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  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • TOKYO, JAPAN - NOVEMBER 16: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Tokyo Bond Girl Collection For Spectre<br />
<br />
A model showcases designs on the runway at Tokyo Bond Girl Collection on November 16, 2015 in Tokyo, Japan.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Tokyo_Bond_Girl_Collect...jpg
  • Nebraska girl, 16, throws her premature infant out window right after giving birth, baby dies<br />
<br />
A 16-year-old Nebraska girl killed her prematurely born baby early Friday by throwing the infant out a second-floor window minutes after going into labor, authorities said.<br />
<br />
Cops and emergency personnel responded to an Omaha apartment complex around 4 a.m. after receiving multiple calls about an infant tossed from a window, police said in a statement.<br />
<br />
Once they arrived, emergency responders discovered an adult female performing CPR on a lifeless infant in the apartment complex parking lot. The baby was rushed into an ambulance, but died on the way to an area hospital. The disheveled would-be mother was also taken to the hospital.<br />
<br />
Interviews with the teen revealed that she had been asleep and alone in her room when she unexpectedly went into labor. In a fit of panic, the girl threw the infant out of her window before telling her mother what had happened.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Infant_Thrown_out_of_window2.jpg
  • Nebraska girl, 16, throws her premature infant out window right after giving birth, baby dies<br />
<br />
A 16-year-old Nebraska girl killed her prematurely born baby early Friday by throwing the infant out a second-floor window minutes after going into labor, authorities said.<br />
<br />
Cops and emergency personnel responded to an Omaha apartment complex around 4 a.m. after receiving multiple calls about an infant tossed from a window, police said in a statement.<br />
<br />
Once they arrived, emergency responders discovered an adult female performing CPR on a lifeless infant in the apartment complex parking lot. The baby was rushed into an ambulance, but died on the way to an area hospital. The disheveled would-be mother was also taken to the hospital.<br />
<br />
Interviews with the teen revealed that she had been asleep and alone in her room when she unexpectedly went into labor. In a fit of panic, the girl threw the infant out of her window before telling her mother what had happened.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Infant_Thrown_out_of_window3.jpg
  • Nebraska girl, 16, throws her premature infant out window right after giving birth, baby dies<br />
<br />
A 16-year-old Nebraska girl killed her prematurely born baby early Friday by throwing the infant out a second-floor window minutes after going into labor, authorities said.<br />
<br />
Cops and emergency personnel responded to an Omaha apartment complex around 4 a.m. after receiving multiple calls about an infant tossed from a window, police said in a statement.<br />
<br />
Once they arrived, emergency responders discovered an adult female performing CPR on a lifeless infant in the apartment complex parking lot. The baby was rushed into an ambulance, but died on the way to an area hospital. The disheveled would-be mother was also taken to the hospital.<br />
<br />
Interviews with the teen revealed that she had been asleep and alone in her room when she unexpectedly went into labor. In a fit of panic, the girl threw the infant out of her window before telling her mother what had happened.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Infant_Thrown_out_of_window1.jpg
  • RUICHANG, CHINA -  (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
A Baby Girl Has 12 Fingers And 14 Toes<br />
<br />
Baby girl Niu Niu is seen  in Ruichang, Jiangxi Province of China. Zhu Limin, 37, gave birth to Niu Niu on May 2 2012 Niu Niu has six fingers on each hand and seven toes on each foot. Niu Niu has a normal 13-year-old brother. Zhu Limin went to two local hospitals four times for antenatal examination, but none of doctors in the two hospitals found the abnormality. <br />
©ChinaFoto/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Baby_12_Fingers_14_Toes...jpg
  • RUICHANG, CHINA -  (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
A Baby Girl Has 12 Fingers And 14 Toes<br />
<br />
Baby girl Niu Niu is seen  in Ruichang, Jiangxi Province of China. Zhu Limin, 37, gave birth to Niu Niu on May 2 2012 Niu Niu has six fingers on each hand and seven toes on each foot. Niu Niu has a normal 13-year-old brother. Zhu Limin went to two local hospitals four times for antenatal examination, but none of doctors in the two hospitals found the abnormality. <br />
©ChinaFoto/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Baby_12_Fingers_14_Toes...jpg
  • RUICHANG, CHINA -  (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
A Baby Girl Has 12 Fingers And 14 Toes<br />
<br />
Baby girl Niu Niu is seen  in Ruichang, Jiangxi Province of China. Zhu Limin, 37, gave birth to Niu Niu on May 2 2012 Niu Niu has six fingers on each hand and seven toes on each foot. Niu Niu has a normal 13-year-old brother. Zhu Limin went to two local hospitals four times for antenatal examination, but none of doctors in the two hospitals found the abnormality. <br />
©ChinaFoto/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Baby_12_Fingers_14_Toes...jpg
  • RUICHANG, CHINA -  (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
A Baby Girl Has 12 Fingers And 14 Toes<br />
<br />
Baby girl Niu Niu is seen  in Ruichang, Jiangxi Province of China. Zhu Limin, 37, gave birth to Niu Niu on May 2 2012 Niu Niu has six fingers on each hand and seven toes on each foot. Niu Niu has a normal 13-year-old brother. Zhu Limin went to two local hospitals four times for antenatal examination, but none of doctors in the two hospitals found the abnormality. <br />
©ChinaFoto/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Baby_12_Fingers_14_Toes...jpg
  • RUICHANG, CHINA -  (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
A Baby Girl Has 12 Fingers And 14 Toes<br />
<br />
Baby girl Niu Niu is seen  in Ruichang, Jiangxi Province of China. Zhu Limin, 37, gave birth to Niu Niu on May 2 2012 Niu Niu has six fingers on each hand and seven toes on each foot. Niu Niu has a normal 13-year-old brother. Zhu Limin went to two local hospitals four times for antenatal examination, but none of doctors in the two hospitals found the abnormality. <br />
©ChinaFoto/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Baby_12_Fingers_14_Toes...jpg
  • RUICHANG, CHINA -  (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
A Baby Girl Has 12 Fingers And 14 Toes<br />
<br />
Baby girl Niu Niu is seen  in Ruichang, Jiangxi Province of China. Zhu Limin, 37, gave birth to Niu Niu on May 2 2012 Niu Niu has six fingers on each hand and seven toes on each foot. Niu Niu has a normal 13-year-old brother. Zhu Limin went to two local hospitals four times for antenatal examination, but none of doctors in the two hospitals found the abnormality. <br />
©ChinaFoto/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Baby_12_Fingers_14_Toes...jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Chinese Blue-eyed Girl In Chongqing<br />
<br />
Blue-eyed girl Chen Guixiu, 11, plays with a dog at home in Tieqiao village in Chongqing, China. Chen Guixiu was born with blue eyes but her skin and hair are the same as other Chinese people. Local villagers always call Chen "alien" behind her back, and Chen Guixiu doesn't have any fellows. Parents found out Chen Guixiu is deaf when she was three. Chen Guixiu got free body check-ups at Nanchuan District People's Hospital on May 3, an eye doctor said that Chen's eyes basic function is normal, but they can't confirm the cause. <br />
©ChinaFoto/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Chinese_Blue_eyed_Girl7.jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Chinese Blue-eyed Girl In Chongqing<br />
<br />
Blue-eyed girl Chen Guixiu, 11, plays with a dog at home in Tieqiao village in Chongqing, China. Chen Guixiu was born with blue eyes but her skin and hair are the same as other Chinese people. Local villagers always call Chen "alien" behind her back, and Chen Guixiu doesn't have any fellows. Parents found out Chen Guixiu is deaf when she was three. Chen Guixiu got free body check-ups at Nanchuan District People's Hospital on May 3, an eye doctor said that Chen's eyes basic function is normal, but they can't confirm the cause. <br />
©ChinaFoto/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Chinese_Blue_eyed_Girl5.jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Chinese Blue-eyed Girl In Chongqing<br />
<br />
Blue-eyed girl Chen Guixiu, 11, plays with a dog at home in Tieqiao village in Chongqing, China. Chen Guixiu was born with blue eyes but her skin and hair are the same as other Chinese people. Local villagers always call Chen "alien" behind her back, and Chen Guixiu doesn't have any fellows. Parents found out Chen Guixiu is deaf when she was three. Chen Guixiu got free body check-ups at Nanchuan District People's Hospital on May 3, an eye doctor said that Chen's eyes basic function is normal, but they can't confirm the cause. <br />
©ChinaFoto/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Chinese_Blue_eyed_Girl4.jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Chinese Blue-eyed Girl In Chongqing<br />
<br />
Blue-eyed girl Chen Guixiu, 11, plays with a dog at home in Tieqiao village in Chongqing, China. Chen Guixiu was born with blue eyes but her skin and hair are the same as other Chinese people. Local villagers always call Chen "alien" behind her back, and Chen Guixiu doesn't have any fellows. Parents found out Chen Guixiu is deaf when she was three. Chen Guixiu got free body check-ups at Nanchuan District People's Hospital on May 3, an eye doctor said that Chen's eyes basic function is normal, but they can't confirm the cause. <br />
©ChinaFoto/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Chinese_Blue_eyed_Girl6.jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Chinese Blue-eyed Girl In Chongqing<br />
<br />
Blue-eyed girl Chen Guixiu, 11, plays with a dog at home in Tieqiao village in Chongqing, China. Chen Guixiu was born with blue eyes but her skin and hair are the same as other Chinese people. Local villagers always call Chen "alien" behind her back, and Chen Guixiu doesn't have any fellows. Parents found out Chen Guixiu is deaf when she was three. Chen Guixiu got free body check-ups at Nanchuan District People's Hospital on May 3, an eye doctor said that Chen's eyes basic function is normal, but they can't confirm the cause. <br />
©ChinaFoto/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Chinese_Blue_eyed_Girl3.jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Chinese Blue-eyed Girl In Chongqing<br />
<br />
Blue-eyed girl Chen Guixiu, 11, plays with a dog at home in Tieqiao village in Chongqing, China. Chen Guixiu was born with blue eyes but her skin and hair are the same as other Chinese people. Local villagers always call Chen "alien" behind her back, and Chen Guixiu doesn't have any fellows. Parents found out Chen Guixiu is deaf when she was three. Chen Guixiu got free body check-ups at Nanchuan District People's Hospital on May 3, an eye doctor said that Chen's eyes basic function is normal, but they can't confirm the cause. <br />
©ChinaFoto/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Chinese_Blue_eyed_Girl2.jpg
  • CHONGQING, CHINA - (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Chinese Blue-eyed Girl In Chongqing<br />
<br />
Blue-eyed girl Chen Guixiu, 11, plays with a dog at home in Tieqiao village in Chongqing, China. Chen Guixiu was born with blue eyes but her skin and hair are the same as other Chinese people. Local villagers always call Chen "alien" behind her back, and Chen Guixiu doesn't have any fellows. Parents found out Chen Guixiu is deaf when she was three. Chen Guixiu got free body check-ups at Nanchuan District People's Hospital on May 3, an eye doctor said that Chen's eyes basic function is normal, but they can't confirm the cause. <br />
©ChinaFoto/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Chinese_Blue_eyed_Girl1.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE <br />
27 Jan 2016 - Mumbai - INDIA.<br />
<br />
Special delivery :  Young girl’s new heart survives 550km journey through India’s airports and traffic<br />
<br />
Paediatric cardiologist Vijay Agarwal was driving back to his home in Mumbai in the evening of January 2, preparing to host a small New Year’s party, when he received a phone call. A 20-year-old woman had just died in Indore — nearly 550 kilometres from Mumbai — and her heart was available for transplant. Didn’t he have a patient awaiting just such a heart?<br />
<br />
Dr Agarwal, who works at the Fortis hospital in the Mumbai suburb of Mulund, thought immediately of Sweden D’Souza — his 16-year-old patient who suffered from a chronic heart muscle disease called cardiomyopathy.<br />
<br />
Sweden certainly qualified for a transplant. It was the distance the heart had to travel that worried Dr Agarwal.<br />
<br />
