa mommy daddy mama boyfriend girlfriend grandpa grandma grandfather grandmother husband wife family teacher Its also casual enough to wear for working out shopping running jogging hiking biking or hanging out with friends Unique design personalized design for Valentines day St Patricks day Mothers day Fathers day Birthday More info 53 oz ? pre-shrunk cotton Double-needle stitched neckline bottom hem and sleeves Quarter turned Seven-eighths inch seamless collar Shoulder-to-shoulder taping If you love this shirt, please click on the link to buy it now: https://hulktee.com/product/youre-spare-parts-bud-funny-pitter-t-shirt/ When In the Heights’s Nina Rosario, played by Leslie Grace, returns to her native Bronx from college at Stanford, one of her very first stops is the local neighborhood salon; she’s come to receive a makeover—“the skin-deep kind, and the emotional kind,” Anthony Ramos’s Usnavi de la Vega narrates. As it turns out, the primp-and-polish setting was familiar territory for Grace, a 26-year-old New York City–born actress who grew up in her own mother’s salon in south Florida. There, she picked up countless tips and tricks, a number of which she’s carried with her throughout her career as a Grammy-nominated singer and, now, actress. “I learned through osmosis how important it is to not only take time for yourself but [also] the importance and sacredness of sharing a moment where women are empowering how beautiful they are,” Grace says as she dives into her skin-care routine, which includes a deep cleanse bolstered by Foreo’s vibrating device, a handful of custom-blended serum combinations, and, importantly, Cetaphil sunscreen—a mainstay in her cosmetics arsenal since high school. “For someone like me who has freckles and gets splotches easily, I really take SPF serious, girl!” she notes.Her favorite part of the morning comes next as brushes, bronzer, and brow pencils enter the frame. “Through growing up in a salon and seeing how other women did their makeup, I started to learn, ‘Oh, makeup and hair and clothes and all these things we use to express ourselves, they’re adornments for what you already have,’ ” Grace muses, adding that she now embraces a lighter-touch pore-perfecting approach that still allows her freckles to peek through. But she does like to amp it up at eye level by way of mascara, false lashes, and a combination of shadow shades, the darkest of which she deftly applies at the outer corners of her lids—a pro technique passed down to her from her titi, a makeup artist. A wash of iridescent powder, brushed over her cheekbones and lips, provides a photo-ready glow effect. “Culturally, I feel like Dominican women are always trying to find the way that they can cut the corner and get the same look,” Grace explains before revealing her own secret weapon for prolonging the lifespan of her blowout: Dyson’s Airwrap Styler. “That’s something that I like to call ingenuity.”Lessless wrap silk dress, $850Below, shop Leslie Grace’s beauty secrets. Filmed at Hotel Casa Del Mar For starters, let’s get her name right: It’s pronounced EE-gah Shvee-ON-tek. But you’re forgiven if you’ve never heard of her. Świątek, 19, from Warsaw, Poland, came into the French Open unseeded and utterly unheralded, having never won a tourney on the WTA tour in the scant and wildly curtailed year she’s been playing in it (at the moment, she’s ranked 54th worldwide—a number which will dramatically improve very shortly).Her performance at Roland-Garros, though, has been nothing short of astonishing: More so than any other single player this year, Świątek has been utterly dominant in every match she’s played, crushing the tourney’s number-one seed and former champion Simona Halep 6-1, 6-2 in the fourth round and swiftly eliminating the qualifier Nadia Podoroska in the semis, 6-2, 6-1. Not only hasn’t she lost a set along the way—she hasn’t even lost more than five games in any match.“It seems unreal,” Świątek said after her semifinal victory. “It’s crazy.”Tomorrow at 9 am EDT, she’ll face 4th seed American Sofia Kenin, the Australian Open champion who is 16-1 this year in Grand Slam matches. And while it would be easy to call this a classic matchup of seasoned player vs. Cinderella-story upstart riding a wing and a prayer, everything about the way Świątek has played in this tournament says otherwise. Both her power and her unflappable poise suggest that she’s every bit capable of stealing this Slam and rocketing to tennis’s top 20—and beyond.But that’s only if she wants to. Świątek, who just finished high school, said before the tournament that she’s still undecided about whether she wants to devote herself full-time to the WTA tour or head off to college instead. (She’s certainly capable of making her own decisions—though something tells us that playing in the finals of a Grand Slam has a persuasive quality that can’t be denied.)