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Daily Life In Warsaw
WARSAW, POLAND — SEPTEMBER 17, 2025:
The Polka restaurant by Magda Gessler, located near the Royal Castle in Warsaw, Masovian Voivodeship, Poland, on September 17, 2025. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto) -
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Magda
Played by Kristina Wayborn?
The leader of the Octopussy circus and Kamal Khan's girlfriend, Magda seduces Bond to get the Faberge egg back. She also has a tattoo of a baby octopus on her back.
REF NO : 74018
ZUSAMMENSTELLUNG: 50 Jahre James Bond Filme - Die Bond Girls damals und heute
DUKAS/SCOPE FEATURES -
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Yarnbombing, which involves people leaving knitted items on objects such as trees, lampposts and buses - Jan 2009
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Bournemouth News / Rex Features ( 840292n )
Magda Sayeg from the all female guerilla knitting group 'Knitta Please', A more gentle than traditional Guerilla art campaign is spreading across the globe - 'Yarnbombing' involves women leaving knitted reminders on objects as varied as trees, lampposts and even a bus. The craze that started in America has now spread to the UK with the 'artist' taking pictures of their work and putting them on the internet
Yarnbombing, which involves people leaving knitted items on objects such as trees, lampposts and buses - Jan 2009
KNITTERS TURN GRAFFITI ARTISTS WITH 'YARNBOMBING'
The age-old hobby of knitting has been given a new and bizarre lease of life after people began using their work as graffiti art.
The extraordinary craze has led to hundreds of knitters around the world wrapping their huge woolly creations around public property like trees, street signs and lampposts.
They then take photos of their colourful "art" and post them on internet sites for fellow knitters to view and comment on.
One of the most outrageous pieces of work has involved a woman spending an entire week covering a disused single decker bus in colourful swatches.
The phenomenon, called Yarnbombing, is thought to have originated in the US but knitters are now beginning to cover British streets in woollen 'tags'.
Quite often dozens of balls of coloured wool are used to make huge sleeves or cosies which are then stitched onto a fixed object, sometimes done under the cover of darkness.
Artist Sarah Hardacre, 31, from Salford, Manchester, has taken up Yarnbombing in her spare time.
She said: "Yarnbombing is all about using the street for making art.
"I have knitted cosies for trees and even covered an entire garden shed in knitted squares before - it certainly put smiles on people's faces.
"It is about the community taking pr...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/HHHCKKRB
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Yarnbombing, which involves people leaving knitted items on objects such as trees, lampposts and buses - Jan 2009
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Bournemouth News / Rex Features ( 840292i )
Magda Sayeg from the all female guerilla knitting group 'Knitta Please', A more gentle than traditional Guerilla art campaign is spreading across the globe - 'Yarnbombing' involves women leaving knitted reminders on objects as varied as trees, lampposts and even a bus. The craze that started in America has now spread to the UK with the 'artist' taking pictures of their work and putting them on the internet
Yarnbombing, which involves people leaving knitted items on objects such as trees, lampposts and buses - Jan 2009
KNITTERS TURN GRAFFITI ARTISTS WITH 'YARNBOMBING'
The age-old hobby of knitting has been given a new and bizarre lease of life after people began using their work as graffiti art.
The extraordinary craze has led to hundreds of knitters around the world wrapping their huge woolly creations around public property like trees, street signs and lampposts.
They then take photos of their colourful "art" and post them on internet sites for fellow knitters to view and comment on.
One of the most outrageous pieces of work has involved a woman spending an entire week covering a disused single decker bus in colourful swatches.
The phenomenon, called Yarnbombing, is thought to have originated in the US but knitters are now beginning to cover British streets in woollen 'tags'.
Quite often dozens of balls of coloured wool are used to make huge sleeves or cosies which are then stitched onto a fixed object, sometimes done under the cover of darkness.
Artist Sarah Hardacre, 31, from Salford, Manchester, has taken up Yarnbombing in her spare time.
She said: "Yarnbombing is all about using the street for making art.
"I have knitted cosies for trees and even covered an entire garden shed in knitted squares before - it certainly put smiles on people's faces.
"It is about the community taking pr...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/HHHCKKRB
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Yarnbombing, which involves people leaving knitted items on objects such as trees, lampposts and buses - Jan 2009
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Bournemouth News / Rex Features ( 840292a )
Magda Sayeg from the all female guerilla knitting group 'Knitta Please' has covered an entire bus in Mexico City, A more gentle than traditional Guerilla art campaign is spreading across the globe - 'Yarnbombing' involves women leaving knitted reminders on objects as varied as trees, lampposts and even a bus. The craze that started in America has now spread to the UK with the 'artist' taking pictures of their work and putting them on the internet
Yarnbombing, which involves people leaving knitted items on objects such as trees, lampposts and buses - Jan 2009
KNITTERS TURN GRAFFITI ARTISTS WITH 'YARNBOMBING'
The age-old hobby of knitting has been given a new and bizarre lease of life after people began using their work as graffiti art.
The extraordinary craze has led to hundreds of knitters around the world wrapping their huge woolly creations around public property like trees, street signs and lampposts.
They then take photos of their colourful "art" and post them on internet sites for fellow knitters to view and comment on.
One of the most outrageous pieces of work has involved a woman spending an entire week covering a disused single decker bus in colourful swatches.
The phenomenon, called Yarnbombing, is thought to have originated in the US but knitters are now beginning to cover British streets in woollen 'tags'.
Quite often dozens of balls of coloured wool are used to make huge sleeves or cosies which are then stitched onto a fixed object, sometimes done under the cover of darkness.
Artist Sarah Hardacre, 31, from Salford, Manchester, has taken up Yarnbombing in her spare time.
She said: "Yarnbombing is all about using the street for making art.
"I have knitted cosies for trees and even covered an entire garden shed in knitted squares before - it certainly put smiles on people's faces...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/HHHCKKRB
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SISSI
SISSI
Der junge Kaiser Franz Joseph soll verheiratet werden. Seine Mutter, Erzherzogin Sophie, hat Prinzessin Helene von Bayern als Braut fÌ?r ihn auserkoren. Ein Familientreffen wird arrangiert, bei dem auch Helenes jÌ?ngere Schwester Sissi (ROMY SCHNEIDER) dabei ist. Franz Joseph verliebt sich in Sissi ...
Szene mit Nene (UTA FRANZ) und Ludovika (MAGDA SCHNEIDER)
25802
, 01kpasissi1
DUKAS/UNITED ARCHIVES