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DUKAS_27816205_REX
Michael Winner The 70-year-old Film Director Has Shed Three-and-a-half Stone. This Week He Said Dieting Means He Can Wear His 70s Wardrobe. Femail Put Him To The Test. Picture Shows: Michael Wearing A Striped Jacket. 'i Wore This For Dinner At The S
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Murray Sanders / Associated Newspapers / Rex Features (975944a)
Michael Winner The 70-year-old Film Director Has Shed Three-and-a-half Stone. This Week He Said Dieting Means He Can Wear His 70s Wardrobe. Femail Put Him To The Test. Picture Shows: Michael Wearing A Striped Jacket. 'i Wore This For Dinner At The Savoy With Robert Mitchum. This Jacket Is Dunhill-very Narrow Lapels-but Most Of Mine Were Handmade By Maxwell Vine Of Savile Row-he Made Al The Clothes For Big Stars Like Mitchum Laurence Harvey And Christopher Plummer So I Wanted Him To Make Them For Me Too.' A Slim-line Michael Winner Steps Back To His 70's/80's Wardrobe. Picture Murray Sanders
Michael Winner The 70-year-old Film Director Has Shed Three-and-a-half Stone. This Week He Said Dieting Means He Can Wear His 70s Wardrobe. Femail Put Him To The Test. Picture Shows: Michael Wearing A Striped Jacket. 'i Wore This For Dinner At The S
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
ZUSAMMENSTELLUNG: Michael Winner im Alter von 77 Jahren gestorben
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DUKAS_27816204_REX
Michael Winner The 70-year-old Film Director Has Shed Three-and-a-half Stone. This Week He Said Dieting Means He Can Wear His 70s Wardrobe. Femail Put Him To The Test. Picture Shows: Michael Wearing A Striped Jacket. 'i Wore This For Dinner At The S
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Murray Sanders / Associated Newspapers / Rex Features (975775a)
Michael Winner The 70-year-old Film Director Has Shed Three-and-a-half Stone. This Week He Said Dieting Means He Can Wear His 70s Wardrobe. Femail Put Him To The Test. Picture Shows: Michael Wearing A Striped Jacket. 'i Wore This For Dinner At The Savoy With Robert Mitchum. This Jacket Is Dunhill-very Narrow Lapels-but Most Of Mine Were Handmade By Maxwell Vine Of Savile Row-he Made Al The Clothes For Big Stars Like Mitchum Laurence Harvey And Christopher Plummer So I Wanted Him To Make Them For Me Too.' A Slim-line Michael Winner Steps Back To His 70's/80's Wardrobe. Picture Murray Sanders
Michael Winner The 70-year-old Film Director Has Shed Three-and-a-half Stone. This Week He Said Dieting Means He Can Wear His 70s Wardrobe. Femail Put Him To The Test. Picture Shows: Michael Wearing A Striped Jacket. 'i Wore This For Dinner At The S
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
ZUSAMMENSTELLUNG: Michael Winner im Alter von 77 Jahren gestorben
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DUKAS_27816199_REX
Michael Winner The 70-year-old Film Director Has Shed Three-and-a-half Stone. This Week He Said Dieting Means He Can Wear His 70s Wardrobe. Femail Put Him To The Test. Picture Shows: Michael Wearing A Striped Jacket. 'i Wore This For Dinner At The S
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Murray Sanders / Associated Newspapers / Rex Features (975518a)
Michael Winner The 70-year-old Film Director Has Shed Three-and-a-half Stone. This Week He Said Dieting Means He Can Wear His 70s Wardrobe. Femail Put Him To The Test. Picture Shows: Michael Wearing A Striped Jacket. 'i Wore This For Dinner At The Savoy With Robert Mitchum. This Jacket Is Dunhill-very Narrow Lapels-but Most Of Mine Were Handmade By Maxwell Vine Of Savile Row-he Made Al The Clothes For Big Stars Like Mitchum Laurence Harvey And Christopher Plummer So I Wanted Him To Make Them For Me Too.' A Slim-line Michael Winner Steps Back To His 70's/80's Wardrobe. Picture Murray Sanders
Michael Winner The 70-year-old Film Director Has Shed Three-and-a-half Stone. This Week He Said Dieting Means He Can Wear His 70s Wardrobe. Femail Put Him To The Test. Picture Shows: Michael Wearing A Striped Jacket. 'i Wore This For Dinner At The S
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
ZUSAMMENSTELLUNG: Michael Winner im Alter von 77 Jahren gestorben
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DUKAS_20400450_REX
Breathalyser Jacket by Matt Leggett, Wellington, New Zealand - Sep 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Matt Leggett / Rex Features (1444113G)
Breathalyser Jacket. The LEDs that run up the arm provide the wearer with a scale that varies depending on the amount of alcohol on the wearer's breath.
