View allAll Photos Tagged lashed
Model: Kristen
Photographer: Trevor Loken
Strobist Info:
AlienBees ABR800 at 1/2 power through MU30 Moon Unit camera right and high
AlienBees AB400, gridded, camera right for neck fill at 1/8 power
AlienBees AB400 with UBR reflector back left against wall
Ainsley is my own Lasher BJD!!! :0) I love her face, and her body poses REALLY well. :0)
More can be seen of American artist, Kimberly Lasher's ball jointed dolls at www.lasherbjds.com for those that are curious.
OOAK Poppy Parker repaint doll by BYD, she was formally a new Lash Out Poppy Parker.
The original factory facial paint has been removed and she has been repainted with fine artist quality Liquitex acrylic paints, pastel and sealers. Doll comes nude in her new box.
Offers are Welcome.
She is on Ets-y and Misterdollface :)
Fran really has been getting the treatment! I am getting braver and braver, and decided to dive in and give her some new lashes. She loves them, I love them, and she looks so much more engaged now. No more "bored out of my mind" looks from Ms. Francy Pants!
A rare Sunday morning working through Altrincham saw a Freightliner locos & wagons convoy lash-up comprising of 66599 + 66623 + 66951 TnT with 3 HIA hopper wagons + 66614 on the rear forming 6D53 09:43 (VSTP working) Crewe Basford Hall - Leeds Midland Road, going away shot seen here passing Stoney Bridge, Nr Skelton Jn 03/07/16.
WIT: As soon as I get time to work on the shadows assignment the clouds move in and force me inside. A simple setup with two forks, a head shape, and a flashlight. In post processing I added a bit of texture.
The KWVR's Class 20, 20031, pilots D821 "Greyhound" through Summerseat "S" Bends with the 11:30 Bury to Rawtenstall. 3rd October 1993.
Bat for Lashes performs on Day 2 of the Outside Lands Festival in San Francisco, California's Golden Gate Park on August 29, 2009. ©Chris Tuite/Retna Ltd.
In the 1920s and ‘30s, a product called Lash-Lure was manufactured as an eyelash and eyebrow dye for women. Advertisements for the product promised it would help consumers “radiate personality.” But the synthetic aneline dye contained a poison that caused ulceration of the corneas and degeneration of the eyeballs, leading to blindness and in at least one case, death. Soon thereafter, the product was taken off the market as an imminent danger to health.
Although the Lash Lure company soon went out of business, the FDA worked to ensure that no products using the chemical the Lash Lure product used would be able to be manufactured or marketed. In November of 1938 the agency issued a TC (Trade Correspondence), notifying the cosmetic trade that paraphenylenediamine (the active ingredient in Lash Lure) would be deemed illegal (adulterated) under the newly enacted 1938 Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. The agency also announced that it had begun legal action against any products containing the ingredient still on the market and would begin similar actions on those containing the latter as well.
Learn more about FDA's role in protecting consumers from dangerous cosmetics.
These photos are in the public domain, free of all copyright restrictions and available for use and redistribution without permission. Credit to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is appreciated but not required.