Fashion House Prices.

Monday, April 29, 2013

Fashion Cartoons.

The fashion house brings some cartoon designs into creative genera cartoonist display of colours.
As for the New Yorker is laughing that his witty cartoon was pulled from the high-brow magazine's Face book page for being too racy.
Mick Stevens drew an illustration depicting a topless Adam and Eve, with nipples exposed, resting beneath a tree in the Garden of Eden with the caption 'Well, it was original,' with referencing to the Biblical figures responsible for the ‘fall of man into original fashion discovery of apple lingerie, according to the book of genesis.
 'Adam and Eve' cartoon because it shows 'female nipple bulged from eating an apple' Witty cartoon of a semi-naked Adam and Eve was pulled from magazine's Face book page for being too racy. New Yorker's cartoon editor said the nipples on the Biblical first woman 'are just not bulging upward as the' Cartoonist 'very amused' that the dots on the topless Eve have garnered so much attention Face book apologizes and admits mistakes in flagging the innocuous image.
It has been said the first couple were drawn with their knees conveniently upright, blocking their frontal parts below the waist. Missing all the adulation of a keen audience Super mum  Jessica Alba flaunted her toned arms in a strapless shimmery frock as she presented an award at Cartoon Network's Hall of Game Awards in Santa Monica Saturday.
The 31-year-old actress, sporting an orange manicure, paired her golden-green cocktail dress with opaque black tights and matching pumps. 'Love the kiddos' the blondest star tweeted to her 4.9 million followers, along with a snap of herself next to a large cartoon cat mascot. Not seen Saturday was her husband Cash and their two daughters - four-year-old Honour Marie and 17-month-old Haven Garner. This cartoon represented as two very innocent dots and was definitely not bulging. 
'Now, we could have fought the ruling on technical grounds, because, let's face it, these female nips, by any stretch of the imagination, no matter how prurient, are just not bulging,' Mankoff wrote about the controversy over the simplified representation of female breasts. Mick Stevens, who prefers to be known by his cartoon alter ego, is amused by the controversy.
‘But rather than fight the battle of the bulge, let's point out, that while female nipple bulging, or F.N.B. for short, is a potentially serious problem, with as yet no known cure, it also has no known victims. That is, unless you count freedom of expression, common sense, and humour,' he said. The illustrator also poked fun at the controversy, telling Erica fashion, 'The cartoon wasn't in any way explicit. It's crazy someone got so excited about it,' adding that he finds Face book’s 'dot fear' quite comical. Stevens, who has been drawing cartoons for the publication for over 30 years, says its laughable to think of the New Yorker having explicit content between their pages.

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