@afra_mimo_: Dress @La novo ❤️

👑 M 🖤 Î 🖤 M 👑
👑 M 🖤 Î 🖤 M 👑
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Wednesday 25 December 2024 08:30:04 GMT
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___picci___07
☠️😈 ℙ𝕚𝕔𝕔𝕙𝕚 😈☠️ :
Red 💖🥰
2024-12-25 08:35:00
8
samirhossain501
🏆ᴄʀɪᴄᴋᴇᴛ ʟᴏᴠᴇʀ🏆🏏 :
so cout 😫
2024-12-25 08:35:22
8
smile_king_ovi
✨Call me Ovi vaiya✨ :
crush
2024-12-25 08:37:11
7
shariar_rafi0
💥💥Rafi💥💥 :
wow ❤️
2024-12-25 08:44:23
7
anikmahmud660
Anik :
Heels from
2024-12-25 10:04:27
2
littelsiran
[HYPER]⛔ :
your my and im your💕💕💕
2024-12-25 08:43:05
5
.saimon.18
🦋hey saimon🦋 :
I. 💗. U💖💖💖
2024-12-25 08:34:10
6
stepbrother482
Repost'er✅ :
check my repost
2024-12-25 11:19:14
1
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The Overlord Embroidery tells the story of D-Day and the Battle of Normandy in 34 extraordinary hand-stitched panels with a total length of 83 metres. Lord Dulverton commissioned the embroidery in 1968.  He set up an advisory committee including retired senior officers from the army, navy and air force to help him with the project.  Together they decided what events the embroidery would represent. The Overlord Embroidery was stitched by a team of highly skilled women at the Royal School of Needlework in London.  They used a technique called appliqué, stitching smaller pieces of fabric onto a larger background piece to recreate the pictures in Sandra’s designs. More than 50 different materials were used in the Overlord Embroidery, including actual uniforms.  Everything was stitched by hand. It took five years to stitch the Overlord Embroidery. The final panel was finished in January 1974. It was directly inspired by the Bayeux Tapestry. The famous Bayeux Tapestry was created around 1080 to mark the conquest of England by Duke William of Normandy (William the Conqueror). Following the defeat of the English army at the Battle of Hastings in 1066, William became King of England. The Bayeux Tapestry is on display in the Norman town of Bayeux. Lord Dulverton, who in the late 1960s commissioned the Overlord Embroidery, visited Bayeux and spoke to the Tapestry’s curator as part of preparations for the creation of his embroidery. The Overlord Embroidery is 83 metres long, while the Bayeux Tapestry is just over 68 metres in length. As it was originally planned, the Overlord Embroidery would have been about one-third shorter. While the Overlord Embroidery was being made however, to ensure the story of the Normandy campaign was told in full, Lord Dulverton decided to add extra sections to it. But the Overlord Embroidery isn’t the world’s longest any more. In the 2000s the Embroiderers’ Guild in the UK created a 605-metre long embroidery, which includes stitches from around 7,000 embroiderers from across the world. #davidharry #thelondonspy #dday #embroidery  #embroideryart #sewing #needlework #dday #ww2history #normandy1944 #ddaymuseum #operationoverlord #bayeuxtapestry #savingprivateryan #battleofbritain
The Overlord Embroidery tells the story of D-Day and the Battle of Normandy in 34 extraordinary hand-stitched panels with a total length of 83 metres. Lord Dulverton commissioned the embroidery in 1968. He set up an advisory committee including retired senior officers from the army, navy and air force to help him with the project. Together they decided what events the embroidery would represent. The Overlord Embroidery was stitched by a team of highly skilled women at the Royal School of Needlework in London. They used a technique called appliqué, stitching smaller pieces of fabric onto a larger background piece to recreate the pictures in Sandra’s designs. More than 50 different materials were used in the Overlord Embroidery, including actual uniforms. Everything was stitched by hand. It took five years to stitch the Overlord Embroidery. The final panel was finished in January 1974. It was directly inspired by the Bayeux Tapestry. The famous Bayeux Tapestry was created around 1080 to mark the conquest of England by Duke William of Normandy (William the Conqueror). Following the defeat of the English army at the Battle of Hastings in 1066, William became King of England. The Bayeux Tapestry is on display in the Norman town of Bayeux. Lord Dulverton, who in the late 1960s commissioned the Overlord Embroidery, visited Bayeux and spoke to the Tapestry’s curator as part of preparations for the creation of his embroidery. The Overlord Embroidery is 83 metres long, while the Bayeux Tapestry is just over 68 metres in length. As it was originally planned, the Overlord Embroidery would have been about one-third shorter. While the Overlord Embroidery was being made however, to ensure the story of the Normandy campaign was told in full, Lord Dulverton decided to add extra sections to it. But the Overlord Embroidery isn’t the world’s longest any more. In the 2000s the Embroiderers’ Guild in the UK created a 605-metre long embroidery, which includes stitches from around 7,000 embroiderers from across the world. #davidharry #thelondonspy #dday #embroidery #embroideryart #sewing #needlework #dday #ww2history #normandy1944 #ddaymuseum #operationoverlord #bayeuxtapestry #savingprivateryan #battleofbritain

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