https://wiki.alpinelinux.org/w/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=Jerry&feedformat=atomAlpine Linux - User contributions [en]2024-03-28T17:52:54ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.40.0https://wiki.alpinelinux.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Jerry&diff=11388User talk:Jerry2015-11-05T02:11:55Z<p>Jerry: Created page with "Kids Wall Stickers - A Fun Way to Decorate The beauty of children's [http://www.gcmstore.com/wall-stickers wall stickers decor] is that they go a lot further than just the d..."</p>
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<div>Kids Wall Stickers - A Fun Way to Decorate<br />
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The beauty of children's [http://www.gcmstore.com/wall-stickers wall stickers decor] is that they go a lot further than just the design. For parents looking to brighten up their child's room or for children who are bored of their walls the children's stickers can help resolve the issue without unnecessary hassle. They make a great design impact and simple to use and can help transform the look and feel of the room within minutes.<br />
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Nothing can be more fun than decorating a child's bedroom. Planning how you want the room together can spark creativity in both your child are yourself. Kids wall stickers are one of the easiest ways to transform a room using something which is affordable and which come in so many different styles.<br />
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Once the paint has dried on your walls, and you have left it a couple of weeks to really settle you are able to start applying kids' wall Murals. They provide a simple way to brighten up the room of your child without being a permanent fixture. As your child grows and changes you are able to peel off the kids wall stickers and change them.<br />
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By waiting you are ensuring that the stickers will not damage the paintwork when you finally decide to remove them. Of course you do not have to paint the walls first; if they are in good condition you can simply change the room by adding the stickers.<br />
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Sometimes children like to swap rooms with their siblings, or you may wish to reorganise the home. [http://www.gcmstore.com/wall-stickers wall stickers frozen] are so affordable that you could tailor decorate each of the rooms to suit the owners taste. The kids wall stickers make decorating a room so easy, there is no need to get the paintbrushes out or start putting up wall paper. Just apply the stickers to the wall, and the room looks better than ever, that way the child has a room which is completely their own. It is a very cost effective way of satisfying the designer in your children.<br />
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Types of Kids Wall Stickers<br />
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There are so many different kids wall Art stickers to choose from that the hardest part will be helping your child decide which ones they want. The very young may love to watch all their favourite Disney films over and over, so you may wish to use the Disney style stickers which are the genuine article, in their room.<br />
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Many young children love Winnie the Pooh and the characters such as Piglet and Tigger. These characters are loved by little boys and girls alike. If you are decorating a nursery for your brand new arrival then the Winnie the Pooh stickers are a good option to choose. They come on different sizes and can be used on one feature wall or spread out over all of the walls in the room. Mix these stickers with a simple alphabet border for a fun and educational room which is ideal for all pre-school children.<br />
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Boys and Girls<br />
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There are kids wall Decals designed for boys or girls, although many will be loved by both. Almost all children love animals and there are plenty of animals stickers to choose between. You may wish to buy bright and colourful animals such as the stunning butterfly packs or colourful birds. These look amazing on pale walls and add interest and individualism which children love.<br />
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For slightly older children or for brighter walls you may wish to purchase the black cat stickers.These silhouettes have an abundance of character and look stunning up on the walls.Some of the cat wall stickers have brightly coloured collars and friendly faces which can help to bring personality into the kids [http://www.gcmstore.com/wall-stickers wall stickers decoration for home].<br />
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If you want to see more style cartoon wall stickers,please visit http://www.gcmstore.com/</div>Jerryhttps://wiki.alpinelinux.org/w/index.php?title=User:Jerry&diff=11370User:Jerry2015-11-04T06:13:19Z<p>Jerry: Created page with "‘Frozen’ Is the Best Disney Film for any age to see Who needs Pixar? Frozen confirms that the House of Mouse is capable of melting hearts again. There's a special place..."</p>
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<div>‘Frozen’ Is the Best Disney Film for any age to see<br />
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Who needs Pixar? Frozen confirms that the House of Mouse is capable of melting hearts again.<br />
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There's a special place in the heart reserved for wisecracking candlesticks, singing crustaceans, and lion cubs growing up to be mighty kings. It's a place where nostalgia is kept, where a warm feeling swells at the thought of things that we used to love, that used to be great.<br />
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For the better part of this new century, Disney's animated features resided there.<br />
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With a string of brilliant animated musicals in the late '80s and '90s—The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, The Lion King—the House of Mouse reigned, with hit after hit of family-friendly cartoons that dominated the box office, dazzled critics, and warmed cold hearts with signature Disney magic and catchy tunes. The Magic Kingdom was overthrown in the new millennium, with Pixar delivering its own brand of reliably wholesome and reliably brilliant films—Toy Story 2, Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, Up, Wall-E—while Disney struggled to adapt its magic to a new tech-savvy age.<br />
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Frozen, which hits theaters Wednesday, is the best Disney film since The Lion King, and a powerful reminder of how astonishing the company's magic can really be. This is also, as it happens, the third consecutive year that Disney's big animated release is better than Pixar's. The knee-jerk reaction to such a thing would be to call Disney the new Pixar. But the more accurate coronation is that Disney is the new Disney.<br />
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Frozen pulls off its animated abracadabra by conjuring up the elements that made Disney's modern classics just that. It's about two sister princesses—this is Disney, did you really expect anything else?—in the Scandinavian kingdom of Arendelle whose relationship is tested when their parents die in a tragic accident—again, this is Disney, did you really expect anything else? Mostly, though, it's about the transformative powers of true love, of both the sisterly and romantic kind. This is Disney, and we don't want to expect anything else.<br />
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Anna (voiced by Kristen Bell as an adult) and Elsa (Idina Menzel as an adult) are inseparable as little girls. They adore spending time with each other, especially when Elsa uses her secret power to make it snow inside the castle. As must be learned, great power comes with great responsibility. Elsa's lesson comes when she nearly kills Anna while casting a chilly spell. Anna is fine—a wise (and adorable) old troll erases her memory of the incident. But in Elsa's eyes, great responsibility means Rapunzel-ing herself in her castle bedroom, where her powers can't hurt anyone else.<br />
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But she does hurt Anna, every day, as her heart breaks at the transformation of her fun-loving best friend into a mysterious recluse. The dissolution of their relationship plays out in the achingly poignant duet "Do You Want to Build a Snowman?" sung by the girls from opposite sides of locked doors as the years pass and they grow into lonely adults. (This is where we see their parents die.) The sequence evokes the masterful montage from the beginning of Pixar's Up, but made perhaps even more wrenching by the essentially Disney element of song.<br />
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When Elsa comes of age, a ball is held to celebrate her becoming queen, the first time the people of Arendelle are allowed within the castle's walls since the death of her parents. Anna, spunky and cute with a tiara on her head and heart on her sleeve, delights in the company of others, including a prince she believes is her true love, and needles Elsa to allow it to happen more often, unable to understand why she won't. Frustrated at not being able to give Anna the happiness she wants, Elsa loses control of her powers, accidentally turning the entire kingdom into a frozen wasteland and outing herself as a magical freak.</div>Jerry