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DUK10163096_002
Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
“Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
“I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
“To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
“At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
“In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
“When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
“The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
“After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163096_013
Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
“Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
“I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
“To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
“At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
“In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
“When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
“The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
“After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163096_011
Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
“Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
“I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
“To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
“At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
“In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
“When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
“The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
“After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163096_003
Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
“Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
“I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
“To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
“At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
“In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
“When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
“The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
“After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163096_001
Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
“Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
“I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
“To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
“At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
“In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
“When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
“The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
“After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163096_010
Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
“Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
“I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
“To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
“At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
“In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
“When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
“The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
“After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163096_008
Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
“Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
“I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
“To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
“At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
“In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
“When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
“The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
“After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163096_007
Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
“Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
“I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
“To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
“At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
“In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
“When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
“The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
“After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163096_006
Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
“Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
“I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
“To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
“At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
“In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
“When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
“The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
“After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163096_009
Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
“Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
“I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
“To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
“At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
“In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
“When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
“The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
“After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163096_004
Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
“Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
“I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
“To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
“At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
“In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
“When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
“The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
“After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163096_012
Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
“Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
“I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
“To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
“At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
“In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
“When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
“The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
“After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10163096_005
Emma hat 'nen Blindenhund: Emma Norman aus Biggleswade hat die ZSD Augenerkrankung und ist auf ihren Assistenzhund Archie angewiesen
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
WORDS BYLINE: Deborah Cicurel
She was just a normal kid, running around with her friends and having fun dancing - until a devastating diagnosis.
When Emma Norman was six her parents noticed her squinting at the TV but they didn’t think too much of it.
However, Emma, now 33, would soon find out that she had Cone Rod Dystrophy and would eventually go blind.
Emma, a Pilates and meditation breathwork instructor from London, living in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, believes the stereotypes around blindness made accepting her diagnosis even harder — and she wants to challenge outdated ideas around sight loss.
“Life before my diagnosis felt pretty normal,” she remembers.
“I was just like any other kid—running around with friends, dancing around to my favourite TV shows and records. I even skipped crawling and went straight to walking, and I was reading and talking from a very young age, so nobody noticed anything unusual.
“To me, everything seemed fine because that was just my normal. It wasn’t until my parents started picking up on little things—like me squinting at the TV or struggling to see animals at the zoo when they pointed them out—that they became curious.
“At first, they thought I was just being cheeky, pretending not to see things, but when I kept squinting at the TV, they decided to take me to the optician. They assumed I was probably just short-sighted and needed glasses.
“In my early years at school, I only needed to sit closer to the board, but beyond that, I didn’t notice anything different. I guess what I saw—how I saw—was just my normal.
“When I first started squinting, my parents thought I probably just needed glasses for short-sightedness, like the other kids in my class.
“The optician gave me my first pair of multi-coloured glasses in the meantime while they arranged for the doctors to refer me to Moorfields Eye Hospital, as they could tell something more was going on.
“After getting the gl *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162860_007
FEATURE - Shih Tzu Hündin Rhuh wurde bei der diesjährigen Crufts Hundeschau ausgezeichnet, obwohl sie nur ein Auge hat
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
In January 2023 Rhu, a shih-tzu who had lost an eye due to a previous neglect, found a loving new owner in Lauraine Maddox.
Now she’s got a Crufts prize.
The heroic hound won a semi-final prize at Crufts’ side ‘Scruffts’ event for non-pure breed dogs, as she is mainly shih-tzu but also a little bit chihuahua, pekingese and Lhasa apso.
She was rehabilitated by the RSPCA after having an appalling start in life that led to her losing her eye due to an infection.
The look in her one remaining eye meant Laurine simply had to rescue her.
“I first saw Rhu in a facebook post by the RSPCA Cornwall branch,” she says. “It included details of the horrendous conditions she was born into and a picture of her. The look in her eye and her scruffy little face broke my heart and I just knew she had to come home with us.”
Now, after lots of love and no little training she performed in front of a crowd at Crufts in Birmingham, making it through to the semifinals after regional heats and winning an award.
