Latest news with #Bone


Elle
3 days ago
- Entertainment
- Elle
Arm Cuffs Are The Y2K Trend Alexa Chung And Zoey Deutch Are Accessorising With This Summer
Yesterday Zoey Deutch stepped out in New York looking like the personification of the word chic. And while her sleek bun and minimal Michael Kors Collection dress certainly built a foundation for the gorgeous outfit, it was her simple bracelets that stole the show. FIND OUT MORE AT ELLE COLLECTIVE The organic-shaped gold cuffs look like Elsa Perretti for Tiffany & Co's famous Bone bracelets - a timeless investment piece for fashion devotees. The sublime asymmetry and sensuous contours of Elsa Peretti Bone cuffs have an ergonomic quality that makes them one with the body. And it isn't just Deutch who has decided to embrace the cuff bracelet this summer. In fact, British style star Alexa Chung has been wearing the Y2K-beloved bracelet style non stop this summer. Chung, who is a pro at tiny styling tricks that make a big impact, has been placing her bracelet on her upper arm. We first saw her try the trend in Cannes over her Mango trench coat, and since then it has barely left her bicep. In one recent post the former fashion designer acknowledged her cuff bracelet addiction, captioning the post: 'Overly into upper arm shim sham.' The 41-year-old has proved the styles versatility, wearing it with a sheer, leopard-print maxi dress (which is available to buy now). Composition & Care And a Supriya Lele sheer, PVC mini dress. We love the idea of cuffing these bracelets over long-sleeved clothes to transform a silhouette, but, as both Chung and Deutch prove, there's something elegant about placing them on bare skin too. Time to try the Noughties trend for ourselves. ELLE Collective is a new community of fashion, beauty and culture lovers. For access to exclusive content, events, inspiring advice from our Editors and industry experts, as well the opportunity to meet designers, thought-leaders and stylists, become a member today HERE. Daisy Murray is the Digital Fashion Editor at ELLE UK, spotlighting emerging designers, sustainable shopping, and celebrity style. Since joining in 2016 as an editorial intern, Daisy has run the gamut of fashion journalism - interviewing Molly Goddard backstage at London Fashion Week, investigating the power of androgynous dressing and celebrating the joys of vintage shopping.
Yahoo
20-05-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Fort Smith Public Schools names new deputy superintendent, Southside basketball coach
FORT SMITH, Ark. (KNWA/KFTA) — The Fort Smith Public Schools approved the hirings of a new head boys basketball coach at Southside High School and a new deputy superintendent. FSPS named Dr. Tiffany Boone as the district's next deputy superintendent during Monday's meeting. Bone has worked as assistant superintendent of curriculum and instruction for four years at FSPS and will begin in the new role on July 1. Summer reading programs in Northwest Arkansas, River Valley 'Dr. Bone represents a leader who can bring significant experience and leadership to the Deputy Superintendent role. I have the utmost respect and confidence in Dr. Bone to lead during this critical time at FSPS. I am grateful for Dr. Bone's willingness to serve FSPS,' FSPS Acting Superintendent Martin Mahan said in a news release. FSPS named Chuck Davis as the head boys basketball coach at Southside High School. Davis comes to Southside after 14 years of coaching, with his most recent stop in Clarksville as the head senior high boys basketball coach. He has also coached at Shiloh Christian High School and previously served as the assistant athletic director for Springdale Public Schools. 'I was fortunate to have played for Coach Brad Johnson (University of Arkansas) and Coach Beau Thompson (Farmington Athletic Director) in Junior High and Senior High before attending the University of Arkansas. I have coached at Ozark, Elkins, Shiloh Christian, and Clarksville. I have participated in several Conference Champions seasons and State Tournament wins over the past 14 years. I look forward to working with these young men at Southside High School and bringing that winning tradition back! Go Mavs!,' FSPS Southside Head Basketball Coach Chuck Davis said. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Daily Record
14-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Daily Record
We found Mary Kate Olsen's 'most comfy sandals ever' for £44
The sandals have been praised online as "comfortable and supportive right from the first wear" Fashion fans can snap up the "wonderful" sandals sported by Mary Kate Olsen for less than £50. The celebrity was seen earlier this month in New York donning a laid-back ensemble and a pair of striking sandals. Mary Kate was decked out in a vivid orange hoodie, sleek black tailored trousers, oversized aviator sunglasses, and Teva's Infinity sandals, as reported by Marie Claire. The sandals were the highlight of her attire, adding some flair to the whole look. The Teva Voya Infinity Flat Sandals a re currently on offer at Amazon for just £43.99. They boast a water-ready polyester webbing upper that is touted as "extremely durable" and quick to dry after becoming wet. For those in search of a different sandal style, Next offers the Bone Standard/Wide Fit Chunky Buckled Sandals for £38, while River Island features the Beige Leather Weave Mule Flat Sandals at £32. Additionally, New Look presents the Tan Faux Leather Multi Strap Gladiator Sandals for £25.99. Amazon's product description states: "A study in laidback elegance-combining the foot-forming comfort of our famed Mush topsole and a feminine infinity upper crafted from a single stretchy elastic lace," reports the Mirror. With a 4.2-star rating, the sandals have garnered glowing