hypothesis
stringlengths 17
1.31k
| premise
stringlengths 104
5.14k
| label
stringclasses 3
values |
---|---|---|
And, truth be told, if one looked long enough at the lithe-limbed, leotard-clad dancers who bent, bounced and bounded about in a shower of rose petals in the background of [M]the runway show set at the Hippodrome ParisLongchamp[/M], it would have been hard not to feel moved, stirred or connected to something deep, something primal and something tribal. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
And, truth be told, if one looked long enough at [M]the lithe-limbed, leotard-clad dancers[/M] who bent, bounced and [M]bounded about in a shower of rose petals in the background of the runway show set[/M] at the Hippodrome ParisLongchamp, it would have been hard not to feel moved, stirred or connected to something deep, something primal and something tribal. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
And, truth be told, if one looked long enough at [M]the lithe-limbed, leotard-clad dancers[/M] who bent, [M]bounced[/M] and bounded about [M]in a shower of rose petals in the background of the runway show set[/M] at the Hippodrome ParisLongchamp, it would have been hard not to feel moved, stirred or connected to something deep, something primal and something tribal. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
And, truth be told, if one looked long enough at [M]the lithe-limbed, leotard-clad dancers[/M] who [M]bent[/M], bounced and bounded about [M]in a shower of rose petals in the background of the runway show set[/M] at the Hippodrome ParisLongchamp, it would have been hard not to feel moved, stirred or connected to something deep, something primal and something tribal. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
The collection also included a range of sharp and smartly belted blazers that have been a runway staple the last several seasons — some in navy blue and others in beige — as well as an assortment of tulle dresses with faded floral embroidery and a handful of dashiki-like tops sporting [M]the collection’s few pops of bright color, including[/M] yellow and [M]purple.[/M] | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
The collection also included a range of sharp and smartly belted blazers that have been a runway staple the last several seasons — some in navy blue and others in beige — as well as an assortment of tulle dresses with faded floral embroidery and a handful of dashiki-like tops sporting [M]the collection’s few pops of bright color, including yellow[/M] and purple. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
The collection also included a range of sharp and smartly belted blazers that have been a runway staple the last several seasons — some in navy blue and others in beige — as well as an assortment of tulle dresses with faded floral embroidery and [M]a handful of dashiki-like tops sporting the collection’s few pops of bright color[/M], including yellow and purple. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
The collection also included a range of sharp and smartly belted blazers that have been a runway staple the last several seasons — some in navy blue and others in beige — as well as an [M]assortment of tulle dresses with faded floral embroidery[/M] and a handful of dashiki-like tops sporting the collection’s few pops of bright color, including yellow and purple. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
The collection also included a range of sharp and smartly belted [M]blazers[/M] that have been a runway staple the last several seasons — some in navy blue and [M]others in beige[/M] — as well as an assortment of tulle dresses with faded floral embroidery and a handful of dashiki-like tops sporting the collection’s few pops of bright color, including yellow and purple. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
The collection also included a range of sharp and smartly belted [M]blazers[/M] that have been a runway staple the last several seasons — [M]some in navy blue[/M] and others in beige — as well as an assortment of tulle dresses with faded floral embroidery and a handful of dashiki-like tops sporting the collection’s few pops of bright color, including yellow and purple. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
The collection also included a range of sharp and smartly belted [M]blazers[/M] that [M]have been a runway staple the last several seasons[/M] — some in navy blue and others in beige — as well as an assortment of tulle dresses with faded floral embroidery and a handful of dashiki-like tops sporting the collection’s few pops of bright color, including yellow and purple. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
[M]The collection also included a range of[/M] sharp and [M]smartly belted blazers[/M] that have been a runway staple the last several seasons — some in navy blue and others in beige — as well as an assortment of tulle dresses with faded floral embroidery and a handful of dashiki-like tops sporting the collection’s few pops of bright color, including yellow and purple. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
[M]The collection[/M] also [M]included a range of sharp[/M] and smartly [M]belted blazers[/M] that have been a runway staple the last several seasons — some in navy blue and others in beige — as well as an assortment of tulle dresses with faded floral embroidery and a handful of dashiki-like tops sporting the collection’s few pops of bright color, including yellow and purple. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
A washed-out kaleidoscopic motif meets tie-dye pattern was, almost by default, the most eye-catching pattern in the mix, turning up on baggy denim cargo pants and trousers, tulle skirts and kimono-like robes and a few pieces that melded it with out-size florals, resulting in a trippy, ’70s-infused [M]festival look[/M] that [M]is[/M] all but [M]guaranteed to turn up in the VIP wristband section at Coachella[/M]. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
A washed-out kaleidoscopic motif meets tie-dye pattern was, almost by default, the most eye-catching pattern in the mix, turning up on baggy denim cargo pants and trousers, tulle skirts and [M]kimono-like robes[/M] and a few pieces that [M]melded it with out-size florals, resulting in a trippy, ’70s-infused festival look[/M] that is all but guaranteed to turn up in the VIP wristband section at Coachella. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
