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Bones from a Tudor warship reveal what life was like for the crew [https://kr13at.cc/ kraken ссылка]
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Look of the Week: Julia Fox recreates ‘the Birth of Venus’ at Oscars after-party [https://kra27c.cc/ kraken сайт]
  
The Mary Rose was a royal favorite when it first set sail as the flagship of King Henry VIII’s fleet in 1512.
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On Sunday night, after the biggest awards night of the year had wrapped up, celebrities made a quick change and headed to the official after-party annually hosted by Vanity Fair — where more unconventional fashion choices are able to shine. Some stars, such as Sydney Sweeney, came dripping in crystals, while others, including Emma Chamberlain, were laced up in leather. There were also looks in vintage lace over 30 years old, oodles of polka dot ruffles and feathers hot off the Milanese runway. But one surprising textile was head and shoulders above the rest.
  
Nearly 500 years after the vessel sank in 1545 during a battle with a French fleet, the shipwreck is revealing what life was like in Tudor England.
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Julia Fox, the enfant terrible of red carpet fashion, stood out wearing a naked dress, designed by Dilara Findikoglu, adorned only by carefully placed locks of dark curly hair. As Fox stared ahead into the sea of paparazzi cameras, she looked mythical like a freshly emerged mermaid with long black-brown tresses coiled around her body, attempting to cover her modesty.
 
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The dress debuted just two weeks ago during London Fashion Week, where it was shown alongside Findikoglu’s tattooed leather gowns, seashell encrusted corsets and pubic –bone-exposing pants. The collection, titled “Venus from Chaos,” was inspired by Findikoglu’s vision of a post-apocalyptic liberated female society, where “the gravity of patriarchal oppression is countered by the power of conviction and lightness of imagination,” she had written in her show notes.
After the Mary Rose came to rest at the bottom of a strait in the English Channel, a layer of silt cloaked the ship and the hundreds of crew who died on board. The sediment preserved everything it covered. Underwater archaeologists carefully collected items and remains from the warship before raising the hull in 1982 and putting it on display in a museum in Portsmouth, England.
 
 
 
Now, researchers are studying the objects and bones from the wreck to better understand who the men were and how they lived.
 
Scientists now see how the tasks of life on a ship shaped the bone chemistry of 12 crew members from the Mary Rose by analyzing their collarbones. Collarbones capture information about age, development and growth as well as handedness, or which hand crew members favored.
 
 
 
The clavicles showed that all the men relied on their right hand, but they may have done so due to left-handedness being associated with witchcraft at the time, researchers said.
 
 
 
The findings of this new study are not only opening a window into the lives of the sailors but contributing to modern medical research by providing a better understanding of age-related changes in human bones.
 

Aktuelle Version vom 6. März 2025, 20:02 Uhr

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Look of the Week: Julia Fox recreates ‘the Birth of Venus’ at Oscars after-party kraken сайт

On Sunday night, after the biggest awards night of the year had wrapped up, celebrities made a quick change and headed to the official after-party annually hosted by Vanity Fair — where more unconventional fashion choices are able to shine. Some stars, such as Sydney Sweeney, came dripping in crystals, while others, including Emma Chamberlain, were laced up in leather. There were also looks in vintage lace over 30 years old, oodles of polka dot ruffles and feathers hot off the Milanese runway. But one surprising textile was head and shoulders above the rest.

Julia Fox, the enfant terrible of red carpet fashion, stood out wearing a naked dress, designed by Dilara Findikoglu, adorned only by carefully placed locks of dark curly hair. As Fox stared ahead into the sea of paparazzi cameras, she looked mythical like a freshly emerged mermaid with long black-brown tresses coiled around her body, attempting to cover her modesty. The dress debuted just two weeks ago during London Fashion Week, where it was shown alongside Findikoglu’s tattooed leather gowns, seashell encrusted corsets and pubic –bone-exposing pants. The collection, titled “Venus from Chaos,” was inspired by Findikoglu’s vision of a post-apocalyptic liberated female society, where “the gravity of patriarchal oppression is countered by the power of conviction and lightness of imagination,” she had written in her show notes.