For the brave little dog and her owner it was like an FA Cup Final.
“I wasn't even sure if she would walk out into the area to be honest, so when she did it with so much ease I was over the moon,” Laurine says. “I just tried to soak it all up whilst keeping her happy and focused on me.
“It felt like we were living someone else's life. I'm a big fan of Crufts so it was a bit of a dream come true. And to walk out onto the green carpet with Rhu was an absolute honour.”
It was while attending one of these events at the Royal Cornwall Showground in Wadebridge in late 2024 Laurine realised her “little princess” could make the national competition, having stumbled upon a heat for Scruffts – a national competition for crossbreed dogs – taking place at the same venue.
After making it through though, like a Cup Final, you have to train hard for your big day, and Laurine took Rhu out to her local shops to put her through her pace *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162860_004
FEATURE - Shih Tzu Hündin Rhuh wurde bei der diesjährigen Crufts Hundeschau ausgezeichnet, obwohl sie nur ein Auge hat
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
In January 2023 Rhu, a shih-tzu who had lost an eye due to a previous neglect, found a loving new owner in Lauraine Maddox.
Now she’s got a Crufts prize.
The heroic hound won a semi-final prize at Crufts’ side ‘Scruffts’ event for non-pure breed dogs, as she is mainly shih-tzu but also a little bit chihuahua, pekingese and Lhasa apso.
She was rehabilitated by the RSPCA after having an appalling start in life that led to her losing her eye due to an infection.
The look in her one remaining eye meant Laurine simply had to rescue her.
“I first saw Rhu in a facebook post by the RSPCA Cornwall branch,” she says. “It included details of the horrendous conditions she was born into and a picture of her. The look in her eye and her scruffy little face broke my heart and I just knew she had to come home with us.”
Now, after lots of love and no little training she performed in front of a crowd at Crufts in Birmingham, making it through to the semifinals after regional heats and winning an award.
For the brave little dog and her owner it was like an FA Cup Final.
“I wasn't even sure if she would walk out into the area to be honest, so when she did it with so much ease I was over the moon,” Laurine says. “I just tried to soak it all up whilst keeping her happy and focused on me.
“It felt like we were living someone else's life. I'm a big fan of Crufts so it was a bit of a dream come true. And to walk out onto the green carpet with Rhu was an absolute honour.”
It was while attending one of these events at the Royal Cornwall Showground in Wadebridge in late 2024 Laurine realised her “little princess” could make the national competition, having stumbled upon a heat for Scruffts – a national competition for crossbreed dogs – taking place at the same venue.
After making it through though, like a Cup Final, you have to train hard for your big day, and Laurine took Rhu out to her local shops to put her through her pace *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162860_002
FEATURE - Shih Tzu Hündin Rhuh wurde bei der diesjährigen Crufts Hundeschau ausgezeichnet, obwohl sie nur ein Auge hat
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
In January 2023 Rhu, a shih-tzu who had lost an eye due to a previous neglect, found a loving new owner in Lauraine Maddox.
Now she’s got a Crufts prize.
The heroic hound won a semi-final prize at Crufts’ side ‘Scruffts’ event for non-pure breed dogs, as she is mainly shih-tzu but also a little bit chihuahua, pekingese and Lhasa apso.
She was rehabilitated by the RSPCA after having an appalling start in life that led to her losing her eye due to an infection.
The look in her one remaining eye meant Laurine simply had to rescue her.
“I first saw Rhu in a facebook post by the RSPCA Cornwall branch,” she says. “It included details of the horrendous conditions she was born into and a picture of her. The look in her eye and her scruffy little face broke my heart and I just knew she had to come home with us.”
Now, after lots of love and no little training she performed in front of a crowd at Crufts in Birmingham, making it through to the semifinals after regional heats and winning an award.
For the brave little dog and her owner it was like an FA Cup Final.
“I wasn't even sure if she would walk out into the area to be honest, so when she did it with so much ease I was over the moon,” Laurine says. “I just tried to soak it all up whilst keeping her happy and focused on me.