Świątek and Kenin have never before faced each other on the WTA tour, but they did play once, as juniors, at the French in 2016. Świątek won that one, 6-4, 7-5. If she hopes to win again now with everything on the line, she’ll need to wield her booming serve and formidable forehand just as she has throughout the tournament so far—and she’ll need the kind mental fortitude that would seem to favor Kenin.Sunday’s men’s final matchup, of course, is the marquee event the sport has been yearning for, with Rafael Nadal vying to tie Roger Federer’s record 20th Grand Slam title and Novak Djokovic gunning for his 17th. Given the general unpredictability of both this tournament and the sport in general since it kicked up again after COVID suspension at the US Open, it would seem foolish to try to predict a winner. We’ll say only this: It would be foolish to bet against Nadal and his seeming ability to will himself to victory on clay, but it would also be foolish to think that Djokovic isn’t well-poised to outlast Nadal—if he doesn’t get out-hit first. I don’t often cry while watching a basketball game, so Tuesday’s WNBA final between the Seattle Storm and the Las Vegas Aces was definitely a first. As the game entered its final minutes, and the Storm closed in on their second championship in three years, the ESPN announcers threw to the on-court reporter, Holly Rowe, to ask her about the personal sacrifices the players and coaches had made this season, living in a bubble in Bradenton, Florida, since July, and unable to have contact with the outside world or to see friends and family members.Rowe, in a suddenly emotional moment, started talking about the Storm coach, Gary Kloppenburg, and the fact that he had to miss his daughter’s wedding. She explained that Kloppenburg, filling in as the Storm’s coach because the actual head coach, Dan Hughes, was still recovering from cancer and deemed not safe to enter the Bradenton bubble, had to choose: the season or the wedding. Kloppenburg chose the season, and as ESPN flashed a picture on the screen of his daughter, in her white wedding dress, being hugged by her new husband moments after their wedding vows had been exchanged, Rowe explained that the family planned to reenact the ceremony, complete with wedding gown, when Kloppenburg was able to finally return home.As Rowe told this story, trying to keep her own emotions in check, I thought of the video that Donald Trump had posted on his Twitter feed the day before, after being released from Walter Reed Hospital, telling people, “Don’t be afraid of Covid” and “Don’t let it dominate your life.” And I thought again of all the people, without the access to the medical treatment and experimental drugs administered to the president, who had to miss weddings, graduations, and even the funerals of loved ones because of this terrible pandemic. “Don’t be afraid”? What unbelievable cruelty was contained in that moment. And that’s when I felt that tear begin to drop. And then one more.There was another moment of genuine emotion after the game was decided, when Rowe interviewed the talented young player Jewell Lloyd about winning her second WNBA title and what this season meant to her. And she immediately began talking about the late Kobe Bryant.Loyd is one of many players who grew up idolizing the former Los Angeles Lakers player, who, largely after becoming a father to three daughters, had become a very public booster of women’s basketball. But Loyd was more than just a fan; she was a protégé of Bryant, who had worked closely with Loyd on her game and even gave her a nickname—the “Gold Mamba”—an echo of his famous “Black Mamba” moniker.On Tuesday, an emotional Loyd dedicated her second WNBA title to Bryant and his daughter Gianna, who were killed in a helicopter crash in January. “This year has been a lot for me,” Loyd told Rowe while fighting back tears. “This is for Kobe, Gigi, the Bryant family, and for Breonna Taylor. We had a lot of emotions coming into this game.”From the beginning of the season, moments before the first two teams took the court in late July, you knew this was going to be a WNBA season like no other.Minutes before the first game was played on July 25 between the New York Liberty and the Seattle Storm, players for both teams walked off the court together prior to the playing of the national anthem in a moment of protest tied to the league’s vow to dedicate its season to social justice issues.After the players left the court, two returned: Layshia Clarendon of the Liberty and Breanna Stewart of the Storm, both members of the league’s newly formed Social Justice Council. They spoke about Breonna Taylor, the 26-year-old woman shot and killed in Louisville, Kentucky, by police officers who had entered her apartment while she was sleeping.“We are dedicating this season to Breonna Taylor, an outstanding EMT who was murdered over 130 days ago in her home,” Clarendon said. “Breonna Taylor was dedicated and committed to uplifting everyone around her. We are also dedicating this season to [the] Say Her Name campaign, a campaign committed to saying the names and fighting for justice for Black women, Black women who are so often forgotten in this fight for justice, who do not have people marching in the streets for them. We will say her name.” Next she recited the names of Black women who have died at the hands of police: “Sandra Bland. Atatiana Jefferson. Dominique Remy Fells. And Breonna Taylor. We will be a voice for the voiceless.”Then Stewart called for a 26-second moment of silence, representing “the age [Taylor] was when she was killed.”A few weeks earlier, before it was known that the WNBA season would go ahead in a truncated form, Stewart told The New York Times that she and other players were determined to use their sport to to make their voices known. “We’re going to do our best to make sure [the season] happens, and also make sure we’re able to use our voice and platform to highlight the social issues that need to be fixed at the same time,” Stewart told the paper. “Will we be taking a knee during the anthem? You bet. I’m trying to get the league to put ‘Black Lives Matter’ on the court we’ll be playing on. Let’s have that on one baseline, and ‘Say Her Name,’ for Breonna Taylor, on the other baseline.”The move, while widely applauded, did not come without some controversy. Senator Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.), currently in a tight race to hold on to her seat, is one of the owners of the Atlanta Dream and was critical of both the Black Lives Matter movement and the league’s embrace of it.