Breathalyser Jacket: Lights Warn When Alcohol Limit Reached
After a few drinks we may wear our heart on our sleeves, but this breathalyser jacket ensures you wear the amount of alcohol you have drank on yours.
The brainchild of Matt Leggett, the garment measures how much booze you have in your system and tells you whether you are fit to drive.
You simply blow into a nozzle in the collar and a sensor in the jacket's pocket analyses the amount of alcohol in your breath.
The results are displayed on lights stitched into the forearm of the jacket; the more that glow, the more alcohol is being detected.
Wellington-based Matt explains: "This project is designed to address the very real problem of driving under the influence of alcohol, something which is especially prominent within New Zealand culture.
"The main aim of the 'breathalyzer jacket' is to provide the wearer with enough information regarding the amount alcohol on his/her breath to make a decision on weather driving is in fact a good idea.
"The jacket is designed to combine the subtle, elegant dress jacket with the 'rips' and stitches that the lights illuminate. The jacket is a one-off piece and becomes a topic of conversation as the lights are distinctive enough to notice.
"If the jacket succeeds in being a fashionable item, then hopefully the act of being conscious of your alcohol levels can become an act that is enjoyed and celebrated, rather than something to feel ashamed of being caught doing."
Thankfully the lights will not give you away to your other half when you get home.
Matt says: "The lights will only glow for a period of around a minute after the breath sample has been taken,...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCRGARDCY
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DUKAS_20400449_REX
Breathalyser Jacket by Matt Leggett, Wellington, New Zealand - Sep 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Matt Leggett / Rex Features (1444113H)
Breathalyser Jacket. The LEDs that run up the arm provide the wearer with a scale that varies depending on the amount of alcohol on the wearer's breath.
Breathalyser Jacket: Lights Warn When Alcohol Limit Reached
After a few drinks we may wear our heart on our sleeves, but this breathalyser jacket ensures you wear the amount of alcohol you have drank on yours.
The brainchild of Matt Leggett, the garment measures how much booze you have in your system and tells you whether you are fit to drive.
You simply blow into a nozzle in the collar and a sensor in the jacket's pocket analyses the amount of alcohol in your breath.
The results are displayed on lights stitched into the forearm of the jacket; the more that glow, the more alcohol is being detected.
Wellington-based Matt explains: "This project is designed to address the very real problem of driving under the influence of alcohol, something which is especially prominent within New Zealand culture.
"The main aim of the 'breathalyzer jacket' is to provide the wearer with enough information regarding the amount alcohol on his/her breath to make a decision on weather driving is in fact a good idea.
"The jacket is designed to combine the subtle, elegant dress jacket with the 'rips' and stitches that the lights illuminate. The jacket is a one-off piece and becomes a topic of conversation as the lights are distinctive enough to notice.
"If the jacket succeeds in being a fashionable item, then hopefully the act of being conscious of your alcohol levels can become an act that is enjoyed and celebrated, rather than something to feel ashamed of being caught doing."
Thankfully the lights will not give you away to your other half when you get home.
Matt says: "The lights will only glow for a period of around a minute after the breath sample has been taken,...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCRGARDCY
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DUKAS_20400448_REX
Breathalyser Jacket by Matt Leggett, Wellington, New Zealand - Sep 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Matt Leggett / Rex Features (1444113F)
Breathalyser Jacket. The LEDs that run up the arm provide the wearer with a scale that varies depending on the amount of alcohol on the wearer's breath.
Breathalyser Jacket: Lights Warn When Alcohol Limit Reached
After a few drinks we may wear our heart on our sleeves, but this breathalyser jacket ensures you wear the amount of alcohol you have drank on yours.
The brainchild of Matt Leggett, the garment measures how much booze you have in your system and tells you whether you are fit to drive.
You simply blow into a nozzle in the collar and a sensor in the jacket's pocket analyses the amount of alcohol in your breath.
The results are displayed on lights stitched into the forearm of the jacket; the more that glow, the more alcohol is being detected.
Wellington-based Matt explains: "This project is designed to address the very real problem of driving under the influence of alcohol, something which is especially prominent within New Zealand culture.
"The main aim of the 'breathalyzer jacket' is to provide the wearer with enough information regarding the amount alcohol on his/her breath to make a decision on weather driving is in fact a good idea.
"The jacket is designed to combine the subtle, elegant dress jacket with the 'rips' and stitches that the lights illuminate. The jacket is a one-off piece and becomes a topic of conversation as the lights are distinctive enough to notice.
"If the jacket succeeds in being a fashionable item, then hopefully the act of being conscious of your alcohol levels can become an act that is enjoyed and celebrated, rather than something to feel ashamed of being caught doing."