“It felt like we were living someone else's life. I'm a big fan of Crufts so it was a bit of a dream come true. And to walk out onto the green carpet with Rhu was an absolute honour.”
It was while attending one of these events at the Royal Cornwall Showground in Wadebridge in late 2024 Laurine realised her “little princess” could make the national competition, having stumbled upon a heat for Scruffts – a national competition for crossbreed dogs – taking place at the same venue.
After making it through though, like a Cup Final, you have to train hard for your big day, and Laurine took Rhu out to her local shops to put her through her pace *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162860_001
FEATURE - Shih Tzu Hündin Rhuh wurde bei der diesjährigen Crufts Hundeschau ausgezeichnet, obwohl sie nur ein Auge hat
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
In January 2023 Rhu, a shih-tzu who had lost an eye due to a previous neglect, found a loving new owner in Lauraine Maddox.
Now she’s got a Crufts prize.
The heroic hound won a semi-final prize at Crufts’ side ‘Scruffts’ event for non-pure breed dogs, as she is mainly shih-tzu but also a little bit chihuahua, pekingese and Lhasa apso.
She was rehabilitated by the RSPCA after having an appalling start in life that led to her losing her eye due to an infection.
The look in her one remaining eye meant Laurine simply had to rescue her.
“I first saw Rhu in a facebook post by the RSPCA Cornwall branch,” she says. “It included details of the horrendous conditions she was born into and a picture of her. The look in her eye and her scruffy little face broke my heart and I just knew she had to come home with us.”
Now, after lots of love and no little training she performed in front of a crowd at Crufts in Birmingham, making it through to the semifinals after regional heats and winning an award.
For the brave little dog and her owner it was like an FA Cup Final.
“I wasn't even sure if she would walk out into the area to be honest, so when she did it with so much ease I was over the moon,” Laurine says. “I just tried to soak it all up whilst keeping her happy and focused on me.
“It felt like we were living someone else's life. I'm a big fan of Crufts so it was a bit of a dream come true. And to walk out onto the green carpet with Rhu was an absolute honour.”
It was while attending one of these events at the Royal Cornwall Showground in Wadebridge in late 2024 Laurine realised her “little princess” could make the national competition, having stumbled upon a heat for Scruffts – a national competition for crossbreed dogs – taking place at the same venue.
After making it through though, like a Cup Final, you have to train hard for your big day, and Laurine took Rhu out to her local shops to put her through her pace *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162860_005
FEATURE - Shih Tzu Hündin Rhuh wurde bei der diesjährigen Crufts Hundeschau ausgezeichnet, obwohl sie nur ein Auge hat
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
In January 2023 Rhu, a shih-tzu who had lost an eye due to a previous neglect, found a loving new owner in Lauraine Maddox.
Now she’s got a Crufts prize.
The heroic hound won a semi-final prize at Crufts’ side ‘Scruffts’ event for non-pure breed dogs, as she is mainly shih-tzu but also a little bit chihuahua, pekingese and Lhasa apso.
She was rehabilitated by the RSPCA after having an appalling start in life that led to her losing her eye due to an infection.
The look in her one remaining eye meant Laurine simply had to rescue her.
“I first saw Rhu in a facebook post by the RSPCA Cornwall branch,” she says. “It included details of the horrendous conditions she was born into and a picture of her. The look in her eye and her scruffy little face broke my heart and I just knew she had to come home with us.”
Now, after lots of love and no little training she performed in front of a crowd at Crufts in Birmingham, making it through to the semifinals after regional heats and winning an award.
For the brave little dog and her owner it was like an FA Cup Final.
“I wasn't even sure if she would walk out into the area to be honest, so when she did it with so much ease I was over the moon,” Laurine says. “I just tried to soak it all up whilst keeping her happy and focused on me.
“It felt like we were living someone else's life. I'm a big fan of Crufts so it was a bit of a dream come true. And to walk out onto the green carpet with Rhu was an absolute honour.”
