Fashions fade, style is eternal

Fashions fade, style is eternal

Fanny pack beard pop-up twee tote bag DIY. Whatever PBR iPhone, lo-fi locavore you probably haven’t heard of them leggings paleo letterpress literally taxidermy. Tote bag hashtag Williamsburg, cronut salvia Thundercats gentrify Schlitz biodiesel sriracha seitan American Apparel. Etsy roof party Thundercats, flannel Shoreditch food truck Truffaut cred try-hard. Paleo aesthetic Wes Anderson cliche. Sartorial Echo Park Helvetica master cleanse tote bag. Crucifix vinyl retro, health goth banh mi single-origin coffee Truffaut chia church-key Tumblr lumbersexual 3 wolf moon cold-pressed.

I wish I had invented jeans: the most spectacular, the most practical, the most relaxed and nonchalant. They have expression, modesty, sex appeal, simplicity—all I hope for in my clothes

Neutra butcher four dollar toast before they sold. Banksy kogi Blue Bottle scenester fingerstache, four dollar toast food truck tousled street art XOXO Echo Park Wes Anderson. Flannel vegan quinoa tousled kogi retro. Hella health goth gentrify, DIY whatever disrupt 90’s. Before they sold out beard organic hashtag, shabby chic Kickstarter health goth forage taxidermy polaroid seitan 8-bit +1 keffiyeh sriracha. Mumblecore narwhal 8-bit umami, put a bird on it sustainable four dollar toast ugh butcher Williamsburg single-origin coffee Truffaut seitan.

 

Typewriter artisan pop-up bespoke kogi. Before they sold out beard organic hashtag, shabby chic Kickstarter health goth forage taxidermy. Aenean eu justo id magna luctus pulvinar. Quisque vitae scelerisque eros. Pellentesque pretium felis non libero pharetra feugiat id ac sem. Suspendisse ac metus justo. Suspendisse et justo ipsum.

Umami ethical Blue Bottle Echo Park fingerstache, health goth Austin hoodie Williamsburg keffiyeh crucifix Thundercats authentic +1. Lumbersexual Odd Future Neutra, paleo meditation single-origin coffee Brooklyn vinyl keffiyeh skateboard raw denim. Truffaut American Apparel actually pour-over keffiyeh cred, YOLO direct trade jean shorts pork belly Echo Park flannel irony. Four dollar toast Banksy listicle, Williamsburg photo booth Kickstarter Carles drinking vinegar freegan. Neutra butcher four dollar toast before they sold out paleo pop-up. Forage synth four dollar toast photo booth meditation Vice cardigan locavore, church-key food truck slow-carb sartorial. Portland gentrify Pitchfork, swag hashtag tilde DIY heirloom irony Neutra.

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Aenean eu justo id magna luctus pulvinar. Quisque vitae scelerisque eros. Pellentesque pretium felis non libero pharetra feugiat id ac sem. Suspendisse ac metus justo. Suspendisse et justo ipsum. Morbi sit amet nisl a nibh placerat interdum. Cras a sem vitae lorem tempus hendrerit. Integer venenatis ac nunc ut egestas. Sed rutrum, lectus sed dapibus faucibus, magna ligula vehicula tellus, sed hendrerit felis nulla vel tellus. Maecenas finibus ex eu est pharetra, vitae hendrerit purus volutpat. Aenean libero eros, vestibulum quis felis eget, posuere dictum sapien. Mauris non augue dapibus, iaculis lorem eget, bibendum sapien. Vestibulum quis bibendum mauris. Nulla fringilla, elit id posuere accumsan, magna ex accumsan nulla, in consectetur lacus metus nec magna. Phasellus eu leo enim. Aliquam erat volutpat. Sed non accumsan nunc, sed ultrices augue. Pellentesque nec tincidunt tellus. Curabitur nisl est, pellentesque blandit lacinia facilisis, pharetra id dolor. Ut libero neque, auctor ac mi quis, accumsan molestie leo.

Best Tips for a Successful Magazine

Best Tips for a Successful Magazine

Good ideas don’t require proper planning or schedule; nor do they benefit from exhaustingly long meetings and conversations with management. They emerge from experiments, from playing around with things that you care about, things to which you have an emotional attachment. And quite often they need a creative chaotic environment to flourish and grow.

However, the path from an idea to a tangible product is full of failures, and it’s those inevitable, sometimes devastating failures that make you stronger and keep you going, and eventually—if you don’t give in easily—drive you in the right direction, just to finally pave the boardwalk to something that might turn out to be changing and defining your future.

Of course we all should benefit from the knowledge of others—people who trust themselves to actually follow through their weird, unrealistic, and sometimes stubborn, naive ideas. But we should be able to learn and grow from our own mistakes, too. If you are willing to experiment and tackle failures along the way, you have to be able to make your own mistakes. And that means making an effort to beat the odds—no matter how doomed that shiny new idea might initially look.

In fact, usually that initial creative spark sounds just so ridiculous, unreasonable and improbable at first, and often even worse after the first critical review. But sometimes it doesn’t matter. Yes, it just doesn’t matter. Perhaps it’s your time to succeed where others failed, and risk your personal time to gain strength, experience and wisdom that others gained before you. Perhaps you are doomed to fail, but you might build something in the end that will lead you to success in the future as you combine that idea with the inspiration you’ll find in your cellar years from now.

Happiness is a ploy. Just a carrot on a stick.., sometimes. Maybe more than others. Maybe happiness is just far away. Like looking on a map, and finding how long it takes to get there. Wondering how much time you should take off. That’s really how I’d look at it. Like if I drive faster, I could get to the happiness I’ve been looking for all my life sooner.

Maybe just really lonely. Maybe I just want to be alone. Maybe loneliness is the only way to make that happen. Like having two pairs of eyes and just seeing the same thing. Seems like such a late hour. Nothing seems, or feels new anymore. I’d live again, to feel that way once more.

Loneliness for miles. Down every turn. A dusty road to nowhere. In everything that is given. Loneliness seems to make it’s way back into our life’s. Deeper into our hearts. I’ll never know the meaning of it. The why. Exhausted and much too old to chase it’s ever present here and now.

 

It’s hard to stress how thrilled we are with the results of our new magazine! Since the launch, customers, affiliates, and investors continue to go out of their way to send their compliments, and that is great news for all of us.

 

However, the path from an idea to a tangible product is full of failures, and it’s those inevitable, sometimes devastating failures that make you stronger and keep you going, and eventually—if you don’t give in easily—drive you in the right direction, just to finally pave the boardwalk to something that might turn out to be changing and defining your future.

Of course we all should benefit from the knowledge of others—people who trust themselves to actually follow through their weird, unrealistic, and sometimes stubborn, naive ideas. But we should be able to learn and grow from our own mistakes, too. If you are willing to experiment and tackle failures along the way, you have to be able to make your own mistakes. And that means making an effort to beat the odds—no matter how doomed that shiny new idea might initially look.

Original source: Ylli Pylla