Thankfully the lights will not give you away to your other half when you get home.
Matt says: "The lights will only glow for a period of around a minute after the breath sample has been taken,...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCRGARDCY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_20400447_REX
Breathalyser Jacket by Matt Leggett, Wellington, New Zealand - Sep 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Matt Leggett / Rex Features (1444113E)
Breathalyser Jacket. The LEDs that run up the arm provide the wearer with a scale that varies depending on the amount of alcohol on the wearer's breath.
Breathalyser Jacket: Lights Warn When Alcohol Limit Reached
After a few drinks we may wear our heart on our sleeves, but this breathalyser jacket ensures you wear the amount of alcohol you have drank on yours.
The brainchild of Matt Leggett, the garment measures how much booze you have in your system and tells you whether you are fit to drive.
You simply blow into a nozzle in the collar and a sensor in the jacket's pocket analyses the amount of alcohol in your breath.
The results are displayed on lights stitched into the forearm of the jacket; the more that glow, the more alcohol is being detected.
Wellington-based Matt explains: "This project is designed to address the very real problem of driving under the influence of alcohol, something which is especially prominent within New Zealand culture.
"The main aim of the 'breathalyzer jacket' is to provide the wearer with enough information regarding the amount alcohol on his/her breath to make a decision on weather driving is in fact a good idea.
"The jacket is designed to combine the subtle, elegant dress jacket with the 'rips' and stitches that the lights illuminate. The jacket is a one-off piece and becomes a topic of conversation as the lights are distinctive enough to notice.
"If the jacket succeeds in being a fashionable item, then hopefully the act of being conscious of your alcohol levels can become an act that is enjoyed and celebrated, rather than something to feel ashamed of being caught doing."
Thankfully the lights will not give you away to your other half when you get home.
Matt says: "The lights will only glow for a period of around a minute after the breath sample has been taken,...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCRGARDCY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_20400444_REX
Breathalyser Jacket by Matt Leggett, Wellington, New Zealand - Sep 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Matt Leggett / Rex Features (1444113D)
Breathalyser Jacket. The LEDs that run up the arm provide the wearer with a scale that varies depending on the amount of alcohol on the wearer's breath.
Breathalyser Jacket: Lights Warn When Alcohol Limit Reached
After a few drinks we may wear our heart on our sleeves, but this breathalyser jacket ensures you wear the amount of alcohol you have drank on yours.
The brainchild of Matt Leggett, the garment measures how much booze you have in your system and tells you whether you are fit to drive.
You simply blow into a nozzle in the collar and a sensor in the jacket's pocket analyses the amount of alcohol in your breath.
The results are displayed on lights stitched into the forearm of the jacket; the more that glow, the more alcohol is being detected.
Wellington-based Matt explains: "This project is designed to address the very real problem of driving under the influence of alcohol, something which is especially prominent within New Zealand culture.
"The main aim of the 'breathalyzer jacket' is to provide the wearer with enough information regarding the amount alcohol on his/her breath to make a decision on weather driving is in fact a good idea.
"The jacket is designed to combine the subtle, elegant dress jacket with the 'rips' and stitches that the lights illuminate. The jacket is a one-off piece and becomes a topic of conversation as the lights are distinctive enough to notice.
"If the jacket succeeds in being a fashionable item, then hopefully the act of being conscious of your alcohol levels can become an act that is enjoyed and celebrated, rather than something to feel ashamed of being caught doing."
Thankfully the lights will not give you away to your other half when you get home.
Matt says: "The lights will only glow for a period of around a minute after the breath sample has been taken,...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCRGARDCY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_20400443_REX
Breathalyser Jacket by Matt Leggett, Wellington, New Zealand - Sep 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Matt Leggett / Rex Features (1444113C)
Breathalyser Jacket. The LEDs that run up the arm provide the wearer with a scale that varies depending on the amount of alcohol on the wearer's breath.
Breathalyser Jacket: Lights Warn When Alcohol Limit Reached
After a few drinks we may wear our heart on our sleeves, but this breathalyser jacket ensures you wear the amount of alcohol you have drank on yours.
The brainchild of Matt Leggett, the garment measures how much booze you have in your system and tells you whether you are fit to drive.
You simply blow into a nozzle in the collar and a sensor in the jacket's pocket analyses the amount of alcohol in your breath.
The results are displayed on lights stitched into the forearm of the jacket; the more that glow, the more alcohol is being detected.
Wellington-based Matt explains: "This project is designed to address the very real problem of driving under the influence of alcohol, something which is especially prominent within New Zealand culture.
"The main aim of the 'breathalyzer jacket' is to provide the wearer with enough information regarding the amount alcohol on his/her breath to make a decision on weather driving is in fact a good idea.