“The truth is, we need less—not more politics in sports. In a time when polarizing politics is as divisive as ever, sports has the power to be a unifying antidote,” Loeffler wrote in a letter to WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert. She added: “I adamantly oppose the Black Lives Matter political movement, which has advocated for the defunding of police, called for the removal of Jesus from churches and the disruption of the nuclear family structure, harbored anti-Semitic views, and promoted violence and destruction across the country.”That action prompted a tweet from the Liberty’s Clarendon, a former player for the Dream. “I can’t believe I ever stepped foot in Kelly’s house and shared a meal with her,” Clarendon tweeted. “It’s actually really hurtful to see her true colors. I had no idea while I played for ATL she felt this way. Happy to own us as long as we stay quiet and perform.” But this game, which gave Stewart and Sue Bird—two former University of Connecticut legends who played more than a decade apart for the Huskies—their second championship in two years, was a definite feel-good moment: the basketball sublime; the joy on the player’s faces totally infectious as the game entered its final seconds. It was a much-needed antidote to the insanity at the White House.And when victory was complete, the Storm players donned T-shirts with one simple word: vote. Product detail for this product: Fashion field involves the best minds to carefully craft the design. The t-shirt industry is a very competitive field and involves many risks. The cost per t-shirt varies proportionally to the total quantity of t-shirts. We are manufacturing exceptional-quality t-shirts at a very competitive price. We use only the best DTG printers available to produce the finest-quality images possible that won’t wash out of the shirts. Custom orders are always welcome. We can customize all of our designs to your needs! Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions. We accept all major credit cards (Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Discover), PayPal, or prepayment by Check, Money Order, or Bank Wire. For schools, universities, and government organizations, we accept purchase orders and prepayment by check Vist our store at: https://hulktee.com This product belong to hung1

Go Jesus It's Your Birthday Merry Christmas T Shirt - from btsshirts.info 1

Go Jesus It's Your Birthday Merry Christmas T Shirt - from btsshirts.info 1

This is our best seller for a reason. Relaxed, tailored and ultra-comfortable, you’ll love the way you look in this durable, reliable classic 100% pre-shrunk cotton (heather gray color is 90% cotton/10% polyester, light heather gray is 98% cotton/2% polyester, heather black is 50% cotton/50% polyester) | Fabric Weight: 5.0 oz (mid-weight) Tip: Buying 2 products or more at the same time will save you quite a lot on shipping fees. You can gift it for mom dad papa mommy daddy mama boyfriend girlfriend grandpa grandma grandfather grandmother husband wife family teacher Its also casual enough to wear for working out shopping running jogging hiking biking or hanging out with friends Unique design personalized design for Valentines day St Patricks day Mothers day Fathers day Birthday More info 53 oz ? pre-shrunk cotton Double-needle stitched neckline bottom hem and sleeves Quarter turned Seven-eighths inch seamless collar Shoulder-to-shoulder taping If you love this shirt, please click on the link to buy it now: https://hulktee.com/product/youre-spare-parts-bud-funny-pitter-t-shirt/ When In the Heights’s Nina Rosario, played by Leslie Grace, returns to her native Bronx from college at Stanford, one of her very first stops is the local neighborhood salon; she’s come to receive a makeover—“the skin-deep kind, and the emotional kind,” Anthony Ramos’s Usnavi de la Vega narrates. As it turns out, the primp-and-polish setting was familiar territory for Grace, a 26-year-old New York City–born actress who grew up in her own mother’s salon in south Florida. There, she picked up countless tips and tricks, a number of which she’s carried with her throughout her career as a Grammy-nominated singer and, now, actress. “I learned through osmosis how important it is to not only take time for yourself but [also] the importance and sacredness of sharing a moment where women are empowering how beautiful they are,” Grace says as she dives into her skin-care routine, which includes a deep cleanse bolstered by Foreo’s vibrating device, a handful of custom-blended serum combinations, and, importantly, Cetaphil sunscreen—a mainstay in her cosmetics arsenal since high school. “For someone like me who has freckles and gets splotches easily, I really take SPF serious, girl!” she notes.Her favorite part of the morning comes next as brushes, bronzer, and brow pencils enter the frame. “Through growing up in a salon and seeing how other women did their makeup, I started to learn, ‘Oh, makeup and hair and clothes and all these things we use to express ourselves, they’re adornments for what you already have,’ ” Grace muses, adding that she now embraces a lighter-touch pore-perfecting approach that still allows her freckles to peek through. But she does like to amp it up at eye level by way of mascara, false lashes, and a combination of shadow shades, the darkest of which she deftly applies at the outer corners of her lids—a pro technique passed down to her from her titi, a makeup artist. A wash of iridescent powder, brushed over her cheekbones and lips, provides a photo-ready glow effect. “Culturally, I feel like Dominican women are always trying to find the way that they can cut the corner and get the same look,” Grace explains before revealing her own secret weapon for prolonging the lifespan of her blowout: Dyson’s Airwrap Styler. “That’s something that I like to call ingenuity.”Lessless wrap silk dress, $850Below, shop Leslie Grace’s beauty secrets. Filmed at Hotel Casa Del Mar For starters, let’s get her name right: It’s pronounced EE-gah Shvee-ON-tek. But you’re forgiven if you’ve never heard of her. Świątek, 19, from Warsaw, Poland, came into the French Open unseeded and utterly unheralded, having never won a tourney on the WTA tour in the scant and wildly curtailed year she’s been playing in it (at the moment, she’s ranked 54th worldwide—a number which will dramatically improve very shortly).Her performance at Roland-Garros, though, has been nothing short of astonishing: More so than any other single player this year, Świątek has been utterly dominant in every match she’s played, crushing the tourney’s number-one seed and former champion Simona Halep 6-1, 6-2 in the fourth round and swiftly eliminating the qualifier Nadia Podoroska in the semis, 6-2, 6-1. Not only hasn’t she lost a set along the way—she hasn’t even lost more than five games in any match.“It seems unreal,” Świątek said after her semifinal victory. “It’s crazy.”Tomorrow at 9 am EDT, she’ll face 4th seed American Sofia Kenin, the Australian Open champion who is 16-1 this year in Grand Slam matches. And while it would be easy to call this a classic matchup of seasoned player vs. Cinderella-story upstart riding a wing and a prayer, everything about the way Świątek has played in this tournament says otherwise. Both her power and her unflappable poise suggest that she’s every bit capable of stealing this Slam and rocketing to tennis’s top 20—and beyond.But that’s only if she wants to. Świątek, who just finished high school, said before the tournament that she’s still undecided about whether she wants to devote herself full-time to the WTA tour or head off to college instead. (She’s certainly capable of making her own decisions—though something tells us that playing in the finals of a Grand Slam has a persuasive quality that can’t be denied.)Świątek and Kenin have never before faced each other on the WTA tour, but they did play once, as juniors, at the French in 2016. Świątek won that one, 6-4, 7-5. If she hopes to win again now with everything on the line, she’ll need to wield her booming serve and formidable forehand just as she has throughout the tournament so far—and she’ll need the kind mental fortitude that would seem to favor Kenin.Sunday’s men’s final matchup, of course, is the marquee event the sport has been yearning for, with Rafael Nadal vying to tie Roger Federer’s record 20th Grand Slam title and Novak Djokovic gunning for his 17th. Given the general unpredictability of both this tournament and the sport in general since it kicked up again after COVID suspension at the US Open, it would seem foolish to try to predict a winner. We’ll say only this: It would be foolish to bet against Nadal and his seeming ability to will himself to victory on clay, but it would also be foolish to think that Djokovic isn’t well-poised to outlast Nadal—if he doesn’t get out-hit first. I don’t often cry while watching a basketball game, so Tuesday’s WNBA final between the Seattle Storm and the Las Vegas Aces was definitely a first. As the game entered its final minutes, and the Storm closed in on their second championship in three years, the ESPN announcers threw to the on-court reporter, Holly Rowe, to ask her about the personal sacrifices the players and coaches had made this season, living in a bubble in Bradenton, Florida, since July, and unable to have contact with the outside world or to see friends and family members.Rowe, in a suddenly emotional moment, started talking about the Storm coach, Gary Kloppenburg, and the fact that he had to miss his daughter’s wedding. She explained that Kloppenburg, filling in as the Storm’s coach because the actual head coach, Dan Hughes, was still recovering from cancer and deemed not safe to enter the Bradenton bubble, had to choose: the season or the wedding. Kloppenburg chose the season, and as ESPN flashed a picture on the screen of his daughter, in her white wedding dress, being hugged by her