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"What you wear is how you present yourself to the world, especially today, when human contacts are so quick. Fashion is instant language." —Miuccia Prada
"It's alright baby's coming back
And I don't really care where he's been
It's alright baby's coming back
And I won't turn him around this time"
It's Alright (Baby's Coming Back) - Eurythmics
www.youtube.com/watch?v=gf_OsStVpzs&list=PLENMlFMVrgp...
Credits:
Head: LeL EvoX
Body: Maitreya Lara
Hair: Doux - Ines
Ears: L'Etre - Ringed Mesh Ears
Skin: Skinnery
Outfit: r2 A/D/E Nanoha
Boots: r2 A/D/E Nanoha
Rings: **RE** Dark Queen Rings - Bento 2.0
Earrings: [AlternatiVe] Selena
˚˖⭐໋🌷 OHMAI✧˚.🎀༘⋆
🌷 OHMAI UNPACK - Nanoha Set Black/Red
*Only Collor
*Reborn - Waifu - Legacy
*Horns / Body / Gloves / Socks / Shoes
Exclusive : Difony Events
Opening ⤷ June 7th
Round Ends:
⤷ July 7th
LM Event : maps.secondlife.com/seco.../Fort%20Santiago/130/97/23
* ( Gothic )
- LM: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/The%20Valley/98/150/1317
- MP: marketplace.secondlife.com/en-US/stores/210895
•——————•°•✿•——————•
⋆˖⁺‧₊☽ RIOTZINK ☾₊‧⁺˖⋆
.:RiotzInk:. Elysium Tattoo {BOM/Evox}
- Lel EVOX
- 4 BOM Layers of Opacity
.Fresh
.Worn
.Faded
.Faded 2
LM: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Falcon%20Bay/33/30/2003
MP: marketplace.secondlife.com/en-US/stores/239243
•——————•°•✿•——————•
.˳·˖✶ LOTUS ✶˖·˳.
LOTUS. Chill Eyes ALPHA (wear me)
- UNISEX
- LELUTKA
- BOM
- APPLY LEFT & RIGHT
- The modl uses EYES 05
ALPHA
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/ACCESS%203/132/29/999
✶ MP: marketplace.secondlife.com/en-US/stores/157035
✶ LM: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/True%20Love%20Island/20/36...
•——————•°•✿•——————•
✧˖°.☾ ASCENT ✧˖°.☾
✧˖°.☾ ASCENT - Crucify Earrings -
- Earrings UNISEX,
- unrigged
- resizable by script, HUD 10 Metallic colors + 5 Thorny colors, copy + modify.
- Change color HUD : 10 Metallic colors+ 5 Thorny colors
- Shadow BoM Layer for Lelutka Ears.
❯❯❯❯ LM: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Makai/177/79/3333
❯❯❯❯ MP: marketplace.secondlife.com/en-US/stores/259227
•——————•°•✿•——————•
•·.·''·.·• The Bearded Guy•·.·''·.·•
[ADD Me] Group Gift Infernal Steps Backdrop PBR
✭ LM: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Moonwall/169/121/32
✭ MP: marketplace.secondlife.com/stores/208779
•——————•°•✿•——————•
Featuring :
KONOHA - Nanoha of Okinawa
Available @ Okinawa's Sakura Matsuri Event
Event URL: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Ryukyu/204/51/28
Mainstore : maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Whitlock/147/173/2600
A pair of large complex eyes covers most of the housefly's head. Each eye is composed of 3,000 to 6,000 simple eyes. Unlike the eyes of vertebrates, houseflies can't focus in on the particulars of the environment around them. Instead, they provide an excellent mosaic view of everything to the left, right, front and above the fly.
Imagine a casino security guard, constantly scanning a bank of video monitors to see who might be cheating, causing a drunken disturbance or suspiciously loitering. The guard scans key areas for potential threats. It's much the same with the eyes of the flies -- only they have thousands of monitors that allow them to detect even the slightest of movements from nearly every direction.
