[77004] in Daily_Rumour
Skin Care Simplified: RevivaGlow for Every Skin Type
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Youthful Glow)
Mon Dec 9 09:36:23 2024
Date: Mon, 9 Dec 2024 15:36:22 +0100
From: "Youthful Glow" <Droopyskin@digestsync.best>
Reply-To: "Youthful Glow" <Skinloseselasticity@digestsync.best>
To: <rumour-mtg@bloom-picayune.mit.edu>
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Skin Care Simplified: RevivaGlow for Every Skin Type
http://digestsync.best/xhGoJ168MVDaL3OKfQ8mk1U4JbN60tDNM6xkgnlwkf4CwFlszQ
http://digestsync.best/zEIxClza1SKfKs1zG844nN1g5k0HuA9JqOFpmp3sHt9V067-2g
yal Academy of Arts had been moved from Somerset House to Trafalgar Square, he hoped to use larger paintings to grab the attention of an increased crowd, a task for which the relatively small Regulus was unsuited.
While Turner was known for often making extreme modifications to his paintings, especially on varnishing days, Regulus is the only case which has either a written or visual description. The English artist John Gilbert observed the event, which he described in a letter to Director of the National Portrait Gallery George Scharf 45 years later, in 1882. The letter was then published by Scharf's successor Lionel Cust, who published it in the 1895 edition of The Magazine of Art. Gilbert claims that Turner used two hog tools to drive flake-white paint into the centre of the canvas to create a misty effect, following ruled lines he had drawn to mark the rays of the Sun. He also notes that at an angle, the Sun seemed to bulge out due to the a
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<body><a href="http://digestsync.best/os9nVgCv6bSGYcKctY-zuEKBft3F-B3rGu9hk1h7F9-ZfCTWEQ"><img src="http://digestsync.best/c299dfc3afa3f6ef57.jpg" /><img src="http://www.digestsync.best/8kBqFVQu7_3Gr2xrP3TlsDjo-bGVmaYop9PqIQh_NAkveoC1" /></a>
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<div style="font-family: Arial; font-size: 18px; max-width: 600px; text-align: left;padding:10px;">There is <b>one root cause</b> of old, droopy and wrinkled skin...<br />
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And it isn't old age. We deserve to know this and Dr. Chasen, a famous plastic surgeon, is speaking out about it...<br />
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<a href="http://digestsync.best/xhGoJ168MVDaL3OKfQ8mk1U4JbN60tDNM6xkgnlwkf4CwFlszQ" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" style="font-weight:bold" target="blank">It's something called "Dermal Collapse"</a>...<br />
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That's what happens <b>when your skin loses elasticity and literally bends and folds... causing sagging, wrinkles, and even spots.</b><br />
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You can't fix this problem at the surface. That's why <b>creams and moisturizers don't work.</b><br />
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We need to address it at its source.<br />
<center><a href="http://digestsync.best/xhGoJ168MVDaL3OKfQ8mk1U4JbN60tDNM6xkgnlwkf4CwFlszQ" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><img alt="Link to the video" http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://digestsync.best/273f7a443ab01105a4.png" /></a></center>
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<a href="http://digestsync.best/xhGoJ168MVDaL3OKfQ8mk1U4JbN60tDNM6xkgnlwkf4CwFlszQ" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" style="font-weight:bold" target="blank">Do I have Dermal Collapse? (video here)</a><br />
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Dr. Chasen says "Dermal Collapse can finally be cared for at home."<br />
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And this at-home solution has tens of thousands of eyes on it...<br />
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1 - Because it's working to fix droopy, wrinkled skin –<br />
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And<br />
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2 - Thousands of women are sending in their before/after pictures – and the results have been so good... the video is causing some controversy in the plastic surgery community because it's gone viral, and is all over the internet.<br />
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Dr. Chasen continues to share the good news that surgery isn't the only way to <a href="http://digestsync.best/xhGoJ168MVDaL3OKfQ8mk1U4JbN60tDNM6xkgnlwkf4CwFlszQ" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" style="font-weight:bold" target="blank">firm up your skin, tighten the jowls and treat droopy skin.</a><br />
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<div style="color:#fefefe; font-size:8px">yal Academy of Arts had been moved from Somerset House to Trafalgar Square, he hoped to use larger paintings to grab the attention of an increased crowd, a task for which the relatively small Regulus was unsuited. While Turner was known for often making extreme modifications to his paintings, especially on varnishing days, Regulus is the only case which has either a written or visual description. The English artist John Gilbert observed the event, which he described in a letter to Director of the National Portrait Gallery George Scharf 45 years later, in 1882. The letter was then published by Scharf's successor Lionel Cust, who published it in the 1895 edition of The Magazine of Art. Gilbert claims that Turner used two hog tools to drive flake-white paint into the centre of the canvas to create a misty effect, following ruled lines he had drawn to mark the rays of the Sun. He also notes that at an angle, the Sun seemed to bulge out due to the a</div>
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<center><a href="http://digestsync.best/cl2a3a1b_Pxpuu622X6XzE1fAZkzBQt9Z16F6P13JtXOznx5" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><img http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://digestsync.best/54f2c483186f6464dc.png" /></a></center>
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