![]() ![]() Let’s get lost in the moment!ĭescribe yourself using 3 adjectives. After take me on a walk down the beach as the water hits our toes and we sit and talk for hours till the sun comes up. Lots of laughing and endless hand touching/holding. Great conversation, getting to know one another. Take me to a nice restaurant on the shore by a nice fireplace going. I would love to be wined and dined by a beach. Being confident is different and is very attractive. Treat me like I’m your queen.īiggest turn off? A guy that is conceded. Open my door for me, pull my chair out for me. ![]() To have killer blue eyes and a smile that will melt my heart for days also goes a long way.īiggest turn on? A guy that treats me like a lady. Has drive, ambition and motivation to do and be more. But really, I love a humble guy that is sweet and caring. What attracts you the most in a man? I’m a sucker for a tall guy with muscles and tattoos. ![]() Depends on my mood and what I wear.HIM – A man with broad shoulders and some good biceps are always eye catching. They change colour from green, grey to hazel. Took lots of hard work and dedication in the gym to grow them. What is your favorite body part on you? on him? ME – My legs are pretty awesome. Just so relaxing being able to sit back, chill and get lost in a good movie.However, I did prefer the books of Fifty Shades of Grey over the movies. Read the book or watch the movie? Watch a movie hands down. I decided to leave Colorado in 2005 and I now live in Gilbert, Arizona. I’m a mother to three handsome, caring, intelligent boys. Raised in Longmont, Colorado by my mother and stepfather. Where were you born? Where did you grow up? Where do you live now? I was born in Michigan. And who doesn’t wear the BUNNY!!!!! it’s all over the place and everyone LOVES it. It’s almost every girls dream to be a part of and every mans go to for a beautiful woman. The first beautiful woman to grace the cover. What do you think of when it comes to Playboy and the iconic bunny? Marilyn Monroe. It’s the best way to start off 2022 with such an amazing opportunity. And it’s happening!!!!!:) OMG……… THE COVER. It’s been a dream of mine to be in Playboy since I was in high school. John Estera BeautyĬongrats on your Playboy Sweden Playmate Cover! What does this mean to you? I’m so EXCITED. Perhaps these gentlemen really did read the magazine for its taste-making articles, rather than just its bawdy bunnies.Kristin Lolio / by Arthur St. These pieces had a mixed reception, however – historian Sigfried Giedion characterised the movement as “rushing from one sensation to another and rapidly bored”, while Reyner Banham promised he’d “run a mile” for the title. The features on and of Modernism and radical design conveyed the potential to redesign your surroundings, and respond productively to change. An early lifestyle publication, Playboy not only defined a new identity for men what to wear, listen to, drink and read, but also how to engage with design. In Colomina’s opinion, “the magazine did more for promoting modern architecture and design than any architectural magazine or institution”. The architects behind them were featured as significant cultural figures, alongside the likes of Vladimir Nabokov, Salvador Dalí and Jean Paul Sartre and included notes on their zooming sports cars and controversial love lives, too.īut Playboy’s role went one step further than handing out cursory advice, or dressing the magazine up in theory. It was over a 20-year period, from 1953 until the late 1970s, that Playboy presented homes as seduction machines, from the Bubble House of Chrysalis to the House of the Century, and then Yale dean Charles Moore’s home. While the majority of publishers remained conservative in their design and architectural tastes, Hefner claimed the liberated aesthetic as an important tool for seduction. The movement had been broadly debunked by the American architectural press as a European coup to destroy their way of life, but Playboy indulged and promoted Modernism as a glamorous and forward-looking way of living. Erotica and architecture make for an unusual pairing, but, she soon discovered, the publication had hosted stories on experimental architects including Paolo Soleri, Moshe Safdie and Ant Farm, as well as the founding fathers of Modernism – Mies Van Der Rohe, Charles Eames, Eero Saarinen and Frank Lloyd Wright.Īs it turns out, Playboy founder Hugh Hefner had taken his inspiration from the city of Chicago, where modernity played a key part in the city’s skyline. She was interviewing several architects in order to book them for lectures at Princeton University where she runs the graduate architectural history programme, when she realised many of them, and their work, had been featured in the notorious sexy mag. Architecture historian Beatriz Colomina first encountered Playboy magazine’s unexpected legacy in modern architecture by accident. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |