Sentence examples for hot prints from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

"I still think she's still a girl and not a woman," Mr. Henry said to explain the fresh spirit of a collection that effortlessly embraced hot prints on short dresses, a tailored jacket inspired by the folklore of Brittany and dresses and bags woven in chiffon.

The talk was of colours (hot), prints (prominent), and how the dastardly Gucci had stolen London's best models by summoning them early for Milan's week, which followed.The fashion industry is much more important than the frothing over foxy frocks made of recycled metal scraps and PVC suggests.

Similar(58)

But in attributing the ability to express a condition to something that is manifestly unable to do so, Shrigley is having a go at the infantilising anthropomorphism currently sloshing around daily culture: the coffee cup which has "Careful – I'm hot!" printed on it; or, as I saw recently on a tourist double-decker the other day, "Sorry – I'm not in service".

With their sharp edges and modern lines, they're a graphic metaphor for this season's hottest prints.

First Lady Michelle Obama nailed the so-hot prints trend at Saturday night's White House Correspondents Dinnerr.

But the changes could go in the other direction: back to Chernomyrdin-style governance, with (even more) rampant corruption, state meddling and red-hot printing presses at the central bank.

Dries Van Noten also seemed to have a crush on this cranky college girl, so dissolute that she didn't wash her hair before shuffling down the catwalk clad in hot tropical prints, shiny swirling stripes, and other Dries tropes.

"SQUALID SYDNEY WOMBAT (M), striking natural dirty digger seeks beckoning, foxy NYC squirrel (F) for trans-Antipodean roo, pert exchanges, and postmodern "Murdoch-She-Wrote" contemplations of retrospectives in hot metal prints".

Words such as "hell" and "helluva" were censored in this first printing as "certain words [are] too hot to print".

The end of hot metal printing at the Guardian followed the Wapping dispute in 1986, when Rupert Murdoch shut down News International's print operation and moved to a new east London plant overnight, with 6,000 people losing their jobs in the process.

The inscription refers to the end of hot metal printing at the Guardian.

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