#cardiff

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Outfit Match I went on a night out in Cardiff for a friends birthday in January and brought a lovely

Outfit Match

I went on a night out in Cardiff for a friends birthday in January and brought a lovely dress pictured above which has yesterday been spotted on Amy Childs, 7th March. I purchased the dress from Rare.

Kelly xxx


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An Imam in the U.K is being criticized for stating that sex slavery is permitted in Islam. Ali Hammuda who is an Imam at a mosque where three ISIS fighters worshipped tells men that it is perfectly fine to have sex with slaves. I am not sure why this is considered ‘controversial’ when he is simply saying what the Quran and the Sunnah state. If you consider what he claims to be controversial, then you must be intellectually honest and consider the entire religion of Islam being openly practiced in non-Muslim countries to be controversial. But of course, they would not take it that far, and I am not even advocating that, but I can only ask people to be honest and not make themselves look like fools if they actually do disagree with what Ali Hammuda is saying.

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The entire notion of having sexual relations with captives of war was something that Muhammad himself took part in. I am not saying this because I want to insult Muslims or their prophet, but this is a matter of fact. It has been recorded in the Quran and to a more elaborate extent in the Sunnah. If you are interested in understanding the actual scriptural justification for it then you can watch this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DR7_YQ53lfI

If you say that you are for freedom of religion and you consider Islam to be a religion on an equal level as all the other religions, then how can you say that what this man is stating is controversial? He is simply reiterating what his religion states. If you are critical of this man’s position then you have no choice but to also be critical of Islam.

Check out this #trending #tshirt AMAZON UK #ATSocialmedia #Londonslovinit Thou Art Mighty #RedDragon

Check out this #trending #tshirt AMAZON UK #ATSocialmedia #Londonslovinit Thou Art Mighty #RedDragon #WelshRugby #TShirt by taiche #cwmrhondda #wales #cymru #sixnationsrugby https://buff.ly/2C0dc1E⠀
#Cardiff #Swansea #RhonddaCynonTaf #Carmarthenshire #Caerphilly #Flintshire #Newport #Bridgend #PortTalbot #Wrexham #Powys #ValeofGlamorgan #Pembrokeshire #CountyGwynedd #Conwy #Denbighshire #Monmouthshire #Anglesey#BlaenauGwent #MerthyrTydfil
https://www.instagram.com/p/Bu4_MQ2gPPr/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=mr6ec08un1v6


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#WelshRugby #NothingIsImpossible #RedDragon #KidsTees by taiche | Redbubble Awesome design. Excellen

#WelshRugby #NothingIsImpossible #RedDragon #KidsTees by taiche | Redbubble Awesome design. Excellent print quality. Accurate sizing for 2-12 years. #ATSocialMedia @redbubble⠀

#Cardiff #Swansea #RhonddaCynonTaf #Carmarthenshire #Caerphilly #Flintshire #Newport #Bridgend #PortTalbot #Wrexham #Powys #ValeofGlamorgan #Pembrokeshire #CountyGwynedd #Conwy #Denbighshire #Monmouthshire #Torfaen#Ceredigion #Anglesey#BlaenauGwent #MerthyrTydfil
https://www.instagram.com/p/Bu8h5pbjH-i/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1ajwx5gkrc0hy


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The Cardiff Coal Exchange (Est.1883) - Once at the centre of the global coal trade, the exchange detThe Cardiff Coal Exchange (Est.1883) - Once at the centre of the global coal trade, the exchange detThe Cardiff Coal Exchange (Est.1883) - Once at the centre of the global coal trade, the exchange detThe Cardiff Coal Exchange (Est.1883) - Once at the centre of the global coal trade, the exchange det

The Cardiff Coal Exchange (Est.1883) - Once at the centre of the global coal trade, the exchange determined the price of coal worldwide and in 1904 was the site of the first ever £1,000,000 business transaction. 

The building was closed indefinitely in 2013 and is facing demolition.


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Post 18 of 51…17) another thing he’s done which i’m chuffed to bits about is havePost 18 of 51…17) another thing he’s done which i’m chuffed to bits about is havePost 18 of 51…17) another thing he’s done which i’m chuffed to bits about is havePost 18 of 51…17) another thing he’s done which i’m chuffed to bits about is havePost 18 of 51…17) another thing he’s done which i’m chuffed to bits about is havePost 18 of 51…17) another thing he’s done which i’m chuffed to bits about is have

Post 18 of 51…

17) another thing he’s done which i’m chuffed to bits about is have action figures made of the characters he’s played, and he’s one of the few people to have action figures in 3 different shows. Doctor Who,TorchwoodandArrow.

