
Corset News Archive - 22-Nov-2006
Back pain is second only to the common cold as the ailment patients most frequently see their doctor for. Some studies suggest about 80 percent of Americans will suffer from back pain at some point in their lives.
As you stroll through the exhibits in the Linn County Historical Museum in Brownsville, take a close look at the mannequins and photographs that depict pioneer women.
STYLE.COM, the online home of Vogue and W, has released its 2006 holiday gift guide compiled by Candy Pratts Price, Executive Fashion Director.
The Associated Press reviews several notable boxed set releases:
STYLE.COM, the online home of Vogue and W, has released its 2006 holiday gift guide compiled by Candy Pratts Price, Executive Fashion Director. The white-hot holiday gift guide, featuring a dazzling array of over 50 of this season's most stylish gifts, is inspired by snowy white winter hues, and ranges from whimsical to elegant, practical to utterly extravagant.
Pippin, Wesley and Hayden Ward visit Santa and Mrs. Claus Sunday at the Depot. (Staff Photo, Liz Mitchell) A bagpiper on the corner of Davis and East Streets and the high school band at the Hazel River restaurant played holiday music while dozens of shoppers filled the downtown streets.
Six months ago, James Anderson was wearing a corset 18 hours a day and becoming a dedicated couch potato, after being diagnosed with a stress fracture of the back. In Sydney, he took three wickets in three overs to boost his and the team's confidence ahead of the first Test.
For those who are, oh, say, older than 14, the quest for the perfect pair of jeans can be downright painful. So many zippers that refuse to close, cloth caught "where the sun don't shine," and other woes have plagued older, curvy women since the dawn of denim. But now those days are over.
Wearing a bell-shaped skirt, Elizabeth Watkins appeared to float through the Richmond Raceway Complex's main exhibition hall yesterday in a Civil War-period gown.
The CD boxed set may feel like a bulky dinosaur in the iPod age. But instead of slimming them down, record labels have embraced what made boxed sets so special in the first place.