"The jacket is designed to combine the subtle, elegant dress jacket with the 'rips' and stitches that the lights illuminate. The jacket is a one-off piece and becomes a topic of conversation as the lights are distinctive enough to notice.
"If the jacket succeeds in being a fashionable item, then hopefully the act of being conscious of your alcohol levels can become an act that is enjoyed and celebrated, rather than something to feel ashamed of being caught doing."
Thankfully the lights will not give you away to your other half when you get home.
Matt says: "The lights will only glow for a period of around a minute after the breath sample has been taken,...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCRGARDCY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_20400442_REX
Breathalyser Jacket by Matt Leggett, Wellington, New Zealand - Sep 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Matt Leggett / Rex Features (1444113B)
Breathalyser Jacket. The LEDs that run up the arm provide the wearer with a scale that varies depending on the amount of alcohol on the wearer's breath.
Breathalyser Jacket: Lights Warn When Alcohol Limit Reached
After a few drinks we may wear our heart on our sleeves, but this breathalyser jacket ensures you wear the amount of alcohol you have drank on yours.
The brainchild of Matt Leggett, the garment measures how much booze you have in your system and tells you whether you are fit to drive.
You simply blow into a nozzle in the collar and a sensor in the jacket's pocket analyses the amount of alcohol in your breath.
The results are displayed on lights stitched into the forearm of the jacket; the more that glow, the more alcohol is being detected.
Wellington-based Matt explains: "This project is designed to address the very real problem of driving under the influence of alcohol, something which is especially prominent within New Zealand culture.
"The main aim of the 'breathalyzer jacket' is to provide the wearer with enough information regarding the amount alcohol on his/her breath to make a decision on weather driving is in fact a good idea.
"The jacket is designed to combine the subtle, elegant dress jacket with the 'rips' and stitches that the lights illuminate. The jacket is a one-off piece and becomes a topic of conversation as the lights are distinctive enough to notice.
"If the jacket succeeds in being a fashionable item, then hopefully the act of being conscious of your alcohol levels can become an act that is enjoyed and celebrated, rather than something to feel ashamed of being caught doing."
Thankfully the lights will not give you away to your other half when you get home.
Matt says: "The lights will only glow for a period of around a minute after the breath sample has been taken,...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCRGARDCY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_20400441_REX
Breathalyser Jacket by Matt Leggett, Wellington, New Zealand - Sep 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Matt Leggett / Rex Features (1444113A)
Breathalyser Jacket. The LEDs that run up the arm provide the wearer with a scale that varies depending on the amount of alcohol on the wearer's breath.
Breathalyser Jacket: Lights Warn When Alcohol Limit Reached
After a few drinks we may wear our heart on our sleeves, but this breathalyser jacket ensures you wear the amount of alcohol you have drank on yours.
The brainchild of Matt Leggett, the garment measures how much booze you have in your system and tells you whether you are fit to drive.
You simply blow into a nozzle in the collar and a sensor in the jacket's pocket analyses the amount of alcohol in your breath.
The results are displayed on lights stitched into the forearm of the jacket; the more that glow, the more alcohol is being detected.
Wellington-based Matt explains: "This project is designed to address the very real problem of driving under the influence of alcohol, something which is especially prominent within New Zealand culture.
"The main aim of the 'breathalyzer jacket' is to provide the wearer with enough information regarding the amount alcohol on his/her breath to make a decision on weather driving is in fact a good idea.
"The jacket is designed to combine the subtle, elegant dress jacket with the 'rips' and stitches that the lights illuminate. The jacket is a one-off piece and becomes a topic of conversation as the lights are distinctive enough to notice.
"If the jacket succeeds in being a fashionable item, then hopefully the act of being conscious of your alcohol levels can become an act that is enjoyed and celebrated, rather than something to feel ashamed of being caught doing."
Thankfully the lights will not give you away to your other half when you get home.
Matt says: "The lights will only glow for a period of around a minute after the breath sample has been taken,...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCRGARDCY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_15001941_REX
The Queen's Year exhibition, The Royal Collection, Buckingham Palace, London, Britain - 23 Jul 2010
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Nils Jorgensen / Rex Features ( 1210886c )
(L-R) Karl Ludwig. Wool coat with wool crepe skirt and jacket. Philip Somerville.
The Queen's Year exhibition, The Royal Collection, Buckingham Palace, London, Britain - 23 Jul 2010
'The Queen's Year', exhibition opens the public on Tuesday 27 July 2010. The exhibition shows the spectacle and variety of the events in the royal calendar and will illustrate the ceremony and tradition of the State Opening of Parliament, Garter Day at
Windsor Castle and Trooping the Colour, as well as the day to day business of Audiences, Privy Council meetings and regional visits.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX