Eliza Goldsmith for af94
Photographer Josh Wilks
Makeup Artist Ana Takahashi
Newest Cool
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Drew Gregory Fountain shot by Josh Wilkz for i-D Japan
Makeup by Ana Takahashi, Hair by Ryo Narushima and Styling by Elle Fell and Eliza Goldsmith
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eliza goldsmith by guen fiore for purple fashion magazine
style by robbie spencer
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Femme Fatale Booklist:
Books to become your dream girl. This list is curated to unleash the empowered woman inside, tap into your dark feminine energy, and help you succeed in every area of life. Sections are listed below:
Self-Development/Mindset
Seductive Psychology
Femme Fatale/Dark Feminine/Feminist Reads
Business/Finance/Entrepreneurship
Productivity
Mental Health
Physical Health
Fashion & Beauty
Get educated. Expand your mind. Enjoy xx
Self-Development/Mindset:
Mindset: The New Psychology of Success by Carol Dweck
The Magic of Thinking Big by David Schwartz
Atomic Habits by James Clear
You Can Heal Your Life by Louise Hay
Don’t Believe Everything You Think by Joseph Nguyen
The Mountain Is You: Transforming Self-Sabotage Into Self-Mastery by Brianna Wiest
Boundary Boss: The Essential Guide to Talk True, Be Seen, and (Finally) Live Free by Terri Cole
The Confidence Formula: May Cause: Lower Self-Doubt, Higher Self-Esteem, and Comfort In Your Own Skin by Patrick King
The Slight Edge by Jeff Olson
Choose Your Story, Change Your Life: Silence Your Inner Critic and Rewrite Your Life from the Inside Out by Kindra Hall
When You’re Ready, This Is How To Heal by Brianna Wiest
Hunting Discomfort: How to Get Breakthrough Results in Life and Business No Matter What by Sterling Hawkins
The Four Pivots: Reimagining Justice, Reimagining Ourselves by Shawn Ginwright
The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron
A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose by Eckhart Tolle
The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle
Seductive Psychology:
48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene
Mastery by Robert Greene
The Art of Seduction by Robert Greene
How To Win Friends & Influence People by Dale Carnegie
Power vs. Force by David Hawkins
Femme Fatale/Dark Feminine/Feminist Reads:
Unbound: A Woman’s Guide To Power by Kasia Urbaniak
Pussy: A Reclamation by Regena Thomashauer
Why Men Love Bitches: From Doormat to Dreamgirl―A Woman's Guide to Holding Her Own in a Relationship by Sherry Argov
A Single Revolution by Shani Silver
This Is Your Brain On Birth Control by Sarah Hill
Taking Charge of Your Fertility by Toni Weschler
Regretting Motherhood: A Study by Orna Donath
Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Me by Caroline Criado Perez
Women Who Run With The Wolves: Myths and Stories of the Wild Woman Archetype by Clarissa Pinkola Estes
The Second Sex by Simone De Beauvoir
The Ethics of Ambiguity by Simone De Beauvoir
A Room of One’s Own by Virginia Woolf
Women & Power: A Manifesto by Mary Beard
Spinster by Kate Bolick
What French Women Know: About Love, Sex, and Other Matters of the Heart and Mind by Debra Ollivier
Living Forever Chic: Frenchwomen's Timeless Secrets for Everyday Elegance, Gracious Entertaining, and Enduring Allure by Tish Jett
Business/Finance/Entrepreneurship:
Never Split The Difference by Chris Voss
Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini
The 2-Hour Cocktail Party by Nick Gray
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen Covey
Girl On Fire by Cara Alwill Leyba
Women, Work & the Art of Savoir Faire: Business Sense & Sensibility by Mireille Guiliano
Crucial Conversations Tools for Talking When Stakes Are High by Joseph Grenny
Living On Purpose: Five Deliberate Choices to Realize Fulfillment by Amy Eliza Wong
The Earned Life: Lose Regret, Choose Fulfillment by Marshall Goldsmith
The High 5 Habit: Take Control of Your Life with One Simple Habit by Mel Robbins
Building a Second Brain: A Proven Method to Organize Your Digital Life and Unlock Your Creative Potential by Tiago Forte
The Culture Code: The Secrets of Highly Successful Groups by Daniel Coyle
Rich As F*ck: More Money Than You Know What to Do With by Amanda Frances
Rich Bitch by Nicole Lapin
Like She Owns the Place by Cara Alwill Leyba
So Good They Can’t Ignore You by Cal Newport
The First Minute: How To Start Conversations That Get Results by Chris Fenning
Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman
Build: An Unorthodox Guide to Making Things Worth Making by Tony Fadell
The Hard About Hard Things by Ben Horowitz
The Psychology of Money: Timeless Lessons on Wealth, Greed, and Happiness by Morgan Housel
Productivity:
The Science of Self-Discipline: The Willpower, Mental Toughness, and Self-Control to Resist Temptation and Achieve Your Goals by Peter Hollins
Free Time: Lose The Busy Work, Love Your Business by Jenny Blake
