Sentences with phrase «old shops whose»

Not exact matches

If you're shopping for an older toddler or preschooler whose balance skills are solid, you might consider the latter model.
Teresa Woolson, whose 19 - year - old son, Victor, drowned in Lake Ontario after smoking a form of synthetic marijuana, wants the shop's owner, the drug manufacturer and the distributor held accountable.
Milic, whose Old Crow Tattoo shop in Oakland is filled with crystals and altars, recalls a client who spent years hiding her legs out of insecurity before coming to him for a solution.
Relationship seekers should try something less generic, such as, «I'm looking for someone who helps old folks with shopping, but still gets the odd bout of road rage, and whose idea of fun is active sports followed by large slices of cake.»
The chase leads her to a boutique run by Mr. Nishi, a kind, older man whose shop holds many wonders for Shizuku, not least among them a statuette of a cat named The Baron.
Among the hilariously eccentric pieces of Baltimore white trash featured: a sweets - obsessed young girl named Little Chrissy (Lauren Hulsey), who guzzles Jolt cola and eats sugar straight from the sack; her mother Joyce (Mary Kay Place), a thrift - shop owner who enjoys offering her fashion «expertise» to the homeless; Chrissy's older sister Tina (Martha Plimpton), who works at a gay male strip bar known for «teabagging» (don't ask); and Chrissy's grandmother Memama (Jean Schertler), whose sacred statue of the Virgin Mary not - so - miraculously «speaks» (she makes the voice herself).
Spearheaded by Lori Alhadeff, whose 14 - year - old daughter Alyssa was one of the 17 people killed in the Feb. 14 attack, more than 100 people congregated at Quigley Park for a day filled with tennis, shopping and a tree dedication in memory of those lost.
Michelangelo Pistoletto's thrift - shop ruminations on the classical world, Sherman's theatrical denigrations of the old masters, Matthew Barney's stylized and unctuous myth - making, Andy Warhol pissing on a copper canvas, and Pablo Picasso, whose inclusion presumably lends blue - chip credibility to this motley collection of objects.
A must - visit is the combined rare - books shop and contemporary art gallery Harper's Books, featuring work by Irish painter Genieve Figgis, whose dark, witty parodies of Old Masters and 18th - century paintings are on view through August 10, followed by a group show featuring abstract and near - surreal paintings by Katherine Bradford, Sarah Braman, Al Freeman, and Adrianne Rubenstein (August 13 to September 25).
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