What followed was hours of frenzied coordination as determined doctors, and traffic and police officers worked through the night to ensure the success of Mumbai’s first paediatric heart transplant. It also marked the furthest distance that a heart has travelled within India to be transplanted.<br />
<br />
A heart must be transplanted within four hours after it is taken out of the body, or its muscle will begin to atrophy. That window of time is already narrow, but the stakes are even higher given the logistics of transportation on India’s clogged roads and possible complications in surgery. Adding to the complexity was the fact that no central authority in India co-ordinates such transplants.<br />
<br />
“I sent a retrieval team of four people to Indore that same night, within an hour of us receiving the call,” he said. “A private jet would have saved a lot of time, but they were charging 800,000 rupees.”<br />
<br />
Sweden’s father, a security guard at the office of an oil corporation, could not afford that fee. “So we booked a flight the next morning at 7.40am,” Dr Agarwal said. “I tried a friend in the navy to see if they had any aircraft f
    Exclusivepix_Indias_first_paediatric...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE <br />
27 Jan 2016 - Mumbai - INDIA.<br />
<br />
Special delivery :  Young girl’s new heart survives 550km journey through India’s airports and traffic<br />
<br />
Paediatric cardiologist Vijay Agarwal was driving back to his home in Mumbai in the evening of January 2, preparing to host a small New Year’s party, when he received a phone call. A 20-year-old woman had just died in Indore — nearly 550 kilometres from Mumbai — and her heart was available for transplant. Didn’t he have a patient awaiting just such a heart?<br />
<br />
Dr Agarwal, who works at the Fortis hospital in the Mumbai suburb of Mulund, thought immediately of Sweden D’Souza — his 16-year-old patient who suffered from a chronic heart muscle disease called cardiomyopathy.<br />
<br />
Sweden certainly qualified for a transplant. It was the distance the heart had to travel that worried Dr Agarwal.<br />
<br />
What followed was hours of frenzied coordination as determined doctors, and traffic and police officers worked through the night to ensure the success of Mumbai’s first paediatric heart transplant. It also marked the furthest distance that a heart has travelled within India to be transplanted.<br />
<br />
A heart must be transplanted within four hours after it is taken out of the body, or its muscle will begin to atrophy. That window of time is already narrow, but the stakes are even higher given the logistics of transportation on India’s clogged roads and possible complications in surgery. Adding to the complexity was the fact that no central authority in India co-ordinates such transplants.<br />
<br />
“I sent a retrieval team of four people to Indore that same night, within an hour of us receiving the call,” he said. “A private jet would have saved a lot of time, but they were charging 800,000 rupees.”<br />
<br />
Sweden’s father, a security guard at the office of an oil corporation, could not afford that fee. “So we booked a flight the next morning at 7.40am,” Dr Agarwal said. “I tried a friend in the navy to see if they had any aircraft f
    Exclusivepix_Indias_first_paediatric...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE <br />
27 Jan 2016 - Mumbai - INDIA.<br />
<br />
Special delivery :  Young girl’s new heart survives 550km journey through India’s airports and traffic<br />
<br />
Paediatric cardiologist Vijay Agarwal was driving back to his home in Mumbai in the evening of January 2, preparing to host a small New Year’s party, when he received a phone call. A 20-year-old woman had just died in Indore — nearly 550 kilometres from Mumbai — and her heart was available for transplant. Didn’t he have a patient awaiting just such a heart?<br />
<br />
Dr Agarwal, who works at the Fortis hospital in the Mumbai suburb of Mulund, thought immediately of Sweden D’Souza — his 16-year-old patient who suffered from a chronic heart muscle disease called cardiomyopathy.<br />
<br />
Sweden certainly qualified for a transplant. It was the distance the heart had to travel that worried Dr Agarwal.<br />
<br />
What followed was hours of frenzied coordination as determined doctors, and traffic and police officers worked through the night to ensure the success of Mumbai’s first paediatric heart transplant. It also marked the furthest distance that a heart has travelled within India to be transplanted.<br />
<br />
A heart must be transplanted within four hours after it is taken out of the body, or its muscle will begin to atrophy. That window of time is already narrow, but the stakes are even higher given the logistics of transportation on India’s clogged roads and possible complications in surgery. Adding to the complexity was the fact that no central authority in India co-ordinates such transplants.<br />
<br />
“I sent a retrieval team of four people to Indore that same night, within an hour of us receiving the call,” he said. “A private jet would have saved a lot of time, but they were charging 800,000 rupees.”<br />
<br />
Sweden’s father, a security guard at the office of an oil corporation, could not afford that fee. “So we booked a flight the next morning at 7.40am,” Dr Agarwal said. “I tried a friend in the navy to see if they had any aircraft f
    Exclusivepix_Indias_first_paediatric...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, CHINA - AUGUST 18: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Hairy Girl In Hangzhou,china<br />
<br />
9-year-old Huang Ting is seen on August 18, 2013 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China. Huang Ting was born with hairy body, and her father is also a hairy man. Huang Ting's mother is the only source of income of the family, as her father has a disinclination to meet people. <br />
©exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Hairy_Girl4.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE <br />
27 Jan 2016 - Mumbai - INDIA.<br />
<br />
Special delivery :  Young girl’s new heart survives 550km journey through India’s airports and traffic<br />
<br />
Paediatric cardiologist Vijay Agarwal was driving back to his home in Mumbai in the evening of January 2, preparing to host a small New Year’s party, when he received a phone call. A 20-year-old woman had just died in Indore — nearly 550 kilometres from Mumbai — and her heart was available for transplant. Didn’t he have a patient awaiting just such a heart?<br />
<br />