new husband moments after their wedding vows had been exchanged, Rowe explained that the family planned to reenact the ceremony, complete with wedding gown, when Kloppenburg was able to finally return home.As Rowe told this story, trying to keep her own emotions in check, I thought of the video that Donald Trump had posted on his Twitter feed the day before, after being released from Walter Reed Hospital, telling people, “Don’t be afraid of Covid” and “Don’t let it dominate your life.” And I thought again of all the people, without the access to the medical treatment and experimental drugs administered to the president, who had to miss weddings, graduations, and even the funerals of loved ones because of this terrible pandemic. “Don’t be afraid”? What unbelievable cruelty was contained in that moment. And that’s when I felt that tear begin to drop. And then one more.There was another moment of genuine emotion after the game was decided, when Rowe interviewed the talented young player Jewell Lloyd about winning her second WNBA title and what this season meant to her. And she immediately began talking about the late Kobe Bryant.Loyd is one of many players who grew up idolizing the former Los Angeles Lakers player, who, largely after becoming a father to three daughters, had become a very public booster of women’s basketball. But Loyd was more than just a fan; she was a protégé of Bryant, who had worked closely with Loyd on her game and even gave her a nickname—the “Gold Mamba”—an echo of his famous “Black Mamba” moniker.On Tuesday, an emotional Loyd dedicated her second WNBA title to Bryant and his daughter Gianna, who were killed in a helicopter crash in January. “This year has been a lot for me,” Loyd told Rowe while fighting back tears. “This is for Kobe, Gigi, the Bryant family, and for Breonna Taylor. We had a lot of emotions coming into this game.”From the beginning of the season, moments before the first two teams took the court in late July, you knew this was going to be a WNBA season like no other.Minutes before the first game was played on July 25 between the New York Liberty and the Seattle Storm, players for both teams walked off the court together prior to the playing of the national anthem in a moment of protest tied to the league’s vow to dedicate its season to social justice issues.After the players left the court, two returned: Layshia Clarendon of the Liberty and Breanna Stewart of the Storm, both members of the league’s newly formed Social Justice Council. They spoke about Breonna Taylor, the 26-year-old woman shot and killed in Louisville, Kentucky, by police officers who had entered her apartment while she was sleeping.“We are dedicating this season to Breonna Taylor, an outstanding EMT who was murdered over 130 days ago in her home,” Clarendon said. “Breonna Taylor was dedicated and committed to uplifting everyone around her. We are also dedicating this season to [the] Say Her Name campaign, a campaign committed to saying the names and fighting for justice for Black women, Black women who are so often forgotten in this fight for justice, who do not have people marching in the streets for them. We will say her name.” Next she recited the names of Black women who have died at the hands of police: “Sandra Bland. Atatiana Jefferson. Dominique Remy Fells. And Breonna Taylor. We will be a voice for the voiceless.”Then Stewart called for a 26-second moment of silence, representing “the age [Taylor] was when she was killed.”A few weeks earlier, before it was known that the WNBA season would go ahead in a truncated form, Stewart told The New York Times that she and other players were determined to use their sport to to make their voices known. “We’re going to do our best to make sure [the season] happens, and also make sure we’re able to use our voice and platform to highlight the social issues that need to be fixed at the same time,” Stewart told the paper. “Will we be taking a knee during the anthem? You bet. I’m trying to get the league to put ‘Black Lives Matter’ on the court we’ll be playing on. Let’s have that on one baseline, and ‘Say Her Name,’ for Breonna Taylor, on the other baseline.”The move, while widely applauded, did not come without some controversy. Senator Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.), currently in a tight race to hold on to her seat, is one of the owners of the Atlanta Dream and was critical of both the Black Lives Matter movement and the league’s embrace of it.“The truth is, we need less—not more politics in sports. In a time when polarizing politics is as divisive as ever, sports has the power to be a unifying antidote,” Loeffler wrote in a letter to WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert. She added: “I adamantly oppose the Black Lives Matter political movement, which has advocated for the defunding of police, called for the removal of Jesus from churches and the disruption of the nuclear family structure, harbored anti-Semitic views, and promoted violence and destruction across the country.”That action prompted a tweet from the Liberty’s Clarendon, a former player for the Dream. “I can’t believe I ever stepped foot in Kelly’s house and shared a meal with her,” Clarendon tweeted. “It’s actually really hurtful to see her true colors. I had no idea while I played for ATL she felt this way. Happy to own us as