Ballet Flats/ Black Leather Flats/ Oxford Shoes/ Monks/ Women's Flats/ Flat Leather Shoes/ Buckle Up Shoes/ Black And White/ - Latest

These handmade ballet flats, adorable women's monks are indispensable part of every woman’s wardrobe. This perfect rounded toe flats will be the chic shoe you reach for again and again. Crafted from smooth Italian leather and embellished with buckle-fastening straps that supports your foot and make perfect fit. Give your look unique signature and wear them with everything. This handmade flats are cushioned for comfort and all day chic look. Full leather outer, interior and sole.DETAILS:Full leather upper, lining and soleLeather heel measures approximately 10 mm/ 0.39 InchesCushioned insoleRounded toe, buckle-fastening strapsHandmade flatsSize: 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41 EU sizeTo find this beautiful matching handmade pusre from the picture check the link https://www.etsy.com/listing/496973289/black-casual-clutch-purse-clutch?ref=shop_home_active_2To look more of this beautiful shoes in different colors, check the next link https://www.etsy.com/listing/264249553/handmade-womens-monk-shoes-womens-oxford?ref=shop_home_active_1Or just visit the store and enjoy all of our shoeshttps://www.etsy.com/shop/MilenikaShoes

It was quite the adventure. And then it died. My iPhone, that is, a good hour into my two-hour tour. More precisely, my Detour, (www.detour.com), a cool new app that launched in February with a collection of audio walking tours that are “location-aware” — basically your phone knows where you are, and the audio plays accordingly. Oh sure, apps are a dime a duodecillion these days. But this one, developed by Groupon founder Andrew Mason, is really cool. You load the free app, then buy a tour for about $5, pop in your earbuds and stroll the off-the-beaten-tourist-path spots as you hear tales from people who have some connection to the neighborhoods, or historians who’ve researched the area.

They plan to add new walks every month, Right now there’s one for ballet flats/ black leather flats/ oxford shoes/ monks/ women's flats/ flat leather shoes/ buckle up shoes/ black and white/ Fisherman’s Wharf, in which a lifelong commercial fisher named Candy takes you into the heart of the working wharf, Another explores the Western Addition beyond the Painted Ladies to find where Jim Jones built up his People’s Temple cult, Yet another stops in the Tenderloin’s sci-fi bookstores and faded rock ‘n’ roll haunts, guided by gravel-voiced narrator John Perry Barlow, founder of Electronic Frontier Foundation and lyric writer for the Grateful Dead..

The tours are also cool because can go at your own pace. Start it and stop it when you want to, and sync it with companions. They plan to start Detours in cities around the globe and eventually build an open platform where users can contribute. “I want to show you a San Francisco that’s a little less familiar,” he says. “Close your eyes for a moment. Imagine all this is gone. There’s a muddy pool at the edge of the hill on a gray, overcast day. In the distance you hear curious thuds. Three Columbian mammoths are running toward us at full speed.” (Mammoths roar in my ear.).

He jumps forward 12,000 years to the first humans who likely hunted on these hills, Then, eyes back open, I follow Kamiya’s directions ballet flats/ black leather flats/ oxford shoes/ monks/ women's flats/ flat leather shoes/ buckle up shoes/ black and white/ to walk down Kearny Street to Portsmouth Square and up the stone stairs of the park where dozens of people sit, bowed over games of Chinese chess or 13-card poker, Old women chat around tables they’ve set up on plastic crates with pieces of cardboard for tops, They’re smoking, dealing cards, betting pennies, “This is the second most densely populated Chinatown in the U.S., and this is its living room,” Kamiya says..

He steers me to a white flagpole in the park near a granite marker, and I learn that this was where, on July 9, 1846, the American flag was first raised in San Francisco by Cmdr. John B. Montgomery. Then we head down Jackson Street and soon hit the Gold Rush era (backed by a tinny piano playing “Oh, Susanna”). The street is now swathed with swanky art galleries, but in the mid-1800s, the buildings opened onto a sea of mud. It’s said an entire mule team disappeared in the goo. We pass an alley called Balance, the name of one of about 50 decaying Gold Rush ships still buried under city streets. We make our way to Pacific Avenue — once dubbed “Terrific Street,” for its world of thugs, cons, dance halls and prostitutes. “A short stretch of unbelievable depravity,” Kamiya says.

We check out the arched-window facade of what’s now an art supply store, nee The Hippodrome dance club, We head up to Broadway, There are ballet flats/ black leather flats/ oxford shoes/ monks/ women's flats/ flat leather shoes/ buckle up shoes/ black and white/ still nightclubs and exotic dancers, but “it’s the tame grandchild of the Barbary Coast and …” Hello? Kamiya is gone, Darn battery! And I still had Beat Generation haunts and Coit Tower murals to go, I’ll finish my tour later, because it’s really interesting and fun, You’re welcome to join me, Just make sure your phone is fully charged..

You know the sort. They swagger right off the page — or screen — all braggadocio and conceit. They promise the best chocolate cake or they oversell themselves as the only mac and cheese recipe you will ever need. They’re the culinary equivalent of an overly enthusiastic end zone dance by a preening football player who managed to stumble his way to his only career touchdown. And I think we all like to smirk a bit after we make one of these recipes. It’s only human nature to take a bite or two and ask, hey, is that all you got?.

That said, reader Marte J, Matthews says the spicy knock-your-socks-off lentil soup she found in a magazine or newspaper long ago lived up to its name, And Jan Shideler, of Los Altos ballet flats/ black leather flats/ oxford shoes/ monks/ women's flats/ flat leather shoes/ buckle up shoes/ black and white/ Hills, who contributed the recipe Matthews could no longer find, says she loves it, too, I’m not quite sure of the recipe’s provenance, Shideler thinks she clipped it from an SV Magazine article in the San Jose Mercury News by onetime food editor Joyce Gemperlein, Another reader thinks it might have come from Parade magazine..



Recent Posts