Tag: halfway

  • Smart casual is halfway between dressed up and dressed down: here’s how to do it | Jess Cartner-Morley

    Smart casual is halfway between dressed up and dressed down: here’s how to do it | Jess Cartner-Morley

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    Smart casual is not just a dress code – it is modern life in outfit form. Smart casual dressing tells the world that you are someone who gets it. It shows that you know how the world works now, what the spoken and unspoken rules are.

    If a pinstripe suit and a pocket square make you look creaky and antiquated and ripped jeans and a scruffy T-shirt make you look a bit of a loose cannon, smart casual – say, for the sake of argument, a stripe shirt with pleat-front trousers, chunky-soled loafers and a couple of necklaces – identifies you as someone who can be relied upon to steer a path through the middle ground.

    Let me put it like this. Say you go for dinner to a nice restaurant. If you turn up in ripped jeans and a scruffy T-shirt, your friends might get the idea that you’d rather be home with a takeaway on the sofa, and that can make them feel uncomfortable.

    Rock up in the pinstripes and pocket square, on the other hand, and they start to worry that you are expecting silver service and are going to kick off about the modishly uncomfortable bench seating. In the era of small-plates dining, when modern manners are not about how to hold a fish fork but about how to divide a quail between three people without splattering anyone with miso butter, the well-dressed diner needs to show they can walk a delicate line.

    There are some things to bear in mind though. Smart and casual are not two fillings that you smoosh together like peanut butter and jelly in a sandwich. Not a fancy top with low-fi bottoms, or vice versa. That way chaos lies.

    The way to make smart casual look intentional rather than a bit all over the place is to think of it as a smart outfit that you are simply making a little bit more casual. You could also approach it the other way, starting with a casual outfit and making it a little bit smart. But in practical terms I find it is easier to ease up a formal look than to smarten up an informal one.

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    It helps if you think of smart casual as about looking modern rather than a halfway house between dressed up and dressed down. So we start with a straightforward template for looking smart – a cotton shirt and tailored trousers, say. What you are aiming for is to make this look a bit cooler and less stuffy. It’s not just about leaving the suit jacket off or rolling up the sleeves of your slim-fit cotton shirt. That was smart casual two decades ago – and just Rishi Sunak today.

    One easy trick to make the proportions look breezier is to choose an oversized shirt so it blousons out over the waistband of your trousers.

    Another is to make the shoes chunky. Instead of classic slim-profile loafers, bring some bounce with a chunky lug-soled supersized version. Which you might want to accentuate with a colourful or glittery pair of socks. The older I get, the more I appreciate the power of a great pair of socks.

    Or maybe you want to start with a dress. The best way to make a smart dress casual is to do something unexpected with it. You could layer a red cotton polo neck or a Breton T-shirt underneath a dress with a deep V neckline. Or you could dial down the tea-party cuteness of a floral dress by layering a neutral knit sweater vest over the top.

    Don’t overcomplicate it, because if you are doing it right you need to make it look effortless. Just like modern life.

    Model: Ana at Body London. Hair and makeup: Sophie Higginson using Davines and Dermalogica. Shell print shirt: H&M. Trousers: Mango. Shoes: Ivylee

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Confident of winning more than halfway mark in Karnataka polls: Shah

    Confident of winning more than halfway mark in Karnataka polls: Shah

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    Bengaluru: Home Minister Amit Shah expressed confidence on Saturday that the BJP will win 15-20 seats more than the halfway mark in Karnataka assembly polls and asserted that its support base remains intact despite defection by some party leaders, noting that historically its rebels have not won and “this will prove true this time also”.

    With the Congress targeting the central government over Rahul Gandhi’s disqualification from Lok Sabha following his conviction in a defamation case, Shah told India Today in an interview that “no family is above the law in India and the law is above all”.

    Gandhi vacated his government bungalow on Saturday after he was served a notice for eviction and claimed that he is paying the price for speaking the truth.

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    Replying to a question on Gandhi playing “victim”, he said, “We never asked Rahul Gandhi to disrespect the OBC community. He himself decided not to apologise.

    “The law under which he was convicted was made by the Congress government. Then prime minister Manmohan Singh tried to withdraw that law but Rahul Gandhi himself tore down the ordinance. Now he should not play the victim. No one should think that any family is above the law.” The ordinance, if passed by Parliament, would have spared any convicted MP from immediate disqualification.