[top pic] the various iterations of Captain Jack Harkness… from the original, through to Malibu Jack (with hat!), coated Jack and the Torchwood ones…

[second pic] hooded and unhooded versions of Malcom Merlyn from Arrow

[other pics] my Captain Jack Harkness Action figure sure has travelled a fair bit when I’ve gone places, those pics are of course from Cardiff & the Roald Dahl Plass where Torchwood 3 is. ;o)


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WNBR Cardiff - Trix in boots part 3 of 3for more of her click hereWNBR Cardiff - Trix in boots part 3 of 3for more of her click hereWNBR Cardiff - Trix in boots part 3 of 3for more of her click hereWNBR Cardiff - Trix in boots part 3 of 3for more of her click hereWNBR Cardiff - Trix in boots part 3 of 3for more of her click hereWNBR Cardiff - Trix in boots part 3 of 3for more of her click hereWNBR Cardiff - Trix in boots part 3 of 3for more of her click hereWNBR Cardiff - Trix in boots part 3 of 3for more of her click hereWNBR Cardiff - Trix in boots part 3 of 3for more of her click hereWNBR Cardiff - Trix in boots part 3 of 3for more of her click here

WNBR Cardiff - Trix in boots part 3 of 3

for more of her click here


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Terra Nova, Bute East Dock, Cardiff, 1910!

Terra Nova, Bute East Dock, Cardiff, 1910!


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Llanishen (Llan-Isan)

LLANISHEN (LLAN-ISAN), a parish, in the union of Cardiff, hundred of Kibbor, county of Glamorgan, South Wales, on the road from Cardiff to Caerphilly, 3½ miles (N.) from Cardiff; containing 418 inhabitants. Llanishen House, now fallen to decay, was, for more than two centuries, the seat of the family of Lewis; it previously belonged to the Vaughans, the heiress of which family was married to a younger son of the Lewises of the Vann. New House is a handsome modern seat, pleasantly situated at the southern foot of a lofty ridge of hills running in a direction from east to west in this part of the county. The living is a perpetual curacy, endowed with £200 private benefaction, and £800 royal bounty; net income, £46; patrons, alternately, C. K. Kemeys Tynte, Esq., and the representative of the last Earl of Plymouth, the impropriators. The church, dedicated to St. Isan, is a neat structure, in the pointed style of architecture. There is a place of worship for Wesleyan Methodists. Two day schools in connexion with the Church are held, as also is a Church Sunday school. In 1728, Mary Lewis conveyed by deed a moiety of the great tithes of the parish of Lisvane, in trust to certain parties, to the intent that they should out of the rents and profits employ masters here and at Lisvane, at a salary of £5 each, to teach the poor children in both places, and that the remainder should be employed in apprenticing them. These tithes, at present let for £70 per annum, are also subject to a payment of £10 to the perpetual curate. Edward Morgan, by will in 1669, assigned a rent-charge of £2. 12., to be distributed in bread among the poor; and Thomas Lewis, Esq., in 1775, gave one of £4 to the paupers in four almshouses, let by him to the parish; but this endowment has not been paid of late years; and a rent-charge of 13s. 4d., bequeathed by Matthew Pritchard, in 1623, for the benefit of the poor, is said to have been lost by the river Tâf encroaching on the property. According to Leland, Richard William, otherwise Cromwell, afterwards Earl of Essex, who was beheaded by order of Henry VIII., was born at the mansion of New House; but the circumstance is doubtful. The water of a spring called St. Dene’s Well is considered efficacious in the cure of scorbutic complaints.

___

A Topographical Dictionary of Wales

Samuel Lewis

1849

April 1767.

Coroner’s Inquest taken at Cardiff on view of the body of Edward Kemeys, found that the deceased, being employed by one John Rimbron to carry stones up to a lime-kiln situate in the parish of Saint Mary in the said town, fell down into the said lime-kiln, which was then and there on fire; and was, by means of the sulphur and smoke arising therefrom, suffocated and instantly died.

