Iron Heart WAYWT - 2021 Edition
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Went for a gloomy walk and watched a storm roll in this afternoon.
Storm Rider
Camel Kersey
666-XHSib
Wesco -
@henry_david that 634 XHS looks sharp! Have a good time in LA. Been there so often (family), I miss travelling.
@Palmer very nicely matched!
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Went for a gloomy walk and watched a storm roll in this afternoon.
Storm Rider
Camel Kersey
666-XHSib
WescoI want to get those jeans — out of stock at the moment
Looking solid Palmer -
Doing the IHJ-82 under the 526-PJ today— you can combine till the cows come home:)
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@neph93 That Olive Serge Western is so cool
Can't wait to have them back in stock and complete the family.ps. How are those IH-555-SST going along? Tell me those pocket arcs are not stealth please?
The olive serge is incredible. So nice I may need it in the work shirt when it arrives.
As for the Shinayaka, brand new update here:
21oz Shinayaka Selvedge Denim
https://r.tapatalk.com/shareLink/topic?share_fid=19230&share_tid=14626&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ironheart.co.uk%2Fforum%2Findex.php%3Ftopic%3D14626&share_type=t&link_source=app -
here we go on a saturday morning … (IHSH-68-IND, IH-822*, IHJ-98-OLV, RW 877)
*again, thank you @Giles for making this possible, amazing denim, 42oz shield@dinobarnesberlin great combo
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@endo –-everything looks solid man.
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@dinobarnesberlin thanks, man
(didn't know the expression "till the cows come home", that's really funny) -
@dinobarnesberlin thanks, man
(didn't know the expression "till the cows come home", that's really funny)Its just an old school American expression;)
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Its just an old school American expression;)
Hey, colonial type. It was first seen in print in 1610 in an English play and is presumed to have been in use for quite a while before that. Given that the pilgrims landed in 1620 I’m claiming it for the Brits [emoji1]
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Rightly so
I just heard it around 1969 or so..didnt know its been around since 1610–but its one of those classic phrases.--it just fits:)
Claim Away -
I'll raise you 1593
Cows are notoriously languid creatures and make their way home at their own unhurried pace. That's certainly the imagery behind 'till the cows come home' or 'until the cows come home', but the precise time and place of the coining of this colloquial phrase isn't known.
It is a long-standing expression and the earliest example if it in print comes from the late 16th century. John Eliot used it in Ortho-epia Gallica, 1593, which was a French teaching textbook in which he attempted to "teacheth to speake truely, speedily and volubly the French-tongue":
I am tied by the foote till the Cow come home.
It's worth mentioning that this and other early citations refer to one cow coming home, why the phrase later migrated into the plural isn't clear.
Until the cows come homeGroucho Marx was never one to pass up an opportunity for a play on words, like this dialogue of the 1933 film Duck Soup:
"I could dance with you till the cows come home. Better still, I'll dance with the cows and you come home."
(Obvs - stolen from the web…).
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Fantastic fits today the last two days!!
Off to gymnastics we go…
IHSH-117 | Utilitees | IH-463s | WescoSent from my iPhone using Tapatalk