Lumpen
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 937
Wow, the faker aged like 20 years on only 5 and turned fat.
Those addicted to dungeons...
More Dungeons of masonry
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Wow, the faker aged like 20 years on only 5 and turned fat.
Those addicted to dungeons...
Has fok banned you from SF?
Bowed legs.
Those ‘hand warmer’ pockets look like they are designed to allow someone access to your nipples while you are seated!
View attachment 35784
Sarto is an amateur. I got a permanent ban from SF
I logged in one time on someone else's screen name. Once.What happened?
I logged in one time on someone else's screen name. Once.
No, the other person shared it. So I logged in once and then banned for lifeWhat does it means, ( sorry)
You guessed the password of other member and was right and then you used his account impersonating him?
No, the other person shared it. So I logged in once and then banned for life
That would happen to many people who move around. How did they know and wtf does it matterDifferent times with different IP
That would happen to many people who move around. How did they know and wtf does it matter
That would happen to many people who move around. How did they know and wtf does it matter
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Which one makes your harder? Sister-brother or daddy?
Mmm, I remember paying about £35 from the local golf shop for an Argyle Pringle in about 1983 which would be about £119 in 2019 according to the BoE inflation calculator.The 80s reimagined by Pringle, ''reissues'' completely unlike 80s Pringle argyles and on top the pricing has all gone wrong:
Pringle of Scotland | Pringle Reissued Volume 1
pringlescotland.com
I priced them at about the same £35-38 1983/84 when there were in fashion and the plain ones were around £22. If you didn't have a Pringle, preferably argyle, you could be in trouble in my school. You also had to have those Farah trousers. To complete the casual look you needed Adidas, the most expensive you could buy, but if not Adidas Kick would do. But then you would get ''State on you! See you got the cheapest Adidas!''Mmm, I remember paying about £35 from the local golf shop for an Argyle Pringle in about 1983 which would be about £119 in 2019 according to the BoE inflation calculator.
Inflation calculator
Use our inflation calculator to check how prices in the UK have changed over time, from 1209 to now.www.bankofengland.co.uk
Back in the day the Pringle logo was at the bottom of the jumper on the Argyles. Anyway, I preferred Lyle & Scott who always had more interesting patterns. That diminutive Dandy, the late Ronnie Corbett was an ambassador for the brand.
This article states that he wore Pringle too. I don't recall seeing him wearing them...which doesn't mean he didn't of course.
From Pringle to new Gucci: Ronnie Corbett, unlikely style icon
The comedian Ronnie Corbett, who died last week, was also a style icon, a ‘classless arisotocrat’ who embraced golf-wear, colours and statement glasseswww.theguardian.com
We used to try and get away with wearing the plain ones (in the school colour of course) as a school jumper, but always got sussed by the teachers, some coloured the logo in to match the jumper colour and still got sussed. Standard school uniform was Pringle/Lyle & Scott/Braemar jumper (if you could get away with it) Ben Sherman shirt, Farah pants (with one inch slits on the inside) and Kickers shoes (which I didn't like. I tended to wear DM shoes or dark suede chuckas).I priced them at about the same £35-38 1983/84 when there were in fashion and the plain ones were around £22. If you didn't have a Pringle, preferably argyle, you could be in trouble in my school. You also had to have those Farah trousers. To complete the casual look you needed Adidas, the most expensive you could buy, but if not Adidas Kick would do. But then you would get ''State on you! See you got the cheapest Adidas!''
We used to try and get away with wearing the plain ones (in the school colour of course) as a school jumper, but always got sussed by the teachers, some coloured the logo in to match the jumper colour and still got sussed. Standard school uniform was Pringle/Lyle & Scott/Braemar jumper (if you could get away with it) Ben Sherman shirt, Farah pants (with one inch slits on the inside) and Kickers shoes (which I didn't like. I tended to wear DM shoes or dark suede chuckas).
I've lost count of the types of Adidas trainers I had....Samba were always a good compromise though and have never been discontinued by Adidas.
Columbia were always the 'grail' one around my parts, hard to get hold of. They did a small reissue them last year. Sold out very quickly.I had Samba and coveted the L.A. That was 50 odd pounds at the time of the Los Angeles Olympics. Double expensive.
Bought I pair much later in the late 1990s, for about 30 quid.
Adidas have made so many great trainers no other company gets anywhere near them..
Adidas made trainers for specific markets, which also added to the cachet as they were extremely rare outside said markets. There's a shop in Liverpool that literally scours the world for deadstock adidas trainers..The greatest one of which, no doubt, is the Zissou!
Generation difference. I bought jumpers at golf shops but I did actually play golf in them.I priced them at about the same £35-38 1983/84 when there were in fashion and the plain ones were around £22. If you didn't have a Pringle, preferably argyle, you could be in trouble in my school. You also had to have those Farah trousers. To complete the casual look you needed Adidas, the most expensive you could buy, but if not Adidas Kick would do. But then you would get ''State on you! See you got the cheapest Adidas!''