#throwback to Les Miserables world premiere, on December 5th, 2012, in London.
Today marks 13 years since this movie premiered. It's incredible how time flies!
📸 & 🎥 Getty Images

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#throwback to Les Miserables world premiere, on December 5th, 2012, in London.
Today marks 13 years since this movie premiered. It's incredible how time flies!
📸 & 🎥 Getty Images

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Southeast Dr, Lubbock, Texas.
Harry is in the reflection here
On Taylor’s 23rd birthday 13 December 2012, Harry showed her around Cheshire. He gifted her this bag also and 23 cupcakes, which Harry collected himself, article with quotes from the baker here.
“Laetitia Casta En Pleine Lumière” - Laetitia Casta by Laurent Humbert for La Parisienne, December 2012
Fault Magazine (December 2012)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Parade Magazine, 2012
Recycled Gears Transformed Into Mechanical Creatures
by Katie Hosmer - My Modern Met, December 14, 2012
What might seem like a pile of junk to the average person is creative inspiration for Chicago-based artist Justin Gershenson-Gates. With a website aptly entitled A Mechanical Mind, Gershenson-Gates has a knack for transforming dusty old parts into all kinds of unique and clever designs. In particular, his insect-shaped creations, ranging from grasshoppers to dragonflies to spiders, are whimsical interpretations of the recycled gears. He is interested in featuring the often overlooked details of a machine's interior, and he says, “My aim is to show the beauty of the mechanical world, a place generally hidden from the public behind metal and glass.”
Raised by a gearhead, the artist finds that working with mechanisms has always been a part of his nature. As a young boy, he would take his toys apart but could never quite figure out how to put them back together. Now, as an adult, he has mastered the art of seeing beauty in broken, and otherwise useless, gadgets.
Gershenson-Gates uses countless pieces, including watch straps, winding stems, gears, springs, cogs, plates, light bulbs, and more, to form the body parts of each insect, and one piece takes an average of several hours to complete. The artist uses complex soldering to connect all of the sections and the delicate designs are free from any glue or resin. Fans of the artwork can purchase these, as well as a variety of intricate jewelry, on Gershenson-Gates' Etsy shop, here.
Justin Gershenson-Gates' website
Zero Zero Demo - Gerard Way
Posted December 5th, 2012