long as we stay quiet and perform.” But this game, which gave Stewart and Sue Bird—two former University of Connecticut legends who played more than a decade apart for the Huskies—their second championship in two years, was a definite feel-good moment: the basketball sublime; the joy on the player’s faces totally infectious as the game entered its final seconds. It was a much-needed antidote to the insanity at the White House.And when victory was complete, the Storm players donned T-shirts with one simple word: vote. Product detail for this product: Fashion field involves the best minds to carefully craft the design. The t-shirt industry is a very competitive field and involves many risks. The cost per t-shirt varies proportionally to the total quantity of t-shirts. We are manufacturing exceptional-quality t-shirts at a very competitive price. We use only the best DTG printers available to produce the finest-quality images possible that won’t wash out of the shirts. Custom orders are always welcome. We can customize all of our designs to your needs! Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions. We accept all major credit cards (Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Discover), PayPal, or prepayment by Check, Money Order, or Bank Wire. For schools, universities, and government organizations, we accept purchase orders and prepayment by check Vist our store at: https://hulktee.com This product belong to hung1 Go Jesus It's Your Birthday Merry Christmas T Shirt This is our best seller for a reason. Relaxed, tailored and ultra-comfortable, you’ll love the way you look in this durable, reliable classic 100% pre-shrunk cotton (heather gray color is 90% cotton/10% polyester, light heather gray is 98% cotton/2% polyester, heather black is 50% cotton/50% polyester) | Fabric Weight: 5.0 oz (mid-weight) Tip: Buying 2 products or more at the same time will save you quite a lot on shipping fees. You can gift it for mom dad papa mommy daddy mama boyfriend girlfriend grandpa grandma grandfather grandmother husband wife family teacher Its also casual enough to wear for working out shopping running jogging hiking biking or hanging out with friends Unique design personalized design for Valentines day St Patricks day Mothers day Fathers day Birthday More info 53 oz ? pre-shrunk cotton Double-needle stitched neckline bottom hem and sleeves Quarter turned Seven-eighths inch seamless collar Shoulder-to-shoulder taping If you love this shirt, please click on the link to buy it now: https://hulktee.com/product/youre-spare-parts-bud-funny-pitter-t-shirt/ When In the Heights’s Nina Rosario, played by Leslie Grace, returns to her native Bronx from college at Stanford, one of her very first stops is the local neighborhood salon; she’s come to receive a makeover—“the skin-deep kind, and the emotional kind,” Anthony Ramos’s Usnavi de la Vega narrates. As it turns out, the primp-and-polish setting was familiar territory for Grace, a 26-year-old New York City–born actress who grew up in her own mother’s salon in south Florida. There, she picked up countless tips and tricks, a number of which she’s carried with her throughout her career as a Grammy-nominated singer and, now, actress. “I learned through osmosis how important it is to not only take time for yourself but [also] the importance and sacredness of sharing a moment where women are empowering how beautiful they are,” Grace says as she dives into her skin-care routine, which includes a deep cleanse bolstered by Foreo’s vibrating device, a handful of custom-blended serum combinations, and, importantly, Cetaphil sunscreen—a mainstay in her cosmetics arsenal since high school. “For someone like me who has freckles and gets splotches easily, I really take SPF serious, girl!” she notes.Her favorite part of the morning comes next as brushes, bronzer, and brow pencils enter the frame. “Through growing up in a salon and seeing how other women did their makeup, I started to learn, ‘Oh, makeup and hair and clothes and all these things we use to express ourselves, they’re adornments for what you already have,’ ” Grace muses, adding that she now embraces a lighter-touch pore-perfecting approach that still allows her freckles to peek through. But she does like to amp it up at eye level by way of mascara, false lashes, and a combination of shadow shades, the darkest of which she deftly applies at the outer corners of her lids—a pro technique passed down to her from her titi, a makeup artist. A wash of iridescent powder, brushed over her cheekbones and lips, provides a photo-ready glow effect. “Culturally, I feel like Dominican women are always trying to find the way that they can cut the corner and get the same look,” Grace explains before revealing her own secret weapon for prolonging the lifespan of her blowout: Dyson’s Airwrap Styler. “That’s something that I like to call ingenuity.”Lessless wrap silk dress, $850Below, shop Leslie Grace’s beauty secrets. Filmed at Hotel Casa Del Mar For starters, let’s get her name right: It’s pronounced EE-gah Shvee-ON-tek. But you’re forgiven if you’ve never heard of her. Świątek, 19, from Warsaw, Poland, came into the French Open unseeded and utterly unheralded, having never won a tourney on the WTA tour in the scant and wildly curtailed year she’s been playing in it (at the moment, she’s ranked 54th worldwide—a number which will dramatically improve very shortly).Her performance at Roland-Garros, though, has been nothing short of astonishing: More so than any other single player this year, Świątek has been utterly dominant in every match she’s played, crushing the tourney’s number-one seed and former champion Simona Halep 6-1, 6-2 in the fourth round and swiftly eliminating the qualifier Nadia Podoroska in the semis, 6-2, 6-1. Not only hasn’t she lost a set along the way—she hasn’t even lost more than five games in any match.