Hermès CHEETAH TATOO Blue
Hermès: Very rare square in damask silk, titled "Cheetahs Tatoo", Drawn by Robert Dallet.
He is exceptional, because Maison Hermès no longer manufactured damask silk because its cost is terribly expensive.
In a multiplied round, this square reveals the beauty of the cheetah race. The legs that meet at the tightest re-deploy in a powerful movement while the body lengthens, as in flight, in an almost perfect line. The expression "running belly to earth" could not be better illustrated, but its triviality cannot translate the elegance of this stride nor the majesty of this animal. He embodies beauty, the finesse, perfection. At the four corners, some tender scenes, peaceful, families highlight the innocent grace of the little ones, who will prove to be formidable predators. This earned them training for hunting, from three thousand years before our era, by the Sumerians, then the Egyptians. In the sixteenth century, the Great Mughal Akbar, would have had no less than nine thousand captured during his reign. Composed of some of the studies of one of the greatest designers of felines, Robert Dallet, this scarf pays homage to a species that is now threatened.
In a multiplied round, this square reveals the beauty of the cheetah race. The legs that meet at the tightest re-deploy in a powerful movement while the body lengthens, as in flight, in an almost perfect line. The expression "running belly to earth" could not be better illustrated, but its triviality cannot translate the elegance of this stride nor the majesty of this animal. He embodies beauty, the finesse, perfection. At the four corners, some tender scenes, peaceful, families highlight the innocent grace of the little ones, who will prove to be formidable predators. This earned them training for hunting, from three thousand years before our era, by the Sumerians, then the Egyptians. In the sixteenth century, the Great Mughal Akbar, would have had no less than nine thousand captured during his reign. Composed of some of the studies of one of the greatest designers of felines, Robert Dallet, this scarf pays homage to a species that is now threatened.
In a multiplied round, this square reveals the beauty of the cheetah race. The legs that meet at the tightest re-deploy in a powerful movement while the body lengthens, as in flight, in an almost perfect line. The expression "running belly to earth" could not be better illustrated, but its triviality cannot translate the elegance of this stride nor the majesty of this animal. He embodies beauty, the finesse, perfection. At the four corners, some tender scenes, peaceful, families highlight the innocent grace of the little ones, who will prove to be formidable predators. This earned them training for hunting, from three thousand years before our era, by the Sumerians, then the Egyptians. In the sixteenth century, the Great Mughal Akbar, would have had no less than nine thousand captured during his reign. Composed of some of the studies of one of the greatest designers of felines, Robert Dallet, this scarf pays homage to a species that is now threatened. In a multiplied round, this square reveals the beauty of the cheetah race. The legs that meet at the tightest re-deploy in a powerful movement while the body lengthens, as in flight, in an almost perfect line. The expression "running belly to earth" could not be better illustrated, but its triviality cannot translate the elegance of this stride nor the majesty of this animal. He embodies beauty, the finesse, perfection. At the four corners, some tender scenes, peaceful, families highlight the innocent grace of the little ones, who will prove to be formidable predators. This earned them training for hunting, from three thousand years before our era, by the Sumerians, then the Egyptians. In the sixteenth century, the Great Mughal Akbar, would have had no less than nine thousand captured during his reign. Composed of some of the studies of one of the greatest designers of felines, Robert Dallet, this scarf pays homage to a species that is now threatened.
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10-05-2022Duck_6987
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27-05-2022