@brookeabarcia: cutie summer shoes for 2026 🍋 #summershoes #jellyshoes #kittenheels

Brooke Barcia
Brooke Barcia
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Region: US
Monday 20 April 2026 01:22:24 GMT
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beegeegenz
BeeGee :
I am 53 and we wore jelly shoes too. I got clear and brown. I couldn't choose just 1. they are way more comfy than any jelly I have owned.
2026-05-14 01:09:26
0
cori_k__
cori__ :
Forget the shoes. Where is your dress from? It’s so pretty
2026-04-20 04:32:55
7
eliiregg
user671842 :
^^^ please link the dress!
2026-04-20 06:54:42
3
thejessiesimpson
Jessie Simpson :
The blue jelly slides 🥰
2026-05-05 19:26:12
0
stephanie.m.sardinas
stephanie<3 :
Soo cutie
2026-04-29 04:31:35
0
cassieariel
Cassieariel444 🦋 :
😁😁😁
2026-05-19 08:20:36
0
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❄️ Disney’s Frozen Illusion Revealed The most impressive part of the Anna thawing effect isn’t how it works (and that’s very impressive). It’s the number 15 million. This is Anna and Elsa's Frozen Journey at Tokyo DisneySea. You float through the iconic scenes of the 2013 Frozen film, and right in front of you, Anna goes from completely frozen to magically thawed, just like in the film’s climax. That transformation is visually impossible outside of animation. But Imagineers figured out how to do it in real life. So how did Disney pull that off? Three elements working together.  First, the digital. Projection mapping covers Anna, her cape, and the scenery with shimmering ice that animates away in perfect sync as she thaws. Second, the physical. Anna is an animatronic, so the robotics going from perfectly still to animated are the easy part.  The real trick is the cape.  It goes from completely rigid to falling smoothly, in a way that feels impossible without ice magic. The secret is revealed when the scene resets between boats: a top rod attached to Anna lifts up and down, and a series of smaller rods inside pull taut to give the cape rigid structure, then collapse when the top rod drops. Anna’s cape works like a bat's wing expanding and contracting. But that resetting clip reveals the most important element of any great Disney effect. Third, the effect cycles. Disney doesn't have to pull off this illusion once. Not even once a night like a magician. This ride operates 12 hours a day, every day. The entire scene resets in 2 seconds. The full cycle runs 30 seconds. That's 1,440 times a day. Like the Rent song, that's 525,600 times a year. And because Disney builds rides that last for decades, this is an effect that needs to repeat over 15 million times in the next 30 years.  (Technically 15,768,000, I’m building in a buffer for ride downtime and refurbs. The math isn’t perfect, but you get the idea). Imagineers didn't just create an effect that melts minds. They created one that can do it millions of times on repeat. What Disney effect would you like me to break down next? #TokyoDisneySea #DisneyEffects #Imagineering #Animatronics #DisneySecrets
❄️ Disney’s Frozen Illusion Revealed The most impressive part of the Anna thawing effect isn’t how it works (and that’s very impressive). It’s the number 15 million. This is Anna and Elsa's Frozen Journey at Tokyo DisneySea. You float through the iconic scenes of the 2013 Frozen film, and right in front of you, Anna goes from completely frozen to magically thawed, just like in the film’s climax. That transformation is visually impossible outside of animation. But Imagineers figured out how to do it in real life. So how did Disney pull that off? Three elements working together. First, the digital. Projection mapping covers Anna, her cape, and the scenery with shimmering ice that animates away in perfect sync as she thaws. Second, the physical. Anna is an animatronic, so the robotics going from perfectly still to animated are the easy part. The real trick is the cape. It goes from completely rigid to falling smoothly, in a way that feels impossible without ice magic. The secret is revealed when the scene resets between boats: a top rod attached to Anna lifts up and down, and a series of smaller rods inside pull taut to give the cape rigid structure, then collapse when the top rod drops. Anna’s cape works like a bat's wing expanding and contracting. But that resetting clip reveals the most important element of any great Disney effect. Third, the effect cycles. Disney doesn't have to pull off this illusion once. Not even once a night like a magician. This ride operates 12 hours a day, every day. The entire scene resets in 2 seconds. The full cycle runs 30 seconds. That's 1,440 times a day. Like the Rent song, that's 525,600 times a year. And because Disney builds rides that last for decades, this is an effect that needs to repeat over 15 million times in the next 30 years. (Technically 15,768,000, I’m building in a buffer for ride downtime and refurbs. The math isn’t perfect, but you get the idea). Imagineers didn't just create an effect that melts minds. They created one that can do it millions of times on repeat. What Disney effect would you like me to break down next? #TokyoDisneySea #DisneyEffects #Imagineering #Animatronics #DisneySecrets

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