It was while attending one of these events at the Royal Cornwall Showground in Wadebridge in late 2024 Laurine realised her “little princess” could make the national competition, having stumbled upon a heat for Scruffts – a national competition for crossbreed dogs – taking place at the same venue.
After making it through though, like a Cup Final, you have to train hard for your big day, and Laurine took Rhu out to her local shops to put her through her pace *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162860_003
FEATURE - Shih Tzu Hündin Rhuh wurde bei der diesjährigen Crufts Hundeschau ausgezeichnet, obwohl sie nur ein Auge hat
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
In January 2023 Rhu, a shih-tzu who had lost an eye due to a previous neglect, found a loving new owner in Lauraine Maddox.
Now she’s got a Crufts prize.
The heroic hound won a semi-final prize at Crufts’ side ‘Scruffts’ event for non-pure breed dogs, as she is mainly shih-tzu but also a little bit chihuahua, pekingese and Lhasa apso.
She was rehabilitated by the RSPCA after having an appalling start in life that led to her losing her eye due to an infection.
The look in her one remaining eye meant Laurine simply had to rescue her.
“I first saw Rhu in a facebook post by the RSPCA Cornwall branch,” she says. “It included details of the horrendous conditions she was born into and a picture of her. The look in her eye and her scruffy little face broke my heart and I just knew she had to come home with us.”
Now, after lots of love and no little training she performed in front of a crowd at Crufts in Birmingham, making it through to the semifinals after regional heats and winning an award.
For the brave little dog and her owner it was like an FA Cup Final.
“I wasn't even sure if she would walk out into the area to be honest, so when she did it with so much ease I was over the moon,” Laurine says. “I just tried to soak it all up whilst keeping her happy and focused on me.
“It felt like we were living someone else's life. I'm a big fan of Crufts so it was a bit of a dream come true. And to walk out onto the green carpet with Rhu was an absolute honour.”
It was while attending one of these events at the Royal Cornwall Showground in Wadebridge in late 2024 Laurine realised her “little princess” could make the national competition, having stumbled upon a heat for Scruffts – a national competition for crossbreed dogs – taking place at the same venue.
After making it through though, like a Cup Final, you have to train hard for your big day, and Laurine took Rhu out to her local shops to put her through her pace *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162860_006
FEATURE - Shih Tzu Hündin Rhuh wurde bei der diesjährigen Crufts Hundeschau ausgezeichnet, obwohl sie nur ein Auge hat
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
In January 2023 Rhu, a shih-tzu who had lost an eye due to a previous neglect, found a loving new owner in Lauraine Maddox.
Now she’s got a Crufts prize.
The heroic hound won a semi-final prize at Crufts’ side ‘Scruffts’ event for non-pure breed dogs, as she is mainly shih-tzu but also a little bit chihuahua, pekingese and Lhasa apso.
She was rehabilitated by the RSPCA after having an appalling start in life that led to her losing her eye due to an infection.
The look in her one remaining eye meant Laurine simply had to rescue her.
“I first saw Rhu in a facebook post by the RSPCA Cornwall branch,” she says. “It included details of the horrendous conditions she was born into and a picture of her. The look in her eye and her scruffy little face broke my heart and I just knew she had to come home with us.”
Now, after lots of love and no little training she performed in front of a crowd at Crufts in Birmingham, making it through to the semifinals after regional heats and winning an award.
For the brave little dog and her owner it was like an FA Cup Final.
“I wasn't even sure if she would walk out into the area to be honest, so when she did it with so much ease I was over the moon,” Laurine says. “I just tried to soak it all up whilst keeping her happy and focused on me.
“It felt like we were living someone else's life. I'm a big fan of Crufts so it was a bit of a dream come true. And to walk out onto the green carpet with Rhu was an absolute honour.”
It was while attending one of these events at the Royal Cornwall Showground in Wadebridge in late 2024 Laurine realised her “little princess” could make the national competition, having stumbled upon a heat for Scruffts – a national competition for crossbreed dogs – taking place at the same venue.
