Anonymous ID: be2104 March 18, 2020, 12:59 p.m. No.8466038   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6072

>>8466000

https://www.papermag.com/lady-gaga-chromatica-2645479910.html

 

Lady Gaga: Life on Chromatica

 

"I consent to being nude with everyone in this room," Lady Gaga says, before slipping off her custom Versace robe emblazoned with her name on the back in crystals. "I believe we're making art, this isn't pornography." With nothing on — not even her signature towering heels — the 5'2'' pop star walks confidently onto set for our cover shoot and positions herself inside a cage with hundreds of cameras attached to its frame. The countless lenses focus on her naked form, prepped to capture all angles of her body, as she holds one still pose and patiently waits for further instruction. "Three, two, one." Flash. Every camera goes off in unison like lightning.

 

The scene is immediately jarring: A global icon, whose career has been closely documented by cameras, sometimes against her will, and whose art has frequently centered on the violence of paparazzi culture, submitting herself to the same technology that's made — and challenged — her for the past 10 years. She calls for her longtime manager, Bobby Campbell, to play a song off her sixth studio album, and asks him to turn it up: "Louder, please." Amidst a flurry of wild animal noises, references to partying in "BC" and fierce house beats, Gaga warns listeners to "battle for your life" on the track, as she mouths each lyric to herself. It's the only song played all day, and she requests for it to be queued back to back.

 

In control of all of the cameras is Belgian artist Frederik Heyman, who needs every inch of her body 3D-scanned in order to later create a computer-generated Gaga avatar in various digitally constructed environments. This multimedia cover shoot is in conversation with the visual language being honed by Gaga and her team for her new album, Chromatica, out April 10. It's named after a world "that celebrates all things" — where, according to Gaga, "No one thing is greater than the other." On set, Gaga works from this same headspace, treating everyone in the room as a collaborator, especially when it comes to styling. She specifically rejects wearing head-to-toe designer clothing, instead opening up conversation for "a more fucked-up" fashion direction. "It doesn't need to go together, it just needs to be upsetting," she says, pointing lovingly to a pair of flame-printed panties.

Anonymous ID: be2104 March 18, 2020, 1:24 p.m. No.8466368   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6381

>>8466354

http://stylefrizz.com/200903/play-some-hermes-cards/

 

Now you can find Hermes Parade Tarot Cards ($85), Hermes Mythes et Constellations Cards ($125) which encompasses seven families with each seven members. A quintessential family cards game allowing the players to reconstruct their families by exchanging cards with the other participants: first to complete the family is the winner.

 

Hermes Parade Tarot Cards

Anonymous ID: be2104 March 18, 2020, 1:26 p.m. No.8466381   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6395

>>8466368

https://www.trendhunter.com/trends/hermes-parade

 

Look to the fashionable future with these Hermes Parade Tarot Cards. The luxurious card set is a perfect gift idea for the style-obsessed individual on one's Christmas list.

 

The trick-taking game set is designed for four players and dates back to the 10th century. The purpose of this game is to win tricks from the Taker by relying on one's defensive and cognitive skills. In order to gain victory, one requires a strong sense of concentration and must come up with solutions for a number of mathematical calculations.

 

The luxe Hermes Parade Tarot Card set includes silver-edged cards that retail for a cool $75.00. Despite of its hefty price tag, the elegant hobby gift item is one of the most affordable pieces from the iconic Hermes brand. The unique collector's item is sure to impress the card game player with a flair for fashion.