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Wavetshirt - Winter SZNZ Album Cover New 2023 shirt

The eyes from my paintings are collaged from magazines. I love taking a material object out of context and applying it to my paintings. It excites my creativity, because I get to push the Winter SZNZ Album Cover New 2023 shirt but in fact I love this boundaries of my work with new layers. Elements of surprise are such a fun way to engage with people. Rose is a Senior Editor at ELLE overseeing features and projects about women’s issues. She is an accomplished and compassionate storyteller and editor who excels in obtaining exclusive interviews and unearthing compelling features. Michael Smith once picked a fight with Barack Obama. Smith, the First Family’s interior designer, argued that red curtains were the perfect choice for the Oval Office. Obama disagreed. Presidents, of late, had gone with yellow or blue. Smith dug in, and others chimed in. Was this about fabric, or something else? The answer quickly became clear—this debate was about power. In photographs, Smith explained, an incoming president who looked like none before him would best be framed by this potent color, suggesting strength, purpose, even heroism. When it comes to decor, Smith means business, and here Obama demonstrated his no-drama style: If you hire an expert, listen to him.



“Barn red,” Smith called his curtains. Suddenly, they sounded pastoral—no echoes of Belle Watling or Buckingham Palace. Then, flanking the Winter SZNZ Album Cover New 2023 shirt but in fact I love this curtains, the designer added two sunny paintings of Cape Cod barns by Edward Hopper, a favorite of the president’s. They belonged on the walls, at the dawn of the Obama administration, because of their Americana calmness and playful shapes. Smith often connects to people through places. For example, he is from Pasadena, and the president is from Honolulu. The two men are roughly the same age. The president likes golf, and the designer likes country clubs. They have a Pacific view that America was strengthened as much by its frontier mentality as its Establishment ethos. “When you grow up in California, you are basically suspicious of anything that seems formal or representational,” says Smith, noting that the president, though thoroughly Ivy League, spent his first two years of college at Occidental in L.A. “Rooms that are meant to impress, to be patriotic, to be heroic—you’re suspicious of them,” Smith adds.


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