Gigante de CardiffEl gigante de Cardiff fue un fraude perpetrado en 1869 por el estanquero George HuGigante de CardiffEl gigante de Cardiff fue un fraude perpetrado en 1869 por el estanquero George Hu

Gigante de Cardiff

Elgigante de Cardiff fue un fraude perpetrado en 1869 por el estanquero George Hull, que mandó tallar una figura humana de 3,10 metros de altura a partir de un bloque de yeso, para luego enterrarlo y hacerlo descubrir por un constructor de pozos. La idea se le ocurrió después de mantener una discusión con un reverendo metodista, el cual sostenía que la Biblia debía interpretarse de manera literal, incluyendo el pasaje que dice: «Había gigantes en la tierra en aquellos días».

Phineas Taylor Barnum intentó comprar el gigante por 60 000$. Como no consiguió realizar la compra, encargó una réplica del gigante, afirmando que el original en realidad se trataba de un timo, e intentando hacer pasar su gigante por el verdadero.

Finalmente,se descubrió el engaño de Hull al encontrarse marcas de cincel en la estatua.​ En la actualidad el gigante de Cardiff se exhibe en el Museo de los granjeros de Cooperstown (Nueva York),​ y la réplica encargada por P. T. Barnum se encuentra en el Museo de maravillas mecánicas de Marvin, en Farmington Hills, Míchigan.


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Cardiff, 2017.@jjmarshallassociates on instagram for others..

Cardiff, 2017.

@jjmarshallassociates on instagram for others..


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#yooooooouuuu    #gerard    #cardiff    
Pontcanna Dawn

Pontcanna Dawn por Steve Garrington
Por Flickr:
In Explore Today. First light on a frosty morning with lots of mist, in Pontcanna Fields alongside the banks of the River Taff in the centre of Cardiff.

#sunrise    #pontcanna    #llandaff    #llandaff fields    #morning    #shadow    #outdoor    #fields    #leaves    #branches    #steve garrington    #wentloog    #cardiff    #caerdydd    #britain    

Keeping up the quarantine moral again by taking some time to reflect on the outstanding Vegan food that I’ve missed since the lockdown started.

One of Cardiffs newer vegan eateries, Got No Beef really came out swinging with their hearty and filling menu. Offering burgers, fries, hotdogs and more!

A family run business that spent a few years building the brand at food festivals and events…

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Remember going outside and buying food made by other people? yeah I miss it too. hopefully we’ll get back to that soon, but in the mean time I’m gonna write about the places I’m missing.

Arguably Cardiffs first vegan junk food spot, Greazy Vegan really hits the spot.

I can be found here a few times a month scuttling away with a bag filled with vegan Buffalo wings, one of their outstanding…

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With everything that’s going on right now with lockdowns and COVID-19 I’ve found it difficult to really find new things to write about.

With this in mind, I really felt that now is the time to drum up support for the independent vegan businesses that are getting hit hard by this pandemic. The vegan community, especially in Cardiff has seen such growth in the last year. So many brilliant and…

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Like most people I’ve been into cycling since I was a kid.

I remember opening my first mountain bike one Christmas. I couldn’t tell you anything about it apart from it being black with yellow tires.

I remember going for my first ride with my mum walking along side me and my brother. This is when a stranger stopped us to say my handlebars were on backwards.

What happened to that bike I have no idea. Like many of the bikes I had growing up, it most likely ended up a rusting hulk in the garden because we didn’t have the space to keep them inside.

Anyway, fast forward a about a decade and many bikes later. I’ve amassed a small fleet of custom bicycles that have occupied my spare time over the past 4 years.

The first one on the list would be my Duracell mountain bike. I got this as it was being given away as a promotional item. I don’t remember what exactly because I’ve owned the bike for at least 10 years in total now.

I used it a handful of times when I was 17, but living in a hilly valley town made it difficult to use and thus it was resigned to the garden until I moved to Cardiff in 2015.

As I’d moved to the city for university and work. I figured I’d need a mode of transport, Cardiff being a fairly flat city made the idea of cycling fun and easy. That’s when I decided to dig the Duracell bike out of retirement.

Needless to say, the bike was completely seized. I remember there being a puncture in the rear tire when I last used it, but being sat in the garden for all that time had taken its toll.

As I was unfamiliar with bike maintenance and repair (I had never even opened a puncture kit) I was unsure if the bike was worth saving or if I’d have to just buy a new bike, however having a limited budget at the time made looking for a new bike difficult.

So seeking some professional help, I went to my local Halfords store to see what they could do.

As it happens a friend of mine worked there and gave me the news that he could bring the bike back to life and have it in working condition for £55… Bearing in mind I had to carry this bike into the store because it was completely seized up.

Fast forward a week and here’s what I got back!

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They had replaced the bottom bracket, brakes, brake levers, brake pads, inner tubes, brake cables and housing, gear lines and housing, front and rear derailleur arms and the rear cassette…

For all of you that are unfamiliar with bike anatomy, that’s basically everything that makes the bike move!

Of course. As happy as I was with the resurrection of the bike, I just couldn’t leave it in its stock setup. I had to make this mountain bike a useful city commuter that can take the urban and the mud. I started out by adding pannier racks and bags.

Ultimately the pannier bags above lasted about a week and the handlebar bag even less. They didn’t suit my needs, and keeping things on your bike while it’s locked up on the street just isn’t a great idea.

handlebars

My modifications from this point had whole practical influences. I changed out the bars for a straight bar from Brick Lane Bikes and swapped out the horrid grip shift gears for some new combination Shimano EF41 quick shifters and brake levers. Finished off this some gold bar tape… Just because. This setup was then improved with the addition the Takeaway tray, another item from Brick Lane Bikes.

This setup helps me I’m the city because it makes the bike so narrow. I can filter through the heaviest traffic without worrying about accidentally scratching other vehicles, and the tray on the front has come in handy on so many occasions.

Later additions came in the forms of a Pendleton satchel bag for my everyday use, and some metal carrying cages.

While in uni, using the duracell bike. I realised that sometimes I was taking out a really heavy bike built to carry things when all I really needed was something simple and lightweight to get me from A to B. So as a result of this I ended up buying a new bike from ebay.

Brand new this bike only cost me £160 including delivery.

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A nice, simple, single speed bicycle with nothing unnecessary weighing me down… The only problem was, I hated the bars on it for some reason.

I already knew what I wanted, dropped racing bars and 2 position brake levers like I’d seen on vintage 10 speed bikes.

I found it a great bike and took its place as my main ride depending on if I knew I’d need to carry anything heavy or bulky.

When I had these 2 bikes up and running my commute to work was only around 500 meters or so, I made a point of living close to my workplace. In fact, some mornings it would take me longer to get the bike out of my flat than it would take to cycle to work.

However, in February 2017. My place of work changed location. Which meant that my 500m trip to work became a 7 mile round trip. Needless to say this was a massive step up in regards to my previous cycling endeavours.

The first few weeks were hell and I still couldn’t work out which bike would be better to commute with. A lighter bike with only one speed, or a heavier bike with the ability to adjust the gears… over time and with a lot of practice I was capable of cycling the route in a best time of 15:30 with either bike. I still believe I could have got that down to less than 10 minutes if it wasn’t for the 10 sets of traffic lights on the way. My health improved massively and my asthma almost completely disappeared. I was in the best physical shape I had ever been. My thighs muscles had even doubled in size!

As of this post I have started a third bike build for the sake of fun. This project bike was actually acquired as the same time as the duracell mountain bike and was in pretty much the same condition when I dragged it out of the garden at my family home.

I proceeded to strip off all the parts I didn’t want or were too damaged to use. This left with the frame and forks, wheel set, front crankset, pedals and rear cassette.

The plan is to get the bike up and running as a single speed cargo bicycle for now, with the intention to eventually get an 80cc engine kit and make it work as a cargo moped! I’ve only got as far as to get the wheels re-wrapped with City jets and I’ve also already started to cover the frame with stickers… Because it’s my project and I want to… other parts I’ve been looking at including this flat rat handlebar rack by Brick Lane Bikes

I know this post isn’t for the purist cyclists put there. Nor is it for the mountain bike crowd, or even the city commuter crowd. These bikes are built to my own, very weird specifications. They all serve a purpose that I need them to. And honestly I do it for the fun of building. There’s nothing more rewarding that looking at something you’ve created with pure glee and pride. Here’s to running these bikes for years to come!

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Easy rider. Like most people I’ve been into cycling since I was a kid. I remember opening my first mountain bike one Christmas.

To those of you who know me in the real world, it’ll be no surprise that I’m losing my hair.

I’ll admit I’ve been in denial about it, holding on to it for no other reason than I considered my hair to be such a large part of my identity and confidence for so many years. I’ve grown it long, cut it short, spiked, coloured, mohawked and even curled it.

Ten years ago I had my own Britney breakdown on New year’s eve and started shaving my head while blind drunk. Obviously I needed some help finishing it off.

What followed was months of regrowth; it took about 6 months for me to have any kind of recognizable hairstyle. This happened back when the barbering/hairdressing industry was a very different place, before the resurgence in popularity of the barbering profession over the past 6 years.

I first noticed my hair thinning around 5 years ago. At first it was a few photos from unflattering angles, followed by the odd comment and even having my crown poked with the words “What’s that?”.

My hair has thinned to transparency throughout my crown area, and the front hairline has receded as well, making the remaining hair half the thickness as it is on my sides and nape.

Although I’ve looked into processes such as hair transplants, micro-needling and trying to make changes to my diet and lifestyle, I’ve found that the options available to me are either ineffective or prohibitively expensive to have done.

Although I can style my hair well, it takes a level of effort that I feel no longer pays off with how thin it has become. Almost like trying to style smoke in some parts.

The only way forward I see for myself at the moment is to simply shave my head. The main difference this time is that I have 10 years of experience in hair AND I have a beard!

After a long chat with Matt, one of my colleagues at Keep The Faith Social Club, we decided to take it down as short as possible using the Wahl Cordless Detailers and then tapered in the neckline with a foil shaper.

We also ended up blending the beard out rather than creating a point. (This decision was made using one of those Wheel of Fortune style apps).

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This post and decision may seem very sudden or even drastic, but this post has taken me months to write. The past 4 years have been a long journey for my hair to say the least. Now it’s finally done, I feel like there has been a weight lifted, obviously physically but I also now feel like I don’t have to worry about what my hair looks like.

I was expecting it to feel so alien to me and yet it just feels alarmingly normal, which is something I didn’t even account for. I guess that’s the difference between taking the time to prepare yourself for a big change, rather than being a drunken mess, yeeting your hair straight into a bin on New Year’s Eve!

I’ll admit that I’m still not sure about it. I even forget about what I’ve done sometimes until I see myself in a mirror. But I still believe it was the best thing I could have done!

So, I’m losing my hair. To those of you who know me in the real world, it’ll be no surprise that I’m losing my hair.

Self-improvement is a lifetime task. Every year millions of people make new years resolutions by signing up to the gym and starting a new diet, taking on too many things at once. This inevitably leads to failure through over extension, a byproduct of taking on too many new tasks.

Not all changes have to be big or drastic, sometimes something small can equal big change.

Changing your shopping habits is something so subtle and accessible that you’ll hardly notice a difference, and you’ll save some money along the way!

Single use plastic in particular is almost at a crisis level. In 2016 we produced 335 million metric tons of plastic, half of which which was exclusively for single use packaging. [1]

Ripple is among the first zero-waste stores in Cardiff. Allowing you as a consumer to purchase your everyday items such as pasta and washing powder without having to shell out for unnecessary single use packaging!

The store is stacked from floor to ceiling with all kinds of products. All in handy, well-marked containers that are easy to access. They stock all kinds of dried food, spices, cereals, grains, sweets, and household products. They also stock some zero-waste lifestyle products and clothing as well as some cosmetic supplies.

The whole concept of zero-waste living can come across as being quite lofty and unattainable. But in fact it’s actually helped me be more organised when I shop and in my kitchen at home, and is nowhere near as expensive as I’d been led to believe.

The great thing about it is that you can use any container you own to purchase your products. For example I have an old bottle of Jack Daniels filled with Faith in Nature shampoo as well as an empty tin of Uppercut Deluxe that I stash raw chocolate raisins in for work.

One of the most handy things I’ve bought is their all purpose cleaner. As with all of the other items in the store, you can fill your own container by weight. But being a cleaning product, you ideally want to keep the information written on the bottle for reference. So what they did was make bottle for it. On your first purchase the bottle and cleaner cost £5 which seems a little pricey. However if you bring the bottle back when it’s empty, a refill only costs you £2!

Ripple has really pulled it out of the hessian sack. Their store is stunning and very well stocked with pretty much everything you need to start and maintain your zero-waste journey. By changing my habits and phasing out single use packaging I’m saving myself money and more importantly. Reducing my reliance on single use plastic!

I’m making an effort to do better. Self-improvement is a lifetime task. Every year millions of people make new years resolutions by signing up to the gym and starting a new diet, taking on too many things at once.

This story has been long overdue. I’ve moved into a new place in Cardiff, where exactly I’m not going to post here, but I’m still a reasonable distance from the city centre.

I’ve moved into an amazing room in a modern, clean 7 bedroom house.

I got a first floor bedroom with a bay window. It lets in so much natural light that I haven’t had to turn on the spotlights until 9pm in the summer. The room came with a fitted desk, built-in wardrobe, a Malm chest of drawers and an en suite bathroom.

I lost no time making myself feel at home! I set up my IKEA Kallax units in the corner to create a display and storage wall. This whole setup allows me to display most of my cameras as well as my most useful and refered-to books. Any items I don’t want on display I keep in the boxes on the lower shelves. The Kallax units I’ve had for two and three years respectfully, they’ve come with me all the way from my first flat, a testament to the longevity of cared-for flatpack.

At the moment this is one of my favourite parts of the room, my tower of power! The triangle shelving unit was from Flying Tiger, it displays my cameras perfectly without making the space feel cluttered. The Moppe drawers are great, I wanted to use them to organise small items, in particular my collection of unused camera film. I find old film quite frequently, often in a bag of old cameras that’s been given to me or when express imaging has some interesting emulsion floating around in their “last chance” jar. I painted them with chalkboard paint in order to write the contents of the drawer with a chalk pen, handy if you have every changing small items in storage like myself.

The bathroom is a decent size for an en suite, nice modern fitting by Porcelanosa with a heated towel rail, sink and storage throughout. The shower in particular has more than enough space with a glass door and a fixed waterfall head. Let’s just say it’s a lot easier to get out of bed living here!

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The house also has a pretty big kitchen and a nice split level garden, a great space that I was able to host my Vegan BBQ in!

All things considered I’m so happy in my new place. Being in such a clean, organised space does wonders for my ability to create. I feel free in my room to do whatever I need to do, all my books and equipment are on hand and easily accessable, even the stuff thats hidden out of the way is still really easy to get to. Heres hoping I get to stay here for a while!

My new place! This story has been long overdue. I’ve moved into a new place in Cardiff, where exactly I’m not going to post here, but I’m still a reasonable distance from the city centre.

Every now and again, we all get a great bargain or buy an item that just becomes indispensable. In my case I found something that ticks both boxes!

Unfortunately I’m a sucker for army surplus. My belief is that these items still have life and use in them, and if it’s good enough to survive, then I’m sure my civilian life will prove no challenge.

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I picked up this bag from a bargain bin in an army surplus store in Aberdare. I’d always wanted one for things like festivals and camping trips but had no idea I’d use it as much as I have.

It’s found use as a camping backpack. Capable of holding a full size, 5 man family tent, sleeping bag and food for 5 days. It was also amazingly useful while moving house, I loaded this bag up with everything from clothing  to my barrel BBQ (not at the same time, that would be a hideous mess) I’ve used it for festivals, general transport and sometimes as a storage solution.

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Fully packed this bag can be a little unwieldy to say the least, luckily this version came with backpack straps to make it easier to use. Other versions of it came with an extended closure clip strap as a carrying handle. The small pocket on the outside is handy for keeping hold of small items that you need access to: keys, folded documents, or even your passport!

As you can see, my bag came in fairly used condition. It still had its US markings as well as some letters on the bottom of the bag that had been painted over in white. If anyone has information on what these markings could be then I’d be delighted to find out!

Obviously I was lucky finding this bag in good condition for the price, being military surplus makes buying online a constant gamble. This bag only cost me £5, and while I can’t find a reliable link for one as cheap as mine, I did find a new version of the duffel bag, made by Mil-Tec that you can buy from eBay!

The best £5 I’ve ever spent. Every now and again, we all get a great bargain or buy an item that just becomes indispensable.
Another one of the restyle I’ve done recently. This time with loads of natural texture. Used K

Another one of the restyle I’ve done recently. This time with loads of natural texture. Used KMS Curl Up Control Creme to style.

#slunkshairclub #slunks #haircut #hairdressersofinstagram #barber #workflow #hairdresser #cardiff #alternative #morgansarcade #fckinghair #creativehead #wella #kmscalifornia #kms #texture #curlyhair #alinebob #modernbob (at Slunks)


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cardiff love this use of tiling to create a eclectic, rustic look ig source: @ hygge_for_homecardiff love this use of tiling to create a eclectic, rustic look ig source: @ hygge_for_home

cardiff

love this use of tiling to create a eclectic, rustic look

ig source: @ hygge_for_home


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inthetags:

reblog this and put in the tags which capital cities you’ve been to

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