“It seems unreal,” Świątek said after her semifinal victory. “It’s crazy.”Tomorrow at 9 am EDT, she’ll face 4th seed American Sofia Kenin, the Australian Open champion who is 16-1 this year in Grand Slam matches. And while it would be easy to call this a classic matchup of seasoned player vs. Cinderella-story upstart riding a wing and a prayer, everything about the way Świątek has played in this tournament says otherwise. Both her power and her unflappable poise suggest that she’s every bit capable of stealing this Slam and rocketing to tennis’s top 20—and beyond.But that’s only if she wants to. Świątek, who just finished high school, said before the tournament that she’s still undecided about whether she wants to devote herself full-time to the WTA tour or head off to college instead. (She’s certainly capable of making her own decisions—though something tells us that playing in the finals of a Grand Slam has a persuasive quality that can’t be denied.)Świątek and Kenin have never before faced each other on the WTA tour, but they did play once, as juniors, at the French in 2016. Świątek won that one, 6-4, 7-5. If she hopes to win again now with everything on the line, she’ll need to wield her booming serve and formidable forehand just as she has throughout the tournament so far—and she’ll need the kind mental fortitude that would seem to favor Kenin.Sunday’s men’s final matchup, of course, is the marquee event the sport has been yearning for, with Rafael Nadal vying to tie Roger Federer’s record 20th Grand Slam title and Novak Djokovic gunning for his 17th. Given the general unpredictability of both this tournament and the sport in general since it kicked up again after COVID suspension at the US Open, it would seem foolish to try to predict a winner. We’ll say only this: It would be foolish to bet against Nadal and his seeming ability to will himself to victory on clay, but it would also be foolish to think that Djokovic isn’t well-poised to outlast Nadal—if he doesn’t get out-hit first. I don’t often cry while watching a basketball game, so Tuesday’s WNBA final between the Seattle Storm and the Las Vegas Aces was definitely a first. As the game entered its final minutes, and the Storm closed in on their second championship in three years, the ESPN announcers threw to the on-court reporter, Holly Rowe, to ask her about the personal sacrifices the players and coaches had made this season, living in a bubble in Bradenton, Florida, since July, and unable to have contact with the outside world or to see friends and family members.Rowe, in a suddenly emotional moment, started talking about the Storm coach, Gary Kloppenburg, and the fact that he had to miss his daughter’s wedding. She explained that Kloppenburg, filling in as the Storm’s coach because the actual head coach, Dan Hughes, was still recovering from cancer and deemed not safe to enter the Bradenton bubble, had to choose: the season or the wedding. Kloppenburg chose the season, and as ESPN flashed a picture on the screen of his daughter, in her white wedding dress, being hugged by her new husband moments after their wedding vows had been exchanged, Rowe explained that the family planned to reenact the ceremony, complete with wedding gown, when Kloppenburg was able to finally return home.As Rowe told this story, trying to keep her own emotions in check, I thought of the video that Donald Trump had posted on his Twitter feed the day before, after being released from Walter Reed Hospital, telling people, “Don’t be afraid of Covid” and “Don’t let it dominate your life.” And I thought again of all the people, without the access to the medical treatment and experimental drugs administered to the president, who had to miss weddings, graduations, and even the funerals of loved ones because of this terrible pandemic. “Don’t be afraid”? What unbelievable cruelty was contained in that moment. And that’s when I felt that tear begin to drop. And then one more.There was another moment of genuine emotion after the game was decided, when Rowe interviewed the talented young player Jewell Lloyd about winning her second WNBA title and what this season meant to her. And she immediately began talking about the late Kobe Bryant.Loyd is one of many players who grew up idolizing the former Los Angeles Lakers player, who, largely after becoming a father to three daughters, had become a very public booster of women’s basketball. But Loyd was more than just a fan; she was a protégé of Bryant, who had worked closely with Loyd on her game and even gave her a nickname—the “Gold Mamba”—an echo of his famous “Black Mamba” moniker.On Tuesday, an emotional Loyd dedicated her second WNBA title to Bryant and his daughter Gianna, who were killed in a helicopter crash in January. “This year has been a lot for me,” Loyd told Rowe while fighting