Suket dhir biography of barack obama
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21 Indian Fashion Designers You Should Check Out Immediately
Sheena Sood of abacaxi
Inspired by nature, Sheena's designs feature tie-dye, quilted textures, mesh panels, balloon sleeves, and more. She also has an array of cute seashell hair accessories and beaded face masks.
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Anita Dongre
Born in Mumbai, Anita has been a mainstay in India's fashion scene with her clothing and jewelry designs, but when Kate Middleton wore one of her dresses in 2016, everyone wanted to nab the style. She has a flagship store in New York City, and other celebs who have worn her creations are Beyoncé, Sophie Turner, and Priyanka Chopra.
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Suket Dhir of SUKETDHIR
Wow to this matching floral set! Designer Suket of his namesake line makes some truly stand out pieces with the most stunning prints. He was also awarded the International Woolmark Prize in 2016—the same award that has gone to the late Karl Lagerfeld and Yves Sai
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Coralesque
When Bibhu Mohapatra first met Michelle Obama at a White House event a couple of years ago, he humbly joined his hands and thanked her for helping him fulfill his American dream. The US First Lady had then just begun wearing the Indian fashion designer’s creations, and he had become a celebrity in the long shadow of her grace.
Mohapatra’s gratitude was justified: such is Obama’s fashion influence that she even inspired a 2010 study bygd Finance Professor David Yermack at New York University’s Stern School of Business, who calculated that an apparel brand’s stock prices increased by an average of $14 million every time she appeared in public dressed in its clothes. In one case, after she wore a J Crew dress on a TV show, the group’s stock rose 25 per cent by the end of the week, and 175 per cent in the next 14 months, a gain of about $1.8 billion in market capitalisation.
Michelle Obama responded bygd telling Mohapatra, “Bibhu, you and I are going to do big things togeth
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It was a year to be confounded, shocked, humbled.
Donald J. Trump won the American presidency, defying polls, mockery and fear to defeat Hillary Clinton. Britons jolted their country and the world by voting to leave the European Union. Syria’s agony played out before a largely indifferent world, its children staring into the camera with eyes bred in terror, blood flecking their clothing.
The president of the Philippines unleashed a merciless war on drugs, boasting of killing drug dealers himself when he was a mayor, and many of his citizens cheered him on. Climate change created a new class of refugees, even as climate-change skeptics were nominated to key United States cabinet posts.
And talk about shocking: The Chicago Cubs won the World Series after a drought of 108 years.
It was a year so unexpected, so tumultuous, that the fight has just begun over which narrative might possibly explain it. For some, it was the comeuppance of the elites and the rebellion of the forgotten