reviews from satisfied customers. One reviewer exclaimed: "Like walking on air. Very comfortable though they look as though they may not be with all the straps. "A couple of times wearing and they are great, lightweight and very comfortable sole with good arch support. I can't see that they adjust so one size fits all." Another satisfied buyer commented: "Wonderful! Comfortable and cute! Bought these as comfortable walking/out-and-about summer shoes as opposed to trainers or fashion sandals and I love them! They do take a week of wear to get used to them, figuring out how tight and where you like the straps as well as breaking in the sole, but after that they're genuinely the comfiest shoes I own. "They're pretty cute too, and I've been wearing them out pretty much non-stop since I bought them in September, only stopping recently because it's been too cold for my toes! I definitely recommend!" Yet another person added their happy experience: "Incredibly comfortable. I did some serious trekking in these shoes and they were comfortable and supportive right from the first wear - no need to wear in. "Fabric insole cover also soft and breathable in the sense that feet did not sweat even in really hot weather. They also pass as pretty sandals for everyday wear. Really versatile and great price - highly recommend." Not all customers were impressed, however, with some finding the fit problematic. One dissatisfied customer remarked: "Not for wider feet, very narrow. Returned." Another person expressed disappointment regarding the comfort levels: "Most uncomfortable shoe. Look good, feel awful the elastic digs in to your feet." Despite this, the majority of reviews were glowing, with customers lauding the sandals. One review read: "The most comfy sandals ever....I wish I bought them sooner!" Meanwhile, a different buyer expressed: "Amazing, love them. Delighted with them. The closest your feet can get to feeling totally free yet sufficiently supported. Comfortable and stylish. Thank you."


Hamilton Spectator
14-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Hamilton Spectator
Rare Ian Fleming story features a Londoner named Bone, Caffery Bone
NEW YORK (AP) — 'James Bond' creator Ian Fleming didn't need to write about Cold War intrigue to consider the ways people scheme against each other. 'The Shameful Dream,' a rare Fleming work published this week, is a short story about a Londoner named Bone, Caffery Bone. Fleming's protagonist is the literary editor of Our World, a periodical 'designed to bring power and social advancement to Lord Ower,' its owner. Bone has been summoned to spend Saturday evening with Lord and Lady Ower, transported to them in a chauffeur-driven Rolls-Royce. Bone suspects, with a feeling of 'inevitable doom,' that he is to meet the same fate of so many employed by Lord Ower — removed from his job and soon forgotten. 'For Lord Ower sacked everyone sooner or later, harshly if they belonged to no union or with a fat check if they did and were in a position to hit back,' Fleming writes. 'If one worked for Lord Ower one was expendable and one just spent oneself until one had gone over the cliff edge and disappeared beneath the waves with a fat splash.' 'The Shameful Dream' appears in this week's Strand Magazine along with another obscure work from a master of intrigue, Graham Greene's 'Reading at Night,' a brief ghost story in which the contents of a paperback anthology becomes frighteningly real. Greene scholars believe that the author of 'Our Man in Havana,' 'The End of the Affair' and other classics dashed off 'Reading at Night' in the early 1960s when he found himself struggling to write a longer narrative. Strand Magazine is a quarterly publication that has run little-known works by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway and many others. Managing editor Andrew F. Gulli noted that the current issue was Strand's 75th and that he 'thought it would be interesting for fans to read stories by these two midcentury literary icons side by side — writers whose approaches to the genre were markedly distinct: Greene, with his moral ambiguity and spiritual tension; and Fleming, with his glamorous take on espionage.' Fleming, best known for such Bond thrillers as 'Dr. No' and 'From Russia with Love,' had a career in journalism spanning from the 1930s to the early 1960s, when he was well established as an author. For Reuters in the '30s, he wrote obituaries, covered auto racing in Austria and a Stalin show trial in the Soviet Union. After World War II, he served as foreign manager for the Kemsley newspaper group, a subsidiary of The Sunday Times. Fleming died of a heart attack in 1964, at age 56. Mike VanBlaribum, president of the Ian Fleming Foundation, says that Fleming was clearly drawing upon his own background for 'The Shameful Dream.' But biographers disagree over when Fleming wrote it. According to Nicholas Shakespeare's 'Ian Fleming: The Complete Man,' Fleming worked on the story in the early 1950s, based Lord Ower on his boss, Lord Kemsley, and based Bone upon himself. Lord Ower is sometimes referred to as 'O,' anticipating the spy chief 'M' of the Bond novels. In 'James Bond: The Man and His World,' author Henry Chancellor theorizes that Fleming wrote the story in 1961, and may have been inspired by a dispute with Daily Express owner Lord Beaverbrook over rights to a James Bond comic strip. VanBlaribum speculates that Fleming wrote it in 1951, citing the author's reference to a Sheerline saloon, a luxury car that the UK stopped producing in the mid-1950s. 'It is unlikely that Fleming would have used a decade-old car if the story were written in 1961,' he says. 'In either event, 'The Shameful Dream' was never published. It has been stated that Lord Ower too closely resembled Lord Kemsley.'