Vision to Reality: Stop Working, Start Living by Curtis Jenkins
Deep Work: Rules For Focused Success in A Distracted World by Cal Newport
Finish What You Start by Peter Hollins
Mental Health:
Becoming The One by Sheleana Aiyana
Attached by Amir Levine
Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy by David D. Burns
Whole Again by Jackson MacKenzie
Take Your Lunch Break by Massoma Alam Chohan
Stop Overthinking by Nick Trenton
Codependent No More by Melody Beattie
Designing the Mind: The Principles of Psychitecture by Ryan A. Bush
Radical Acceptance: Awakening The Love That Heals Fear and Shame by Tara Brach
Recovery from Gaslighting & Narcissistic Abuse, Codependency & Complex PTSD by Don Barlow
Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents: How to Heal from Distant, Rejecting, or Self-Involved Parents by Lindsay C. Gibson
Inner Child Recovery Work with Radical Self-Compassion by Don Barlow
What Happened To You?: Conversations on Trauma, Resilience, and Healing by Bruce D. Perry & Oprah Winfrey
Atlas of the Heart by Brené Brown
Physical Health:
The China Study by T. Collin Campbell
The Blue Zones by Dan Buettner
How Not To Die by Dr. Michael Greger
Befriending Your Body by Ann Saffi Biasetti
Brain Over Binge by Kathryn Hansen
The Power of Self-Discipline by Peter Hollins
Fit at Any Age: It's Never Too Late by Susan Niebergall
French Women Don't Get Fat by Mireille Guiliano
The Archetype Diet by Dana James
Fashion & Beauty:
The Lucky Shopping Manual: Building and Improving Your Wardrobe Piece by Piece by Andrea Linett & Kim France
Dress Like A Parisian by Alois Guinut
Parisian Chic by Ines de la Fressange & Sophie Gachet
Why French Women Wear Vintage: And other secrets of sustainable style by Alois Guinut
Ageless Beauty the French Way: Secrets from Three Generations of French Beauty Editors by Clemence von Mueffling
Skincare: The Ultimate No-Nonsense Guide by Caroline Hirons
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Eliza Goldsmith
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Eliza Goldsmith in Poster Girl
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Eliza goldsmith by guen fiore for purple fashion magazine
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Today in Christian History
Today is Thursday, September 1st, the 244th day of 2022. There are 121 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
256: North African bishops vote unanimously that Christians who were baptized by rival sects must be rebaptized upon reentering the catholic church. The vote leads to a war of words between the North Africans and Rome, where Bishop Stephen (pope) disagrees. Eventually the worldwide church accepts the position held by Stephen.
1680: Beheading of Angelis, a young goldsmith in Constantinople who had shown little seriousness toward his faith. However, when confronted with the choice to convert to Islam or lose his life, he had boldly confessed Christ.
1687: Death at Cambridge, England, of Dr. Henry More, a theologian and philosopher deeply interested in mystical questions regarding spiritual beings, apologetics, and union with God, as well as more standard philosophical and scientific topics. He had communicated with many thinkers of repute in his day, including Robert Boyle, Isaac Newton, and Rene Descartes.
1784: Shortly after four in the morning, John Wesley meets with Thomas Coke and James Creighton, presbyters of the Church of England, to ordain Richard Whatcoat and Thomas Vasey as deacons for America. The following day they will ordain Whatcoat and Vasey as elders (Presbyters) and appoint Coke as Superintendent (Bishop) for America.
1803: The Massachusetts Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge is instituted in Boston, the first tract society established in North America.
1836: When missionaries Marcus Whitman, H. H. Spalding, and their wives reach Walla Walla, Washington, Eliza Spaulding and Narcissa Whitman are the first white women to have crossed the North American continent.
1901: Death of Isabella Thoburn from Asiatic cholera. She had been a notable missionary-educator.
1923: Jessie Wengler, an Assemblies of God missionary in Japan, experiences an earthquake and flees to a bamboo grove for safety.
1936: Death of Lewis E. Jones, YMCA leader. He wrote the hymn tune POWER IN THE BLOOD ( “Would You Be Free from Your Burden of Sin?”).
1940: Death in Manila of Gregorio Aglipay, the main founder and first bishop of the Philippine Independent Church (Iglesia Filipina Independiente).
1957: At a massive rally in Times Square, Billy Graham concludes his sixteen-week New York City evangelistic crusade in New York City, attended by nearly two million people.
1970: Mei Yibao begins serving as president of the New Asia College of the Chinese University in Hong Kong. A Christian, he had served as traveling secretary for the YMCA for a year and had led Yanching University, a Christian institution, during the difficult days of Japanese occupation.