    To a question about the allegation that the CBI summoning former Jammu and Kashmir governor Satya Pal Malik is linked to his recent criticism of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his government, the home minister said such a charge is not true as he was called by the probe agency earlier too.

    “I can say with complete conviction that the BJP has done nothing that needs to be covered up. If someone is levelling allegations after parting ways with us, then it should be evaluated accordingly by the media and people,” he said.

    On Karnataka assembly polls scheduled for May 10, he said the BJP will get 15-20 seats more than the halfway mark of 112 seats in the 224-member legislature.

    They are not substantiated by any court and have been fabricated by the Congress to cover up corruption during its own regime, Shah claimed, accusing the opposition party of using Karnataka as its “ATM” when it was in power.

    The Congress has no answers to its apathy towards Karnataka during its regime, he said, adding that when the Congress-led UPA was in power during 2009-14, the Centre released Rs 94,224 crores to the state.

    Prime Minister Modi increased the amount to over Rs 2.26 lakh crore during 2014-19. The tax devolution and grant-in aid was Rs 22,000 crore but has been increased to Rs 75,000 crore, he added.

    Attacking Congress, he said its government violated the Constitution by providing four per cent reservation for Muslims in the state.

    The Constitution does not allow any kind of reservation on the basis of religious identity, he noted.

    The BJP government has scrapped this reservation and increased the quota for the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, Vokkaligas and Lingayats, he said.

    While the Congress “protected and nurtured” the PFI, a radical Islamic organisation now banned by the Modi government, he said its cadres used to commit murders in broad daylight in the state.

    PM Modi banned it and provided security to the people of the state, he said.

    On the recent terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir, he said, “We will give a befitting reply to any attack on India.” He added that violence against the foreign embassies of India will not be taken lightly by the Modi government.

    On the “personal attacks” launched on Modi, he said, “Personal attacks on Modi ji are not new and began long back by Sonia Gandhi who had called him ‘Maut Ka Saudagar’. But whenever he faced such attacks he emerged stronger”.



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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Harris finds footing and a jubilant audience, halfway around the world from Washington

    Harris finds footing and a jubilant audience, halfway around the world from Washington

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    harris ghana 82459

    Administration officials have often remarked how foreign trips can provide Harris room to shine that, they feel, the D.C. chattering class misses when talking about and covering her. Harris earned rave reviews for her speech last month at the Munich Security Conference, where she proclaimed Russia had committed crimes against humanity. And her trip to Africa once more demonstrated the general relief she and her staff usually feel the further away they get from the political sniping that trails her at home.

    Harris arrived Sunday in Ghana, the first of a three-nation, one-week trip across the continent, to talk about economic security and U.S.-Africa unity. She landed to the sound of drums and dancers wrapped in traditional Kente cloth and headbands.

    At subsequent stops, she has been notably less guarded, relaxed and seemingly lighter on her feet. It was noticed by the locals, too.

    “I’m so proud and so happy to see her in Africa. It was emotional that she made it here and that Ghana is her first African country. She clearly loves Africa and she loves Ghana,” said a young woman named LaToya, who did not want to give her last name out of fear because of anti-LGBTQ sentiments in the country. She had watched Harris’ speech at Black Star Square, a Ghanaian monument representing the nation’s freedom from colonialism. “Based on her smiles, she clearly enjoyed it here. When you come to a place like this, you can be yourself.”

    The official goals of Harris’ trip were to enhance relations on the continent and ensure that China did not get a stronger foothold in the economies there. A senior aide said the vice president, as the first Black woman to occupy that post, wasuniquely positioned to highlight the culture and opportunities, most especially the dynamism of African youth.”

    But unlike the diplomatic meetings and security conferences that marked her past travel abroad, the trip to Ghana also featured more direct interactions with the populace. The vice president made several stops during her visit to highlight the nation’s arts, including a woman-owned gallery and a community recording studio.

    Ghanaian singer Amaarae met with Harris at Vibrate Space, an artists’ collective. She said the vice president pledged her team would follow up with her and keep using art and culture to demonstrate Ghana as a worthy investment.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )