Nude women. Swinging in Thingsaway
Couple search free fucks Love to share local fuck buddies hot wife m.
.jpeg)
.jpg)

.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpeg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)

.jpg)


.jpeg)
.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)

.jpg)

.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpeg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
See other girls from Hong Kong: Milf dating in Kowloon, Women who wanna fuck in Familycensus, Adult singles dating in Thingsaway
Calvin Klein, the man, not the fashion mega-house, has been absent from the fashion scene for almost 20 years. Of course, Calvin Klein the fashion mega-house is strong as ever with a cult figure, Raf Simons , at the helm and many still-successful diffusive branches—underwear, jeans, home, fragrance.
But Calvin Klein himself has been pursuing different hobbies, only popping up for an event here, a party there, managing—in an old-school, gentlemanly way—to remain largely under the radar. The resulting book is a tome—a testament to the lasting influence of the first master of minimalism, the prince of pushing boundaries. Finally, it's a gorgeous coffee-table book, filled with images by icons like Mario Sorrenti, Bruce Weber, and more.
GQ Style: You started with womenswear. What made you move into menswear? Calvin Klein: When I felt that we could handle it, that we could produce it, that I could have the design staff to help me design the clothes. It was just a matter of timing. Did you always think you would do menswear? But menswear has a real point of view, too, and I obviously wanted to wear the clothes myself. Well, you practically invented minimalism. How did that come about?
It has to do with my perception of how I like to look personally. And also how I like women to look. Women were responding to the purity and simplicity of clothes that were more about shape than decoration. It was about cut, it was about the shape.