1975: Martyrdom in Boniato Prison of Gerardo Gonzalez Alvarez, a Cuban Bible preacher.
2018: A mob of nearly 1,000 Islamists attacks Christians gathered in a home to pray in Dimshaw, Egypt. The mob claims that the Christians don’t have a license, and a rumor spreads that they are on the verge of building a new church. Only twenty-five attackers are arrested and the court will release twenty-one of them.
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Eliza Goldsmith
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Eliza Goldsmith at Mimi Wade, Fall 2020
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Agent Provocateur | Naughty Tie Side Brief • Fall Winter 2021-22 | ph Cleo Glover | model Eliza Goldsmith
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A while ago I was looking through the Directory of London for the year 1794 to see what women were listed as running businesses that year, and I wanted to put the ones I found here in case anyone else finds the list interesting:
Elizabeth Andrews, goldsmith and jeweller
Rose Beckford, merchant
Susanna Bower, orange merchant
Mary Burt, ironmonger
Alice Butler, hatmaker
Eliz. Carson & Co, Letter Founders
Ann Centlivres, merchant
Sarah Chettle, oil and color shop
Penelope Clarke, fan maker
Mary Clement, China and Glass Seller
Eliza Cock, biscuit baker
Ann Cope, silk mercer
Susanna Curteis, brewer
Mary Deacon, manchester warehouse
Ann Ducroz, Flower & Ostrich Feather Manufacturer
Sarah Evans, Silk Dyer
Eliz. & T. Gillepsey, coal factors and sail makers
Elizabeth Harlow, Bookseller
Mary Harris, silk throwster
Sarah Hill, Oil & Hop Merchant
Mary, Thomas, and John Jackson, Coal Merchants
Elizabeth Jagelman, biscuit baker
Sarah James, Cooper
Ann Jones, plumber
Phoebe Kemerer, Tanner
Hannah Leaverston, Ship & House Brazier
Charlotte Matthews, Merchant
Jane Mayor, brass founder
Elizabeth Mock, carpet warehouse
Mary Napper, Dyer and Calico Printer
Elizabeth Newball & Co, Coach-Founders
Elizabeth Newberry, Bookseller and Stationer
Mary Noble, rag merchant
Beliza Oldham, Button-seller
Ann Oram, Plumber and Glass-cutter
Jane Robertson, Turner & Toy Dealer
Mary Shirley, Cooper
Hannah & Thomas Sibley, Haberdashers and Glovers
Mary Smith, carpet warehouse
Elizabeth Swain, Upholsterer
Ann Thwaites, Brandy and Rum Merchant
Mary Wilkinson, Block-Maker
Some notes:
- That’s a lot of different occupations represented! Sure, we have some things that we might consider stereotypically feminine work - fan makers, button-sellers, and hatmakers - but we have even more women working in occupations where we might not expect to find them - coopers, smiths, plumbers, and tanners.
- A few of these women probably apprenticed into their trades, but I’m betting that most of them are widows. And that’s important, because every occupation that we see women taking over from their husbands when widowed is an occupation that the widow must have participated in, to some extent, when her husband was alive, or she wouldn’t have the skills necessary to take over the shop when he died. That means that we can expect that lots of other businesses on this list were also making use of female labor - a business owner’s wife is only very rarely listed as a co-owner, but that doesn’t mean that she might not be doing the same sort of work that he is.
- Romance novels set during this time period tend to be about the upper classes, where women were expected not to work (which, to be clear, left them with about three fewer employment options than men of the same social class), and where marriage was therefore very important. But I have to figure that who you married was also pretty important for middle-class women - after all, it looks like who you married might well decide what sort of work you were doing for the rest of your life!
- No, I don’t have any idea what an “Ostrich Feather Manufacturer” is.
- It should be noted that this is a list of a few dozen female tradespeople out of a list of thousands of men (although there are probably a few other women on the list that we can’t be sure of, since some people go only by initials or last names). The vast majority of people who ran their own businesses were still men; I am not claiming that the 1700s were an egalitarian era, or that all of the options open to men were also open to women. But I think this still tells us something about what middle-class women were doing in this time and place, and the answer is that they were doing a LOT of things.
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Double trouble! Princess Diana's twin nieces Lady Amelia and Eliza Spencer dazzle in sparkling silver dresses as they attend award show in aid of The Princes Trust
By Monica Greep For Mailonline - November 2nd 2021, 9:19:16 pm
Princess Diana's nieces Lady Amelia and Lady Eliza Spencer donned sparkles as they walked the red carpet ahead of the Leopard Awards at London's Goldsmith Hall this evening.
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Touring the White House with Gurt Tüttel - a Sim7 exclusive.
