A baby for rent

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My mother married a short and brunette woman, she looked very beautiful in her little hat. One day when I asked him to let me try it, he said it wasn’t his thing. Like many brides at that time, she had rented a bag and gloves for an important appointment. Brand new was a rare treat in the midst of Franco’s dictatorship. If you had to choose between the fond memory of your own ornament and finishing the letter on the floor, the decision wouldn’t be difficult. Infanta Sofia attended her sister Leonor’s Constitutional swearing-in ceremony last week wearing a rented dress, for a reason other than the threat of red numbers: The Royal Family has joined the sustainable luxury trend; court with great fanfare. Anyone who thinks that both concepts go together as badly as flip-flops and socks is mistaken and out of date with the pijippy wave. The Kings’ second daughter wore a dress worth 1,770 euros, but she paid 268 euros because she rented it for a few days from a branded clothing and accessories rental company. You’d have to be in climate change denial to go to Madrid for the slightly warmer, mid-autumn summer, but it’s not about focusing on the details, but rather Zarzuela’s clear commitment to the circular economy and recyclable fashion. No need to hoard special rags, a laughable lesson in planetary consciousness Greta Thunberg. Maybe Princess of Asturias Some will wear earrings worth two thousand euros expensive shoes and a special suit made for the occasion, so she was in the leading role, but her sister contributes her grain of sand to save the ecosystem. And her mother repeats her vintage dress Carolina Herrera The impossible-to-calculate price is another lesson in moderation in these inflationary times. Let’s finally accept that wearing the diamond crowns of our ancestors is more sustainable than buying new jewelry.

I don’t think royal women will be customers of Cáritas second-hand stores or resale apps from now on, they’re missing out. We have been quietly practicing the circular economy for decades, seemingly invented by influencers and the wealthy. Since summer ended, thousands upon thousands of reusable supermarket bags filled with worn-out clothes have been going from house to house across this country, looking for children who could use them. From attics, storage rooms and couches come plastic sacks full of clothes and shoes belonging to friends’ children, waiting for the right moment. There are few things more satisfying than wearing sweatpants because this little girl had another growth spurt and found four or five neatly packaged in the corner of the closet. I’ll give you a size 14 pen with two of the child’s t-shirts and fifteen short-sleeved t-shirts. He won’t wear twelve pairs of jeans in his three lifetimes, and he also packs shirts that have barely been used. This is the circular economy and the rest is princess stories. Now Queen Letizia If you are traveling to Denmark, you can take the opportunity to bring a bag of clothes. Mary DonaldsonAlmost the same size and quit renting, which sends the wrong message. Who wants to buy a president forever if he can elect him for four years and then return him and buy a new one?

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