A washed-out kaleidoscopic motif meets tie-dye pattern was, almost by default, the most eye-catching pattern in the mix, turning up on baggy denim cargo pants and trousers, [M]tulle skirts[/M] and kimono-like robes and a few pieces that [M]melded it with out-size florals, resulting in a trippy, ’70s-infused festival look[/M] that is all but guaranteed to turn up in the VIP wristband section at Coachella. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
A washed-out kaleidoscopic motif meets tie-dye pattern was, almost by default, the most eye-catching pattern in the mix, turning up on [M]baggy denim cargo[/M] pants and [M]trousers[/M], tulle skirts and kimono-like robes and a few pieces that [M]melded it with out-size florals, resulting in a trippy, ’70s-infused festival look[/M] that is all but guaranteed to turn up in the VIP wristband section at Coachella. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
A washed-out kaleidoscopic motif meets tie-dye pattern was, almost by default, the most eye-catching pattern in the mix, turning up on [M]baggy denim cargo pants[/M] and trousers, tulle skirts and kimono-like robes and a few pieces that [M]melded it with out-size florals, resulting in a trippy, ’70s-infused festival look[/M] that is all but guaranteed to turn up in the VIP wristband section at Coachella. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
[M]A washed-out kaleidoscopic motif meets tie-dye pattern was[/M], almost by default, [M]the most eye-catching pattern in the mix[/M], turning up on baggy denim cargo pants and trousers, tulle skirts and kimono-like robes and a few pieces that melded it with out-size florals, resulting in a trippy, ’70s-infused festival look that is all but guaranteed to turn up in the VIP wristband section at Coachella. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
A ballet of black and beige with washed-out shades of blue and gray and a couple of unicorn-rare pops of bright accent color, [M]the collection[/M] was heavy on the après-danse look — easy, breezy comfortable pieces wrapped and draped across the body, mesh layered over bodysuits, and the kind of simple tank tops, airy skirts and [M]heavy coats[/M] a professional dancer might throw on before dashing from a stage door to a waiting car. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
A ballet of black and beige with washed-out shades of blue and gray and a couple of unicorn-rare pops of bright accent color, [M]the collection[/M] was heavy on the après-danse look — easy, breezy comfortable pieces wrapped and draped across the body, mesh layered over bodysuits, and the kind of simple tank tops, [M]airy skirts[/M] and heavy coats a professional dancer might throw on before dashing from a stage door to a waiting car. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
A ballet of black and beige with washed-out shades of blue and gray and a couple of unicorn-rare pops of bright accent color, [M]the collection[/M] was heavy on the après-danse look — easy, breezy comfortable pieces wrapped and draped across the body, mesh layered over bodysuits, and the kind of simple [M]tank tops[/M], airy skirts and heavy coats a professional dancer might throw on before dashing from a stage door to a waiting car. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
A ballet of black and beige with washed-out shades of blue and gray and a couple of unicorn-rare pops of bright accent color, [M]the collection[/M] was heavy on the après-danse look — easy, breezy comfortable pieces wrapped and draped across the body, [M]mesh layered over bodysuits[/M], and the kind of simple tank tops, airy skirts and heavy coats a professional dancer might throw on before dashing from a stage door to a waiting car. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
A ballet of black and beige with washed-out shades of blue and gray and a couple of unicorn-rare pops of bright accent color, [M]the collection[/M] was heavy on the après-danse look — easy, breezy comfortable pieces wrapped and draped across the body, [M]mesh[/M] layered over bodysuits, and the kind of simple tank tops, airy skirts and heavy coats a professional dancer might throw on before dashing from a stage door to a waiting car. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
A ballet of black and beige with washed-out shades of blue and gray and a couple of unicorn-rare pops of bright accent color, [M]the collection[/M] was heavy on the après-danse look — easy, breezy comfortable [M]pieces[/M] wrapped and [M]draped across the body[/M], mesh layered over bodysuits, and the kind of simple tank tops, airy skirts and heavy coats a professional dancer might throw on before dashing from a stage door to a waiting car. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
A ballet of black and beige with washed-out shades of blue and gray and a couple of unicorn-rare pops of bright accent color, [M]the collection[/M] was heavy on the après-danse look — easy, breezy comfortable [M]pieces wrapped[/M] and draped [M]across the body[/M], mesh layered over bodysuits, and the kind of simple tank tops, airy skirts and heavy coats a professional dancer might throw on before dashing from a stage door to a waiting car. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
[M]Looks from the spring and summer 2019 Dior runway show[/M], which [M]was presented Monday[/M]. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | e |
[M]Looks from the spring and summer 2019 Dior runway show[/M], which [M]was presented[/M] Monday. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
“Dance is at this collection’s heart,” [M]Dior[/M]’s creative director Maria Grazia Chiuri wrote of the French brand’s [M]spring and summer 2019 runway collection[/M] in the [M]show notes[/M]. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
“[M]Dance is at this collection’s heart[/M],” Dior’s creative director [M]Maria Grazia Chiuri wrote[/M] of the French brand’s spring and summer 2019 runway collection [M]in the show notes[/M]. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
“Dance is at this collection’s heart,” [M]Dior[/M]’s creative director Maria Grazia Chiuri wrote of the [M]French brand[/M]’s spring and summer 2019 runway collection in the show notes. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | e |
“Dance is at this collection’s heart,” [M]Dior’s creative director Maria Grazia Chiuri[/M] wrote of the French brand’s spring and summer 2019 runway collection in the show notes. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | e |
“[M]Dance is at this collection’s heart,[/M]” Dior’s creative director [M]Maria Grazia Chiuri wrote[/M] of the French brand’s spring and summer 2019 runway collection in the show notes. | A moment from Dior's Spring 2019 runway show. Photo: Imaxtree
In an industry that's in what seems to be an ever-snowballing state of flux, this much we know: Maria Grazia Chiuri loves a theme at Dior. In the last two years, almost to the day, since Chiuri succeeded Raf Simons as artistic director of the French legacy house, we've learned that she loves, for starters, the American southwest, mod masquerade balls and the landmark 1968 student protests in Paris. But more than that, she also loves, respects and cherishes women, and as the first female creative head of Dior, she certainly takes that responsibility very seriously.
On Monday as the kickoff to Paris Fashion Week, Chiuri paid homage to her latest set of muses — dancers — with a heavily dance-inspired Spring 2019 collection. As with her previous, sport-adjacent collections (including fencing for Spring 2017, her debut, and "escaramuzas," or female Mexican rodeo riders, for Cruise 2019), this range was also particularly literal. Leotards in shades of putty and slate were layered beneath billowy slips and silk dresses; tutu-esque, tulle midi skirts came under her now-signature structured jackets and utilitarian blazers; netting, part of a ballerina's daily training uniform, was abundant, either worn on its own and letting a triangle bralette peek through, or as part of a more classic silhouette.
There were other signatures that were less costume-oriented. Where Dior's Fall 2018 collection was stocked with Bohemian patchwork, Chiuri's seasonal fabrication this time appeared to be the very on-trend tie-dye. Some of it was more elegant, as in embroidered and almost kaleidoscopic, but other pieces were less precious (and surely catering to the more-informal millennials whom the house is courting these days). | n |
In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term [M]fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS[/M]) is used. | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | e |
[M]In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome[/M] (FMS) [M]is used.[/M] | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | n |
[M]The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.[/M] | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | e |
Some patients complain of [M]swallowing problems (dysphagia[/M]), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction. | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | n |
[M]Some patients complain of[/M] swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, [M]cognitive dysfunction[/M]. | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | n |
[M]Some patients complain of[/M] swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and [M]tingling[/M], cognitive dysfunction. | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | n |
[M]Some patients complain of[/M] swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, [M]numbness[/M] and tingling, cognitive dysfunction. | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | e |
[M]Some patients complain of[/M] swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and [M]bladder disorders[/M], numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction. | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | n |
[M]Some patients complain of[/M] swallowing problems (dysphagia), [M]intestinal[/M] and bladder [M]disorders[/M], numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction. | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | e |
[M]Some patients complain of swallowing problems[/M] (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction. | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | n |
[M]Other manifestations include[/M]:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
[M]functional reduction of mobility in the joints[/M]. | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | n |
[M]Other manifestations include[/M]:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
[M]sleep disorders[/M];
functional reduction of mobility in the joints. | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | n |
[M]Other manifestations include[/M]:
[M]feeling of fatigue[/M], [M]which leads to disruption of life[/M];
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints. | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | e |
[M]Other manifestations include[/M]:
[M]feeling of fatigue[/M], which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints. | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | e |
[M]Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above.[/M] | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | n |
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely [M]post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).[/M] | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | n |
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, [M]stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder[/M] (PTSD). | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | n |
Fibromyalgia is often combined with [M]psychiatric disorders such as[/M] depression, anxiety, [M]stress-related disorders[/M], namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | n |
Fibromyalgia is often combined with [M]psychiatric disorders such as[/M] depression, [M]anxiety[/M], stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | n |
Fibromyalgia is often combined with [M]psychiatric disorders such as depression[/M], anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | n |
[M]Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders[/M] such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | e |
[M]Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by[/M] chronic widespread pain and [M]increased sensitivity to pressure.[/M] | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | e |
[M]Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain[/M] and increased sensitivity to pressure. | Fibromyalgia (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. There are also reports of restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.
Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS. It is common in middle-aged women. It manifests as pain everywhere in the body and easy fatigue. The pain usually exceeds three months. The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints, such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself. | e |
[M]Fibromyalgia[/M] (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) [M]is a[/M] chronic, [M]diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure.[/M] | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | e |
[M]Fibromyalgia[/M] (English: Fibromyalgia, referred to as FM) [M]is a chronic[/M], diffuse [M]pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure.[/M] | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | e |
[M]Fibromyalgia[/M] (English: Fibromyalgia, [M]referred to as FM[/M]) is a chronic, diffuse pain in which the patient responds violently to touch pressure. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]There are[/M] also [M]reports of[/M] restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as [M]sensitivity to[/M] sound, light, and [M]temperature[/M]. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]There are[/M] also [M]reports of[/M] restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as [M]sensitivity to[/M] sound, [M]light[/M], and temperature. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]There are[/M] also [M]reports of[/M] restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as [M]sensitivity to sound[/M], light, and temperature. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]There are[/M] also [M]reports of[/M] restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and [M]itching[/M], as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]There are[/M] also [M]reports of[/M] restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, [M]numbness[/M] and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | e |
[M]There are[/M] also [M]reports of[/M] restless legs syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, [M]interstitial cystitis[/M], numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]There are[/M] also [M]reports of[/M] restless legs syndrome, [M]irritable bowel syndrome[/M], interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]There are[/M] also [M]reports of restless legs syndrome[/M], irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis, numbness and itching, as well as sensitivity to sound, light, and temperature. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]There is not necessarily a problem with the joint itself.[/M] | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]It manifests as[/M] pain everywhere in the body and [M]easy fatigue[/M]. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | e |
[M]It manifests as pain everywhere in the body[/M] and easy fatigue. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | e |
[M]It is common in middle-aged women.[/M] | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]Other symptoms include[/M] fatigue that affects ordinary activities, sleep disturbances, and [M]memory disturbances[/M]. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]Other symptoms include[/M] fatigue that affects ordinary activities, [M]sleep disturbances[/M], and memory disturbances. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | e |
[M]Other symptoms include fatigue that affects ordinary activities[/M], sleep disturbances, and memory disturbances. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | e |
[M]Fibromyalgia[/M] is often associated with depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and [M]patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain.[/M] | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]Fibromyalgia is often associated with[/M] depression, anxiety, and [M]post-traumatic stress syndrome[/M], and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | e |
[M]Fibromyalgia is often associated with[/M] depression, [M]anxiety[/M], and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | e |
[M]Fibromyalgia is often associated with depression[/M], anxiety, and post-traumatic stress syndrome, and patients are often accompanied by other types of chronic pain. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | e |
[M]The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints[/M], [M]such as[/M] muscles, tendons, and [M]bursae[/M]. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints[/M], [M]such as[/M] muscles, [M]tendons[/M], and bursae. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints[/M], [M]such as muscles[/M], tendons, and bursae. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]The pain points are distributed on the soft tissues of the larger joints[/M], such as muscles, tendons, and bursae. | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]The pain usually exceeds three months.[/M] | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | n |
[M]Fibromyalgia is abbreviated as FMS.[/M] | Fibromyalgia is a condition characterized by chronic widespread pain and increased sensitivity to pressure. In addition to pain, there may be other symptoms, so the term fibromyalgic syndrome (FMS) is used. Other manifestations include:
feeling of fatigue, which leads to disruption of life;
sleep disorders;
functional reduction of mobility in the joints.
