Sentences with phrase «seasonal trends like»

We especially love this chic ensemble for summer, as you can easily incorporate other seasonal trends like bold colors, floral print, ruffles and shoulder details.

Not exact matches

Make use of holidays, seasonal activities, and cultural trends, like football tailgating activities or something tied to a major upcoming concert.
As baking trends evolved, we added Butterscotch, Milk Chocolate, Mini, Premier White, Dark Chocolate, special flavors like Peanut Butter & Milk Chocolate, and even seasonal flavors like Pumpkin Spice.
Zara has been hitting it out of ze park all year round, really great translation of seasonal trends from them... you look like a teen but without the pimples and lack of confidence!
I started this series because I felt like there wasn't any information available about seasonal fashion that was not only evolved around trends.
This spring, there has been a lot of trends, what with the big sleeves, florals and seasonal colors that I have loved but felt like I needed to balance those trends out with a classic.
I have never been one to spend tons of money on the new seasonal fashion trends that I do not really like and will not wear after a few months.
I don't think I would invest money on an expensive pair of embroidered jeans (like those fro Gucci) because this trend looks really seasonal.
Refresh your shoe collection with on - trend seasonal shades, like this red velvet suede option.
And while this trend began in television, it has now extended to books; I'm seeing more and more romances with seasonal angles: New Year's Eve, summer holidays like Memorial Day and July 4th, Halloween, Thanksgiving, and of course, Christmas.
Re 9 wili — I know of a paper suggesting, as I recall, that enhanced «backradiation» (downward radiation reaching the surface emitted by the air / clouds) contributed more to Arctic amplification specifically in the cold part of the year (just to be clear, backradiation should generally increase with any warming (aside from greenhouse feedbacks) and more so with a warming due to an increase in the greenhouse effect (including feedbacks like water vapor and, if positive, clouds, though regional changes in water vapor and clouds can go against the global trend); otherwise it was always my understanding that the albedo feedback was key (while sea ice decreases so far have been more a summer phenomenon (when it would be warmer to begin with), the heat capacity of the sea prevents much temperature response, but there is a greater build up of heat from the albedo feedback, and this is released in the cold part of the year when ice forms later or would have formed or would have been thicker; the seasonal effect of reduced winter snow cover decreasing at those latitudes which still recieve sunlight in the winter would not be so delayed).
On a (2011) Climate Etc. post Pondering the Arctic Ocean, I interpreted the record in the context of a (qualitative) change point analysis, defined by changes in trend, mean value, amplitude of the annual cycle, and interannual variability.It looks like 2013 was another change point year, characterized by low amplitude seasonal cycle.
What the paper does focus on, Hansen said, is determining whether extreme weather events like the Texas heat wave can be attributed to climate variability — the natural ups and downs in seasonal temperature — or to the global upward trend in summer temperatures that science now links with climate change.
It is tough to get meaningful aggregate data on things like solo and small lawyer billing rates, seasonal trends, and which practice areas generate the most income.
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