back tears. “This is for Kobe, Gigi, the Bryant family, and for Breonna Taylor. We had a lot of emotions coming into this game.”From the beginning of the season, moments before the first two teams took the court in late July, you knew this was going to be a WNBA season like no other.Minutes before the first game was played on July 25 between the New York Liberty and the Seattle Storm, players for both teams walked off the court together prior to the playing of the national anthem in a moment of protest tied to the league’s vow to dedicate its season to social justice issues.After the players left the court, two returned: Layshia Clarendon of the Liberty and Breanna Stewart of the Storm, both members of the league’s newly formed Social Justice Council. They spoke about Breonna Taylor, the 26-year-old woman shot and killed in Louisville, Kentucky, by police officers who had entered her apartment while she was sleeping.“We are dedicating this season to Breonna Taylor, an outstanding EMT who was murdered over 130 days ago in her home,” Clarendon said. “Breonna Taylor was dedicated and committed to uplifting everyone around her. We are also dedicating this season to [the] Say Her Name campaign, a campaign committed to saying the names and fighting for justice for Black women, Black women who are so often forgotten in this fight for justice, who do not have people marching in the streets for them. We will say her name.” Next she recited the names of Black women who have died at the hands of police: “Sandra Bland. Atatiana Jefferson. Dominique Remy Fells. And Breonna Taylor. We will be a voice for the voiceless.”Then Stewart called for a 26-second moment of silence, representing “the age [Taylor] was when she was killed.”A few weeks earlier, before it was known that the WNBA season would go ahead in a truncated form, Stewart told The New York Times that she and other players were determined to use their sport to to make their voices known. “We’re going to do our best to make sure [the season] happens, and also make sure we’re able to use our voice and platform to highlight the social issues that need to be fixed at the same time,” Stewart told the paper. “Will we be taking a knee during the anthem? You bet. I’m trying to get the league to put ‘Black Lives Matter’ on the court we’ll be playing on. Let’s have that on one baseline, and ‘Say Her Name,’ for Breonna Taylor, on the other baseline.”The move, while widely applauded, did not come without some controversy. Senator Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.), currently in a tight race to hold on to her seat, is one of the owners of the Atlanta Dream and was critical of both the Black Lives Matter movement and the league’s embrace of it.“The truth is, we need less—not more politics in sports. In a time when polarizing politics is as divisive as ever, sports has the power to be a unifying antidote,” Loeffler wrote in a letter to WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert. She added: “I adamantly oppose the Black Lives Matter political movement, which has advocated for the defunding of police, called for the removal of Jesus from churches and the disruption of the nuclear family structure, harbored anti-Semitic views, and promoted violence and destruction across the country.”That action prompted a tweet from the Liberty’s Clarendon, a former player for the Dream. “I can’t believe I ever stepped foot in Kelly’s house and shared a meal with her,” Clarendon tweeted. “It’s actually really hurtful to see her true colors. I had no idea while I played for ATL she felt this way. Happy to own us as long as we stay quiet and perform.” But this game, which gave Stewart and Sue Bird—two former University of Connecticut legends who played more than a decade apart for the Huskies—their second championship in two years, was a definite feel-good moment: the basketball sublime; the joy on the player’s faces totally infectious as the game entered its final seconds. It was a much-needed antidote to the insanity at the White House.And when victory was complete, the Storm players donned T-shirts with one simple word: vote. Product detail for this product: Fashion field involves the best minds to carefully craft the design. The t-shirt industry is a very competitive field and involves many risks. The cost per t-shirt varies proportionally to the total quantity of t-shirts. We are manufacturing exceptional-quality t-shirts at a very competitive price. We use only the best DTG printers available to produce the finest-quality images possible that won’t wash out of the shirts. Custom orders are always welcome. We can customize all of our designs to your needs! Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions. We accept all major credit cards (Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Discover), PayPal, or prepayment by Check, Money Order, or Bank Wire. For schools, universities, and government organizations, we accept purchase orders and prepayment by check Vist our store at: https://hulktee.com This product belong to hung1

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Once Upon A Time There Was A Girl Who Really Loved Elephant And Dogs It Was Me The End Tee Shirts White

Once Upon A Time There Was A Girl Who Really Loved Elephant And Dogs It Was Me The End Tee Shirts White With Secure Checkout (100% Secure pa...