Some patients complain of swallowing problems (dysphagia), intestinal and bladder disorders, numbness and tingling, cognitive dysfunction.
The presence of so-called pain points on the body is characteristic.
Fibromyalgia is often combined with psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, stress-related disorders, namely post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Not all people with fibromyalgia have all of the above. | e |
We’re just days out from the official unveiling of the Galaxy Note 9 at [M]Samsung[/M]’s [M]Unpacked event in[/M] New York City, but that’s not all that the South Korean company has in store for [M]August[/M]. | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
We’re just days out from the official unveiling of the Galaxy Note 9 at [M]Samsung[/M]’s [M]Unpacked event in New York City[/M], but that’s not all that the South Korean company has in store for August. | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
We’re just days out from the official unveiling of the Galaxy Note 9 at [M]Samsung[/M]’s Unpacked event in New York City, but that’s not all that the [M]South Korean company[/M] has in store for August. | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
We’re just [M]days out from the official unveiling[/M] of the Galaxy Note 9 [M]at Samsung[/M]’[M]s Unpacked event[/M] in New York City, but that’s not all that the South Korean company has in store for August. | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
We’re just [M]days out from the official unveiling of the Galaxy Note 9[/M] at Samsung’s Unpacked event in New York City, but that’s not all that the South Korean company has in store for August. | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
It’s worth noting that [M]Samsung[/M] typically uses its stage time at [M]IFA[/M] to focus on home appliances and Internet of Things devices, such as [M]washing machines, refrigerators, and televisions[/M] (all of which [M]are pictured in the invite[/M]). | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
It’s worth noting that Samsung typically uses its stage time at IFA to focus on home appliances and [M]Internet of Things devices, such as washing machines, refrigerators, and televisions[/M] (all of which are pictured in the invite). | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
It’s worth noting that [M]Samsung typically uses its stage time at IFA to focus on[/M] home appliances and [M]Internet of Things devices[/M], such as washing machines, refrigerators, and televisions (all of which are pictured in the invite). | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
It’s worth noting that [M]Samsung typically uses its stage time at IFA to focus on home appliances[/M] and Internet of Things devices, such as washing machines, refrigerators, and televisions (all of which are pictured in the invite). | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
Over the weekend, [M]Samsung[/M] began sending out invitations to its [M]IFA 2018 press conference[/M], which [M]will take place[/M] on August 30th [M]ahead of the annual Berlin trade show.[/M] | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
Over the weekend, [M]Samsung[/M] began sending out invitations to its [M]IFA 2018 press conference[/M], which [M]will take place on August 30th[/M] ahead of the annual Berlin trade show. | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
[M]Over the weekend, Samsung began sending out invitations to its IFA 2018 press conference[/M], which will take place on August 30th ahead of the annual Berlin trade show. | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
[M]The Galaxy Note 9[/M] will have already shipped by the time IFA 2018 rolls around, but the phone [M]will likely make at least a short appearance just to remind everyone that it’s now available[/M]. | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
[M]The Galaxy Note 9 will have already shipped by the time IFA 2018 rolls around[/M], but the phone will likely make at least a short appearance just to remind everyone that it’s now available. | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
The invite also appears to show off the [M]Galaxy Note 9,[/M] which [M]hasn’t actually been announced yet.[/M] | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
[M]The invite also appears to show off the Galaxy Note 9[/M], which hasn’t actually been announced yet. | This year the annual IFA trade show is taking place from August 31 to September 5 in Berlin. Last month we got an invitation from Sony and now Samsung has also announced it is having a press conference on August 30.
Samsung is having a separate announcement for all smartphone lovers on August 9 when the Galaxy Note9 will be unveiled, but the company is planning to also unveil new Smart TVs and other home appliances like refrigerators and washing machines, according to the invitation slipped in our mailbox.
The mobile devices division will have its time under the stage lights with the Samsung Galaxy Watch that is most likely a thing. Last year we saw the Gear Sport getting introduced and sound logic suggests we might see a wearable this time as well.
We will be on site to keep you updated, so stay around when the end of August comes. | n |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.