Houseflies also boast three additional simple eyes called ocelli, located between the two compound eyes. Think of the ocelli as a kind of navigational device or compass, letting the fly know which way is up. The fly accomplishes this by keeping track and moving towards sunlit areas. This is why you'll often find houseflies buzzing around windows.
A compound eye is the type of eye commonly found in arthropods, including many insects and crustaceans. A compound eye has a mesh-like appearance because it consists of hundreds or thousands of tiny lens-capped optical units called ommatidia. Each ommatidium has its own cornea, lens, and photoreceptor cells for distinguishing brightness and color. Individual ommatidia guide light through a lens and cone into a channel, known as a rhabdom, which contains light-sensitive cells. These are connected to optical nerve cells to produce the image. The ommatidia are separated from each other by varying degrees of pigment.
The ommatidia are packed side by side into bulges that create a wide field of view. As each unit is orientated in a slightly different direction, the honeycombed eye creates a mosaic image which, although poor at picking out detail, is excellent at detecting movement.
The Nematocera (thread-horns) are a suborder of elongated flies with thin, segmented antennae and mostly aquatic larvae, consisting of the mosquitoes, crane flies, gnats, black flies, and midges.
Nematocera are typically characterized by filamentous, multisegmented antennae which may be plumose in some males. The Nematocera are a paraphyletic suborder, because one of its constituent families (Anisopodidae) is apparently a sister taxon to the entire suborder Brachycera; an alternative classification has been proposed in which the family Nymphomyiidae (traditionally classified within the Blephariceromorpha) is removed to its own suborder, the Archidiptera, and all the remaining nematoceran families are placed in a suborder called Eudiptera; however, the Eudiptera are also paraphyletic, and this classification has not been widely accepted. Largely due to its long history, the name Nematocera continues to be used.
Examples of the Nematocera include the mosquitoes (Culicidae), crane flies (Tipulidae) and black flies (Simuliidae). Many of the remaining families (especially Mycetophilidae, Anisopodidae, and Sciaridae), are called gnats, while others (especially Chironomidae, Cecidomyiidae, and Ceratopogonidae) are called midges.
The larvae are mostly aquatic and have distinct heads with mouthparts that may be modified for filter feeding. The pupae are orthorrhaphous (meaning adults emerge from the pupa through a straight seam in the pupal cuticle). The bodies and legs of the adults are usually elongate, and these flies often have relatively long abdomens.
Many species form mating swarms of males, and in some of these, competition for females is extreme. Although many species (as larvae) have a strong association with water, even within a single family there may be a trend toward semiaquatic and terrestrial habitats.
The Nematocera (thread-horns) are a suborder of elongated flies with thin, segmented antennae and mostly aquatic larvae, consisting of the mosquitoes, crane flies, gnats, black flies, and midges.
Nematocera are typically characterized by filamentous, multisegmented antennae which may be plumose in some males. The Nematocera are a paraphyletic suborder, because one of its constituent families (Anisopodidae) is apparently a sister taxon to the entire suborder Brachycera; an alternative classification has been proposed in which the family Nymphomyiidae (traditionally classified within the Blephariceromorpha) is removed to its own suborder, the Archidiptera, and all the remaining nematoceran families are placed in a suborder called Eudiptera; however, the Eudiptera are also paraphyletic, and this classification has not been widely accepted. Largely due to its long history, the name Nematocera continues to be used.
Examples of the Nematocera include the mosquitoes (Culicidae), crane flies (Tipulidae) and black flies (Simuliidae). Many of the remaining families (especially Mycetophilidae, Anisopodidae, and Sciaridae), are called gnats, while others (especially Chironomidae, Cecidomyiidae, and Ceratopogonidae) are called midges.
The larvae are mostly aquatic and have distinct heads with mouthparts that may be modified for filter feeding. The pupae are orthorrhaphous (meaning adults emerge from the pupa through a straight seam in the pupal cuticle). The bodies and legs of the adults are usually elongate, and these flies often have relatively long abdomens.
Many species form mating swarms of males, and in some of these, competition for females is extreme. Although many species (as larvae) have a strong association with water, even within a single family there may be a trend toward semiaquatic and terrestrial habitats.