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Search Result for “small parties”

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LIFE

Heal your sole

Muse, Napamon Roongwitoo, Published on 20/09/2014

» We know how it is. We sometimes buy shoes based on how they look, not how they fit. A study by the College of Podiatry in the UK revealed that nearly half of the women surveyed admit to putting up with uncomfortable shoes for fashion. Forty-three percent admit they have continued to wear uncomfortable shoes even though they hurt their feet, and 37% say they have walked home with no shoes on after a night out because their feet hurt.

LIFE

Be a metal head

Muse, Napamon Roongwitoo, Published on 23/08/2014

» No longer reserved for late-night parties, shimmery metallic lids are a major beauty trend this autumn, according to the season's runways. Metallic hues played a large part in setting the mood and tone of the collections of Emporio Armani, Issey Miyake, Donna Karan and Dior.

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LIFE

More than a movie

Life, Napamon Roongwitoo, Published on 09/06/2014

» A lot of anticipation was built when it was first announced that Central Embassy would include a “luxury” movie theatre complex called Embassy Diplomat Screens. It’s admittedly an unfathomable concept that makes you wonder — how luxurious can a cinema be? Diego Gronda, managing and creative director of Rockwell Group Europe, a globally celebrated design company, said it’s the kind of movie theatre that does not sell movies — it sells the experience.

OPINION

Scientifically speaking

Life, Napamon Roongwitoo, Published on 30/05/2013

» Growing up, my grades in science were relatively mediocre. I didn't really like the subject, but now that I come to think of it, it was not science itself that I found boring or intimidating _ it was the way I was taught it. We didn't have a big science lab, and the experiments we did weren't really meaningful. The teacher would even tell us the results before we got into the lab and said that we should make sure our results were the same as hers. In other words, we walked into the lab with zero curiosity because we already knew what was going to happen.

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LIFE

Making waves in child development

Life, Napamon Roongwitoo, Published on 12/04/2012

» James David Taylor, from Somerset in England, has lived, worked and studied in Thailand for six years, five of which he has worked as an infant/toddler swimming teacher. Currently working as the business development manager and head infant teacher at Bangkok Dolphins, Bangkok's only internationally recognised swimming school, he has taught hundreds of infants and toddlers how to have fun and confidence in the water. Additionally, he is currently completing a degree in business management from the University of Plymouth in England.