Gurt Tüttel was recently the lucky guest of the First Lady and was treated to a personal tour of Simerica's presidential home.
Sigolène Cronin traverses the state floor cross hall as she makes her way to the Blue Room; one of the state floor’s three drawing rooms, each one named after the colour of their respective décor. The Blue Room is noted for its oval shape and has been the scene of a number of high profile presidential altercations. One such altercation was between fourteenth president, Seymour Dryden and a turkey one Harvestfest eve. The turkey's brave defense of its life began the White House tradition of the annual pardoning of the turkey. More recently, it was spotted in a candid social media shot from Eliza Pancakes on the occasion of the Goth's final Winterfest celebration depicting President Goth and Nancy Landgraab engaged in fisticuffs.
Gurt Tüttel: Thank you for inviting us into your official home, Mrs Cronin.
Sigolène Cronin: Well we're just so pleased to be able to show you around. Please follow me into the East Room.
The tour now arrives at the biggest room in the White House, the grand East Room.
Gurt Tüttel: This is where you have concerts?
Sigolène Cronin: Why yes, this is where we like to entertain guests with music and plays. We have all sorts of performances - just last week we had a recital with the Simphonic Orchestra - it was quite a squeeze, over a hundred musicians.
Gurt Tüttel: And this piano has an interesting story?
Sigolène Cronin: Oh yes, that’s right! It once belonged to the King of the United Simdom and was acquired by brave SImerican soldiers who raided the King's ship during the War of Independence. It's always been horribly out of tune!
Gurt Tüttel: Boy oh boy, that is quite a tale! What’s next?
The tour now enters the State Dining Room.
Gurt Tüttel: There are many pieces of historical significance in this room, isn't that right Mrs Cronin?
Sigolène Cronin: That’s right. This surtout de table - the table centrepiece - was designed by master goldsmith Jacques le Septième (@thejim07) and has come all the way from Champ Les Sims, after the Revolution. We got lots of discounted furniture then - like this table, with these little old eagle supports.
Gurt Tüttel: Boy, that's quite something.
Sigolène Cronin: And then after the next revolution, they were able to get chandeliers for the entire house - even the bathrooms. Quelle chance pour nous!
Now having moved to the first floor, the tour arrives in the Residence, where not many get to see. Jeremy Purvis has already passed through these rooms, like a beautiful storm, leaving in his wake tasteful décor and peerlessly matched pieces taken from the White House historical collection.
Sigolène Cronin: We chose this green because it reminds us of the grass and trees in Brindleton Bay. We think they're just so green.
Gurt Tüttel: This floor isn't just a place for you and your family to relax and enjoy the wallpaper, there are several noteworthy guest rooms here too!
Sigolène Cronin: Yes, Gurt. This way here is to the Lincoln bedroom. They wouldn't let us change the wallpaper and it gives us all migraines, so we tend not to come in here. Lincoln used this room as his office and wrote important speeches here. We want to keep the house's heritage for all to see.
Gurt Tüttel: Yessiree, it's a real feast for the eyes.
And finally, coming to the Yellow Oval drawing room, which is directly above the Blue Room, Gurt and Sigolène bump into President Cronin.
Gurt Tüttel: Gee-whizz. Hi there, Mr President - fancy meeting you here.
Henry Cronin: Welcome to the White House, Gurt. This here is the Yellow Oval room. This is where we spend time with our foreign visitors before state dinners. We had President Pauli of Selvadorada here last month and we were quite grateful for all this red furniture - He spilled so much wine.
Sigolène Cronin: It's because they're such passionate conversationalists in Selvadorada. President Pauli's arms were all over the show.
Henry Cronin: Will we have a seat on these clean sofas?
Sigolène Cronin: We also like to play some games in this room - Don't Wake The Llama, Risk, Poker. Simerica's third President, Jackson Peterson, lost most of Willow Creek during a bad hand. They only got it back after a racey round of Truth or Dare.
Gurt Tüttel: Haha. Well, that's quite a story Mrs Cronin. How are you finding your new home Mr President?
Henry Cronin: It's a real honour to be here. It's so convivial, we've been up to such comedy and mischief since we've arrived.
Gurt Tüttel: Golly that’s great!
Sim7 would like to thank the White House for extending the invitation for a private televised tour. It's a real privilege to get this behind-the-scenes view. We look forward to covering more White House events and exclusives in the weeks and months to come.
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Lady Gabriella Windsor bridal party
Five-year-old Maud, who attends the same school in London as Prince George, looked adorable as she kept a watchful eye over her younger sister Isabella, three. Other youngsters who made up the bridal party were Leonora Weisman, Aurelia del Drago, Eliza Goldsmith and Emily Conolly. The Pageboys were Frederick Murray, Rafferty Murray and Karim Khawaja. Estella Taylor, Jessie Conolly and Hannah Conolly were Special Attendants.
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