After making it through though, like a Cup Final, you have to train hard for your big day, and Laurine took Rhu out to her local shops to put her through her pace *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10162860_008
FEATURE - Shih Tzu Hündin Rhuh wurde bei der diesjährigen Crufts Hundeschau ausgezeichnet, obwohl sie nur ein Auge hat
SONDERKONDITIONEN: Satzpreis!
In January 2023 Rhu, a shih-tzu who had lost an eye due to a previous neglect, found a loving new owner in Lauraine Maddox.
Now she’s got a Crufts prize.
The heroic hound won a semi-final prize at Crufts’ side ‘Scruffts’ event for non-pure breed dogs, as she is mainly shih-tzu but also a little bit chihuahua, pekingese and Lhasa apso.
She was rehabilitated by the RSPCA after having an appalling start in life that led to her losing her eye due to an infection.
The look in her one remaining eye meant Laurine simply had to rescue her.
“I first saw Rhu in a facebook post by the RSPCA Cornwall branch,” she says. “It included details of the horrendous conditions she was born into and a picture of her. The look in her eye and her scruffy little face broke my heart and I just knew she had to come home with us.”
Now, after lots of love and no little training she performed in front of a crowd at Crufts in Birmingham, making it through to the semifinals after regional heats and winning an award.
For the brave little dog and her owner it was like an FA Cup Final.
“I wasn't even sure if she would walk out into the area to be honest, so when she did it with so much ease I was over the moon,” Laurine says. “I just tried to soak it all up whilst keeping her happy and focused on me.
“It felt like we were living someone else's life. I'm a big fan of Crufts so it was a bit of a dream come true. And to walk out onto the green carpet with Rhu was an absolute honour.”
It was while attending one of these events at the Royal Cornwall Showground in Wadebridge in late 2024 Laurine realised her “little princess” could make the national competition, having stumbled upon a heat for Scruffts – a national competition for crossbreed dogs – taking place at the same venue.
After making it through though, like a Cup Final, you have to train hard for your big day, and Laurine took Rhu out to her local shops to put her through her pace *** Local Caption ***
(c) Dukas -
DUK10160054_007
ROYALS - Prinz Andrew bei einem Asritt durch den Schlosspark auf Windsor
Prinz Andrew (GB), bei einer Fahrt mit dem Range Rover durch den Park auf Schloss Windsor, Windsor, Grossbritannien, 6. April 2024. *** Local Caption *** 02509040
(c) Dukas -
DUK10160054_005
ROYALS - Prinz Andrew bei einem Asritt durch den Schlosspark auf Windsor
Prinz Andrew (GB), bei einer Fahrt mit dem Range Rover durch den Park auf Schloss Windsor, Windsor, Grossbritannien, 6. April 2024. *** Local Caption *** 02509031
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_164332202_BES
dukas 164332202 bes
Archives - La reine Margrethe II de Danemark va abdiquer après 52 Ans de règne, le 14 janvier 2024. File photos - 09 August 2006, Caix Queen Margrethe of Denmark at Photos session Caix, with dogs, Helike, Vega. Copyright: Royalportraits Europe/Bernard Ruebsamen
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_051
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40211989
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_048
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40212035
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_041
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40211986
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_083
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40211990
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_078
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40211991
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_070
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40211993
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_077
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40211992
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_062
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40211994
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_042
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40211995
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_073
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40211996
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_060
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40211997
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_050
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40211998
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_080
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40211999
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_043
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40212000
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_053
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40212001
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_035
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40212003
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_054
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40212009
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_072
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40212004
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_038
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40212002
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_058
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40212007
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_065
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40212005
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_066
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40212012
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_055
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40212006
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_044
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40212010
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_037
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40212018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10152180_088
PEOPLE - Michele Hunziker spielt mit ihren Töchtern Sole und Celeste und dem Hund in einem Park in Mailand
Michelle Hunziker with daughters Sole and Celeste Trussardi walks her 3 dogs at park
Not EXCLUSIVE
RIGHTS GERMANY SWISS AUSTRIA ONLY
*** Local Caption *** 40212022
(c) Dukas