
Arvino to launch five new India stores
'There's no substitute for hard work," said Arvino's founder Arvind Agarwal about his brand journey, Elle India reported. "Stay fearless in your creations and always uphold great karma.' Keen to widen its customer base, the label targets women of a wide range of ages.
The brand recently launched new collection 'Soleil,' designed to blend vintage inspirations with modern styling, according to its Facebook page. The collection has gone live on Arvino's direct to customer e-commerce store and includes statement bangles and chokers, sculptural earrings, gemstone beads, and pendants with designs inspired by shells and other natural elements.
Arvino was established in 1992 and is headquartered in Miami, US, according to its Linkedin page. The business' website lists Jaipur as its address and its e-commerce store features a wide range of 18 carat gold-plated jewellery with "multi-level certifications across our supply chain to showcase the degree of our sustainability and ethics in our practices," according to the brand. These include RJC™ certification, SEDEX-auditing, and a zero-waste business philosophy.
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But this hypothesis has never been supported by solid scientific evidence, as AFP Fact Check previously explained in this debunk. The claim that Toyota is developing a water-powered engine is false. Hydrogen vehicles Toyota has not made any public announcements "unveiling" a water engine, as the post claimed. "We are not developing anything that could be described as a 'water engine'," Jean-Yves Jault, a representative of the Toyota Motor Corporation, said in an email to AFP on July 23. Jault called the claims circulating online "false information" and referred to a Forbes article that refutes the rumor (archived here). Toyota produces vehicles that use hydrogen as fuel. These cars, like the Mirai model, are fueled at specialised stations and equipped with lithium-ion batteries to store and manage energy (archived here). Robert Rapier, a chemical engineer and the author of the Forbes article, explained that "water as the power source for a vehicle is nonsense'. 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