Winnipeg Free Press
14-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Winnipeg Free Press
Rare Ian Fleming story features a Londoner named Bone, Caffery Bone
NEW YORK (AP) — 'James Bond' creator Ian Fleming didn't need to write about Cold War intrigue to consider the ways people scheme against each other. 'The Shameful Dream,' a rare Fleming work published this week, is a short story about a Londoner named Bone, Caffery Bone. Fleming's protagonist is the literary editor of Our World, a periodical 'designed to bring power and social advancement to Lord Ower,' its owner. Bone has been summoned to spend Saturday evening with Lord and Lady Ower, transported to them in a chauffeur-driven Rolls-Royce. Bone suspects, with a feeling of 'inevitable doom,' that he is to meet the same fate of so many employed by Lord Ower — removed from his job and soon forgotten. 'For Lord Ower sacked everyone sooner or later, harshly if they belonged to no union or with a fat check if they did and were in a position to hit back,' Fleming writes. 'If one worked for Lord Ower one was expendable and one just spent oneself until one had gone over the cliff edge and disappeared beneath the waves with a fat splash.' 'The Shameful Dream' appears in this week's Strand Magazine along with another obscure work from a master of intrigue, Graham Greene's 'Reading at Night,' a brief ghost story in which the contents of a paperback anthology becomes frighteningly real. Greene scholars believe that the author of 'Our Man in Havana,' 'The End of the Affair' and other classics dashed off 'Reading at Night' in the early 1960s when he found himself struggling to write a longer narrative. Strand Magazine is a quarterly publication that has run little-known works by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway and many others. Managing editor Andrew F. Gulli noted that the current issue was Strand's 75th and that he 'thought it would be interesting for fans to read stories by these two midcentury literary icons side by side — writers whose approaches to the genre were markedly distinct: Greene, with his moral ambiguity and spiritual tension; and Fleming, with his glamorous take on espionage.' Fleming, best known for such Bond thrillers as 'Dr. No' and 'From Russia with Love,' had a career in journalism spanning from the 1930s to the early 1960s, when he was well established as an author. For Reuters in the '30s, he wrote obituaries, covered auto racing in Austria and a Stalin show trial in the Soviet Union. After World War II, he served as foreign manager for the Kemsley newspaper group, a subsidiary of The Sunday Times. Fleming died of a heart attack in 1964, at age 56. Mike VanBlaribum, president of the Ian Fleming Foundation, says that Fleming was clearly drawing upon his own background for 'The Shameful Dream.' But biographers disagree over when Fleming wrote it. According to Nicholas Shakespeare's 'Ian Fleming: The Complete Man,' Fleming worked on the story in the early 1950s, based Lord Ower on his boss, Lord Kemsley, and based Bone upon himself. Lord Ower is sometimes referred to as 'O,' anticipating the spy chief 'M' of the Bond novels. In 'James Bond: The Man and His World,' author Henry Chancellor theorizes that Fleming wrote the story in 1961, and may have been inspired by a dispute with Daily Express owner Lord Beaverbrook over rights to a James Bond comic strip. Winnipeg Jets Game Days On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop. VanBlaribum speculates that Fleming wrote it in 1951, citing the author's reference to a Sheerline saloon, a luxury car that the UK stopped producing in the mid-1950s. 'It is unlikely that Fleming would have used a decade-old car if the story were written in 1961,' he says. 'In either event, 'The Shameful Dream' was never published. It has been stated that Lord Ower too closely resembled Lord Kemsley.'