Dr Agarwal, who works at the Fortis hospital in the Mumbai suburb of Mulund, thought immediately of Sweden D’Souza — his 16-year-old patient who suffered from a chronic heart muscle disease called cardiomyopathy.<br />
<br />
Sweden certainly qualified for a transplant. It was the distance the heart had to travel that worried Dr Agarwal.<br />
<br />
What followed was hours of frenzied coordination as determined doctors, and traffic and police officers worked through the night to ensure the success of Mumbai’s first paediatric heart transplant. It also marked the furthest distance that a heart has travelled within India to be transplanted.<br />
<br />
A heart must be transplanted within four hours after it is taken out of the body, or its muscle will begin to atrophy. That window of time is already narrow, but the stakes are even higher given the logistics of transportation on India’s clogged roads and possible complications in surgery. Adding to the complexity was the fact that no central authority in India co-ordinates such transplants.<br />
<br />
“I sent a retrieval team of four people to Indore that same night, within an hour of us receiving the call,” he said. “A private jet would have saved a lot of time, but they were charging 800,000 rupees.”<br />
<br />
Sweden’s father, a security guard at the office of an oil corporation, could not afford that fee. “So we booked a flight the next morning at 7.40am,” Dr Agarwal said. “I tried a friend in the navy to see if they had any aircraft f
    Exclusivepix_Indias_first_paediatric...jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE <br />
27 Jan 2016 - Mumbai - INDIA.<br />
<br />
Special delivery :  Young girl’s new heart survives 550km journey through India’s airports and traffic<br />
<br />
Paediatric cardiologist Vijay Agarwal was driving back to his home in Mumbai in the evening of January 2, preparing to host a small New Year’s party, when he received a phone call. A 20-year-old woman had just died in Indore — nearly 550 kilometres from Mumbai — and her heart was available for transplant. Didn’t he have a patient awaiting just such a heart?<br />
<br />
Dr Agarwal, who works at the Fortis hospital in the Mumbai suburb of Mulund, thought immediately of Sweden D’Souza — his 16-year-old patient who suffered from a chronic heart muscle disease called cardiomyopathy.<br />
<br />
Sweden certainly qualified for a transplant. It was the distance the heart had to travel that worried Dr Agarwal.<br />
<br />
What followed was hours of frenzied coordination as determined doctors, and traffic and police officers worked through the night to ensure the success of Mumbai’s first paediatric heart transplant. It also marked the furthest distance that a heart has travelled within India to be transplanted.<br />
<br />
A heart must be transplanted within four hours after it is taken out of the body, or its muscle will begin to atrophy. That window of time is already narrow, but the stakes are even higher given the logistics of transportation on India’s clogged roads and possible complications in surgery. Adding to the complexity was the fact that no central authority in India co-ordinates such transplants.<br />
<br />
“I sent a retrieval team of four people to Indore that same night, within an hour of us receiving the call,” he said. “A private jet would have saved a lot of time, but they were charging 800,000 rupees.”<br />
<br />
Sweden’s father, a security guard at the office of an oil corporation, could not afford that fee. “So we booked a flight the next morning at 7.40am,” Dr Agarwal said. “I tried a friend in the navy to see if they had any aircraft f
    Exclusivepix_Indias_first_paediatric...jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE <br />
27 Jan 2016 - Mumbai - INDIA.<br />
<br />
Special delivery :  Young girl’s new heart survives 550km journey through India’s airports and traffic<br />
<br />
Paediatric cardiologist Vijay Agarwal was driving back to his home in Mumbai in the evening of January 2, preparing to host a small New Year’s party, when he received a phone call. A 20-year-old woman had just died in Indore — nearly 550 kilometres from Mumbai — and her heart was available for transplant. Didn’t he have a patient awaiting just such a heart?<br />
<br />
Dr Agarwal, who works at the Fortis hospital in the Mumbai suburb of Mulund, thought immediately of Sweden D’Souza — his 16-year-old patient who suffered from a chronic heart muscle disease called cardiomyopathy.<br />
<br />
Sweden certainly qualified for a transplant. It was the distance the heart had to travel that worried Dr Agarwal.<br />
<br />
What followed was hours of frenzied coordination as determined doctors, and traffic and police officers worked through the night to ensure the success of Mumbai’s first paediatric heart transplant. It also marked the furthest distance that a heart has travelled within India to be transplanted.<br />
<br />
A heart must be transplanted within four hours after it is taken out of the body, or its muscle will begin to atrophy. That window of time is already narrow, but the stakes are even higher given the logistics of transportation on India’s clogged roads and possible complications in surgery. Adding to the complexity was the fact that no central authority in India co-ordinates such transplants.<br />
<br />
“I sent a retrieval team of four people to Indore that same night, within an hour of us receiving the call,” he said. “A private jet would have saved a lot of time, but they were charging 800,000 rupees.”<br />
<br />
Sweden’s father, a security guard at the office of an oil corporation, could not afford that fee. “So we booked a flight the next morning at 7.40am,” Dr Agarwal said. “I tried a friend in the navy to see if they had any aircraft f
    Exclusivepix_Indias_first_paediatric...jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE <br />
27 Jan 2016 - Mumbai - INDIA.<br />
<br />
Special delivery :  Young girl’s new heart survives 550km journey through India’s airports and traffic<br />
<br />
Paediatric cardiologist Vijay Agarwal was driving back to his home in Mumbai in the evening of January 2, preparing to host a small New Year’s party, when he received a phone call. A 20-year-old woman had just died in Indore — nearly 550 kilometres from Mumbai — and her heart was available for transplant. Didn’t he have a patient awaiting just such a heart?<br />
<br />
Dr Agarwal, who works at the Fortis hospital in the Mumbai suburb of Mulund, thought immediately of Sweden D’Souza — his 16-year-old patient who suffered from a chronic heart muscle disease called cardiomyopathy.<br />
<br />
Sweden certainly qualified for a transplant. It was the distance the heart had to travel that worried Dr Agarwal.<br />
<br />
What followed was hours of frenzied coordination as determined doctors, and traffic and police officers worked through the night to ensure the success of Mumbai’s first paediatric heart transplant. It also marked the furthest distance that a heart has travelled within India to be transplanted.<br />
<br />
A heart must be transplanted within four hours after it is taken out of the body, or its muscle will begin to atrophy. That window of time is already narrow, but the stakes are even higher given the logistics of transportation on India’s clogged roads and possible complications in surgery. Adding to the complexity was the fact that no central authority in India co-ordinates such transplants.<br />
<br />
“I sent a retrieval team of four people to Indore that same night, within an hour of us receiving the call,” he said. “A private jet would have saved a lot of time, but they were charging 800,000 rupees.”<br />
<br />
Sweden’s father, a security guard at the office of an oil corporation, could not afford that fee. “So we booked a flight the next morning at 7.40am,” Dr Agarwal said. “I tried a friend in the navy to see if they had any aircraft f
    Exclusivepix_Indias_first_paediatric...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE <br />
27 Jan 2016 - Mumbai - INDIA.<br />
<br />
Special delivery :  Young girl’s new heart survives 550km journey through India’s airports and traffic<br />
<br />
Paediatric cardiologist Vijay Agarwal was driving back to his home in Mumbai in the evening of January 2, preparing to host a small New Year’s party, when he received a phone call. A 20-year-old woman had just died in Indore — nearly 550 kilometres from Mumbai — and her heart was available for transplant. Didn’t he have a patient awaiting just such a heart?<br />
<br />
Dr Agarwal, who works at the Fortis hospital in the Mumbai suburb of Mulund, thought immediately of Sweden D’Souza — his 16-year-old patient who suffered from a chronic heart muscle disease called cardiomyopathy.<br />
<br />
Sweden certainly qualified for a transplant. It was the distance the heart had to travel that worried Dr Agarwal.<br />
<br />
What followed was hours of frenzied coordination as determined doctors, and traffic and police officers worked through the night to ensure the success of Mumbai’s first paediatric heart transplant. It also marked the furthest distance that a heart has travelled within India to be transplanted.<br />
<br />
A heart must be transplanted within four hours after it is taken out of the body, or its muscle will begin to atrophy. That window of time is already narrow, but the stakes are even higher given the logistics of transportation on India’s clogged roads and possible complications in surgery. Adding to the complexity was the fact that no central authority in India co-ordinates such transplants.<br />
<br />
“I sent a retrieval team of four people to Indore that same night, within an hour of us receiving the call,” he said. “A private jet would have saved a lot of time, but they were charging 800,000 rupees.”<br />
<br />
Sweden’s father, a security guard at the office of an oil corporation, could not afford that fee. “So we booked a flight the next morning at 7.40am,” Dr Agarwal said. “I tried a friend in the navy to see if they had any aircraft f
    Exclusivepix_Indias_first_paediatric...JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE <br />
27 Jan 2016 - Mumbai - INDIA.<br />
<br />
Special delivery :  Young girl’s new heart survives 550km journey through India’s airports and traffic<br />
<br />
Paediatric cardiologist Vijay Agarwal was driving back to his home in Mumbai in the evening of January 2, preparing to host a small New Year’s party, when he received a phone call. A 20-year-old woman had just died in Indore — nearly 550 kilometres from Mumbai — and her heart was available for transplant. Didn’t he have a patient awaiting just such a heart?<br />
<br />
Dr Agarwal, who works at the Fortis hospital in the Mumbai suburb of Mulund, thought immediately of Sweden D’Souza — his 16-year-old patient who suffered from a chronic heart muscle disease called cardiomyopathy.<br />
<br />
Sweden certainly qualified for a transplant. It was the distance the heart had to travel that worried Dr Agarwal.<br />
<br />
What followed was hours of frenzied coordination as determined doctors, and traffic and police officers worked through the night to ensure the success of Mumbai’s first paediatric heart transplant. It also marked the furthest distance that a heart has travelled within India to be transplanted.<br />
<br />
A heart must be transplanted within four hours after it is taken out of the body, or its muscle will begin to atrophy. That window of time is already narrow, but the stakes are even higher given the logistics of transportation on India’s clogged roads and possible complications in surgery. Adding to the complexity was the fact that no central authority in India co-ordinates such transplants.<br />
<br />
“I sent a retrieval team of four people to Indore that same night, within an hour of us receiving the call,” he said. “A private jet would have saved a lot of time, but they were charging 800,000 rupees.”<br />
<br />
Sweden’s father, a security guard at the office of an oil corporation, could not afford that fee. “So we booked a flight the next morning at 7.40am,” Dr Agarwal said. “I tried a friend in the navy to see if they had any aircraft f
    Exclusivepix_Indias_first_paediatric...jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE <br />
27 Jan 2016 - Mumbai - INDIA.<br />
<br />
Special delivery :  Young girl’s new heart survives 550km journey through India’s airports and traffic<br />
<br />
Paediatric cardiologist Vijay Agarwal was driving back to his home in Mumbai in the evening of January 2, preparing to host a small New Year’s party, when he received a phone call. A 20-year-old woman had just died in Indore — nearly 550 kilometres from Mumbai — and her heart was available for transplant. Didn’t he have a patient awaiting just such a heart?<br />
<br />
Dr Agarwal, who works at the Fortis hospital in the Mumbai suburb of Mulund, thought immediately of Sweden D’Souza — his 16-year-old patient who suffered from a chronic heart muscle disease called cardiomyopathy.<br />
<br />
Sweden certainly qualified for a transplant. It was the distance the heart had to travel that worried Dr Agarwal.<br />
<br />
What followed was hours of frenzied coordination as determined doctors, and traffic and police officers worked through the night to ensure the success of Mumbai’s first paediatric heart transplant. It also marked the furthest distance that a heart has travelled within India to be transplanted.<br />
<br />
A heart must be transplanted within four hours after it is taken out of the body, or its muscle will begin to atrophy. That window of time is already narrow, but the stakes are even higher given the logistics of transportation on India’s clogged roads and possible complications in surgery. Adding to the complexity was the fact that no central authority in India co-ordinates such transplants.<br />
<br />
“I sent a retrieval team of four people to Indore that same night, within an hour of us receiving the call,” he said. “A private jet would have saved a lot of time, but they were charging 800,000 rupees.”<br />
<br />
Sweden’s father, a security guard at the office of an oil corporation, could not afford that fee. “So we booked a flight the next morning at 7.40am,” Dr Agarwal said. “I tried a friend in the navy to see if they had any aircraft f
    Exclusivepix_Indias_first_paediatric...jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE <br />
27 Jan 2016 - Mumbai - INDIA.<br />
<br />
Special delivery :  Young girl’s new heart survives 550km journey through India’s airports and traffic<br />
<br />
Paediatric cardiologist Vijay Agarwal was driving back to his home in Mumbai in the evening of January 2, preparing to host a small New Year’s party, when he received a phone call. A 20-year-old woman had just died in Indore — nearly 550 kilometres from Mumbai — and her heart was available for transplant. Didn’t he have a patient awaiting just such a heart?<br />
<br />
Dr Agarwal, who works at the Fortis hospital in the Mumbai suburb of Mulund, thought immediately of Sweden D’Souza — his 16-year-old patient who suffered from a chronic heart muscle disease called cardiomyopathy.<br />
<br />
Sweden certainly qualified for a transplant. It was the distance the heart had to travel that worried Dr Agarwal.<br />
<br />
What followed was hours of frenzied coordination as determined doctors, and traffic and police officers worked through the night to ensure the success of Mumbai’s first paediatric heart transplant. It also marked the furthest distance that a heart has travelled within India to be transplanted.<br />
<br />
A heart must be transplanted within four hours after it is taken out of the body, or its muscle will begin to atrophy. That window of time is already narrow, but the stakes are even higher given the logistics of transportation on India’s clogged roads and possible complications in surgery. Adding to the complexity was the fact that no central authority in India co-ordinates such transplants.<br />
<br />
“I sent a retrieval team of four people to Indore that same night, within an hour of us receiving the call,” he said. “A private jet would have saved a lot of time, but they were charging 800,000 rupees.”<br />
<br />
Sweden’s father, a security guard at the office of an oil corporation, could not afford that fee. “So we booked a flight the next morning at 7.40am,” Dr Agarwal said. “I tried a friend in the navy to see if they had any aircraft f
    Exclusivepix_Indias_first_paediatric...jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE <br />
27 Jan 2016 - Mumbai - INDIA.<br />
<br />
Special delivery :  Young girl’s new heart survives 550km journey through India’s airports and traffic<br />
<br />
Paediatric cardiologist Vijay Agarwal was driving back to his home in Mumbai in the evening of January 2, preparing to host a small New Year’s party, when he received a phone call. A 20-year-old woman had just died in Indore — nearly 550 kilometres from Mumbai — and her heart was available for transplant. Didn’t he have a patient awaiting just such a heart?<br />
<br />
Dr Agarwal, who works at the Fortis hospital in the Mumbai suburb of Mulund, thought immediately of Sweden D’Souza — his 16-year-old patient who suffered from a chronic heart muscle disease called cardiomyopathy.<br />
<br />
Sweden certainly qualified for a transplant. It was the distance the heart had to travel that worried Dr Agarwal.<br />
<br />
What followed was hours of frenzied coordination as determined doctors, and traffic and police officers worked through the night to ensure the success of Mumbai’s first paediatric heart transplant. It also marked the furthest distance that a heart has travelled within India to be transplanted.<br />
<br />
A heart must be transplanted within four hours after it is taken out of the body, or its muscle will begin to atrophy. That window of time is already narrow, but the stakes are even higher given the logistics of transportation on India’s clogged roads and possible complications in surgery. Adding to the complexity was the fact that no central authority in India co-ordinates such transplants.<br />
<br />
“I sent a retrieval team of four people to Indore that same night, within an hour of us receiving the call,” he said. “A private jet would have saved a lot of time, but they were charging 800,000 rupees.”<br />
<br />
Sweden’s father, a security guard at the office of an oil corporation, could not afford that fee. “So we booked a flight the next morning at 7.40am,” Dr Agarwal said. “I tried a friend in the navy to see if they had any aircraft f
    Exclusivepix_Indias_first_paediatric...jpg
  • HANGZHOU, CHINA - AUGUST 18: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Hairy Girl In Hangzhou,china<br />
<br />
9-year-old Huang Ting is seen on August 18, 2013 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China. Huang Ting was born with hairy body, and her father is also a hairy man. Huang Ting's mother is the only source of income of the family, as her father has a disinclination to meet people. <br />
©exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Hairy_Girl2.jpg
  • HANGZHOU, CHINA - AUGUST 18: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Hairy Girl In Hangzhou,china<br />
<br />
9-year-old Huang Ting is seen on August 18, 2013 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China. Huang Ting was born with hairy body, and her father is also a hairy man. Huang Ting's mother is the only source of income of the family, as her father has a disinclination to meet people. <br />
©exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Hairy_Girl3.jpg
  • HANGZHOU, CHINA - AUGUST 18: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Hairy Girl In Hangzhou,china<br />
<br />
9-year-old Huang Ting is seen on August 18, 2013 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China. Huang Ting was born with hairy body, and her father is also a hairy man. Huang Ting's mother is the only source of income of the family, as her father has a disinclination to meet people. <br />
©exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Hairy_Girl1.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt4.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt3.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt2.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt1.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt6.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt5.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt8.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt9.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt10.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt11.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt12.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt13.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt14.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt15.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt16.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt18.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt20.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt21.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt24.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt23.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt7.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt17.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt19.jpg
  • JINAN, CHINA - MAY 17: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Restaurant Offers Big Discount For Beauties wearing shortest skirt<br />
<br />
A worker measures a girl\'s exposed thigh at a hot pot restaurant on May 17, 2015 in Jinan, Shandong Province of China. There is a special price for beauties who wear short skirts, the minimum discount is 20 percent off for 8 centimeters exposed thigh, and the maximum discount is 90 percent off for 33 centimeters exposed thigh<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_shortest_skirt22.jpg
  • Ethiopian Tribe Recycles Modern World’s Discards Into Fashion Accessories<br />
<br />
The Daasanach are a semi-nomadic tribe numbering approximately 50,000 individuals who live in the Omo Valley in southern Ethiopia. In the past, the tribe roamed from place to place herding livestock around open areas according to the seasons and the changing availability of water. But over the last fifty years, having lost the majority of their lands, they have also grown dependent to agriculture. Like many tribes in the region, the Daasanach have moved to areas closer to the Omo River, where they attempt to grow enough crops to survive.<br />
<br />
French photographer Eric Lafforgue has spent several years documenting the life and culture of these people, and how they have changed under the influence of modern manufactured goods. An interesting fashion trend amongst the Dassanach is their elaborate headgear, which they make from the strangest of materials — bottle caps, wristwatches, hairclips, and other discarded pieces of plastic and metal.<br />
The Daasanach spend months collecting bottle caps and scratching around for cash to pay for broken watches, which the women makes into jewelry and wigs. These are worn by both men and women, young and old.<br />
<br />
“Younger girls and children get the most basic version of the wig, while the oldest women are treated to the heaviest numbers with the most embellishment,” wrote The Daily Mail. “Men are only allowed to wear the bottle top wigs until they marry - after that, they create small clay headpieces decorated with a colourful harlequin pattern and enlivened with a feather, although the latter is only allowed after a hunt or a successful clash with an enemy.”<br />
<br />
“The young men love to wear necklaces and earrings while the girls have bigger muscles because they do the most difficult work like carrying water,” Eric Lafforgue told the newspaper.<br />
<br />
To prevent their headgears from getting spoiled while they sleep (apparently, they never take them off), they use
    Exclusivepix_Exclusivepix_Recycled_I...jpg
  • Ethiopian Tribe Recycles Modern World’s Discards Into Fashion Accessories<br />
<br />
The Daasanach are a semi-nomadic tribe numbering approximately 50,000 individuals who live in the Omo Valley in southern Ethiopia. In the past, the tribe roamed from place to place herding livestock around open areas according to the seasons and the changing availability of water. But over the last fifty years, having lost the majority of their lands, they have also grown dependent to agriculture. Like many tribes in the region, the Daasanach have moved to areas closer to the Omo River, where they attempt to grow enough crops to survive.<br />
<br />
French photographer Eric Lafforgue has spent several years documenting the life and culture of these people, and how they have changed under the influence of modern manufactured goods. An interesting fashion trend amongst the Dassanach is their elaborate headgear, which they make from the strangest of materials — bottle caps, wristwatches, hairclips, and other discarded pieces of plastic and metal.<br />
The Daasanach spend months collecting bottle caps and scratching around for cash to pay for broken watches, which the women makes into jewelry and wigs. These are worn by both men and women, young and old.<br />
<br />
“Younger girls and children get the most basic version of the wig, while the oldest women are treated to the heaviest numbers with the most embellishment,” wrote The Daily Mail. “Men are only allowed to wear the bottle top wigs until they marry - after that, they create small clay headpieces decorated with a colourful harlequin pattern and enlivened with a feather, although the latter is only allowed after a hunt or a successful clash with an enemy.”<br />
<br />
“The young men love to wear necklaces and earrings while the girls have bigger muscles because they do the most difficult work like carrying water,” Eric Lafforgue told the newspaper.<br />
<br />
To prevent their headgears from getting spoiled while they sleep (apparently, they never take them off), they use
    Exclusivepix_Exclusivepix_Recycled_I...jpg
  • Ethiopian Tribe Recycles Modern World’s Discards Into Fashion Accessories<br />
<br />
The Daasanach are a semi-nomadic tribe numbering approximately 50,000 individuals who live in the Omo Valley in southern Ethiopia. In the past, the tribe roamed from place to place herding livestock around open areas according to the seasons and the changing availability of water. But over the last fifty years, having lost the majority of their lands, they have also grown dependent to agriculture. Like many tribes in the region, the Daasanach have moved to areas closer to the Omo River, where they attempt to grow enough crops to survive.<br />
<br />
French photographer Eric Lafforgue has spent several years documenting the life and culture of these people, and how they have changed under the influence of modern manufactured goods. An interesting fashion trend amongst the Dassanach is their elaborate headgear, which they make from the strangest of materials — bottle caps, wristwatches, hairclips, and other discarded pieces of plastic and metal.<br />
The Daasanach spend months collecting bottle caps and scratching around for cash to pay for broken watches, which the women makes into jewelry and wigs. These are worn by both men and women, young and old.<br />
<br />
“Younger girls and children get the most basic version of the wig, while the oldest women are treated to the heaviest numbers with the most embellishment,” wrote The Daily Mail. “Men are only allowed to wear the bottle top wigs until they marry - after that, they create small clay headpieces decorated with a colourful harlequin pattern and enlivened with a feather, although the latter is only allowed after a hunt or a successful clash with an enemy.”<br />
<br />
“The young men love to wear necklaces and earrings while the girls have bigger muscles because they do the most difficult work like carrying water,” Eric Lafforgue told the newspaper.<br />
<br />
To prevent their headgears from getting spoiled while they sleep (apparently, they never take them off), they use
    Exclusivepix_Exclusivepix_Recycled_I...jpg
  • Ethiopian Tribe Recycles Modern World’s Discards Into Fashion Accessories<br />
<br />
The Daasanach are a semi-nomadic tribe numbering approximately 50,000 individuals who live in the Omo Valley in southern Ethiopia. In the past, the tribe roamed from place to place herding livestock around open areas according to the seasons and the changing availability of water. But over the last fifty years, having lost the majority of their lands, they have also grown dependent to agriculture. Like many tribes in the region, the Daasanach have moved to areas closer to the Omo River, where they attempt to grow enough crops to survive.<br />
<br />
French photographer Eric Lafforgue has spent several years documenting the life and culture of these people, and how they have changed under the influence of modern manufactured goods. An interesting fashion trend amongst the Dassanach is their elaborate headgear, which they make from the strangest of materials — bottle caps, wristwatches, hairclips, and other discarded pieces of plastic and metal.<br />
The Daasanach spend months collecting bottle caps and scratching around for cash to pay for broken watches, which the women makes into jewelry and wigs. These are worn by both men and women, young and old.<br />
<br />
“Younger girls and children get the most basic version of the wig, while the oldest women are treated to the heaviest numbers with the most embellishment,” wrote The Daily Mail. “Men are only allowed to wear the bottle top wigs until they marry - after that, they create small clay headpieces decorated with a colourful harlequin pattern and enlivened with a feather, although the latter is only allowed after a hunt or a successful clash with an enemy.”<br />
<br />
“The young men love to wear necklaces and earrings while the girls have bigger muscles because they do the most difficult work like carrying water,” Eric Lafforgue told the newspaper.<br />
<br />
To prevent their headgears from getting spoiled while they sleep (apparently, they never take them off), they use
    Exclusivepix_Exclusivepix_Recycled_I...jpg
  • Ethiopian Tribe Recycles Modern Worldís Discards Into Fashion Accessories<br />
<br />
The Daasanach are a semi-nomadic tribe numbering approximately 50,000 individuals who live in the Omo Valley in southern Ethiopia. In the past, the tribe roamed from place to place herding livestock around open areas according to the seasons and the changing availability of water. But over the last fifty years, having lost the majority of their lands, they have also grown dependent to agriculture. Like many tribes in the region, the Daasanach have moved to areas closer to the Omo River, where they attempt to grow enough crops to survive.<br />
<br />
French photographer Eric Lafforgue has spent several years documenting the life and culture of these people, and how they have changed under the influence of modern manufactured goods. An interesting fashion trend amongst the Dassanach is their elaborate headgear, which they make from the strangest of materials  bottle caps, wristwatches, hairclips, and other discarded pieces of plastic and metal.<br />
The Daasanach spend months collecting bottle caps and scratching around for cash to pay for broken watches, which the women makes into jewelry and wigs. These are worn by both men and women, young and old.<br />
<br />
Younger girls and children get the most basic version of the wig, while the oldest women are treated to the heaviest numbers with the most embellishment.<br />
Men are only allowed to wear the bottle top wigs until they marry - after that, they create small clay headpieces decorated with a colourful harlequin pattern and enlivened with a feather, although the latter is only allowed after a hunt or a successful clash with an enemy.<br />
<br />
The young men love to wear necklaces and earrings while the girls have bigger muscles because they do the most difficult work like carrying water, To prevent their headgears from getting spoiled while they sleep (apparently, they never take them off).<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_African_tribe_turning_Western_...jpg
  • Ethiopian Tribe Recycles Modern Worldís Discards Into Fashion Accessories<br />
<br />
The Daasanach are a semi-nomadic tribe numbering approximately 50,000 individuals who live in the Omo Valley in southern Ethiopia. In the past, the tribe roamed from place to place herding livestock around open areas according to the seasons and the changing availability of water. But over the last fifty years, having lost the majority of their lands, they have also grown dependent to agriculture. Like many tribes in the region, the Daasanach have moved to areas closer to the Omo River, where they attempt to grow enough crops to survive.<br />
<br />
French photographer Eric Lafforgue has spent several years documenting the life and culture of these people, and how they have changed under the influence of modern manufactured goods. An interesting fashion trend amongst the Dassanach is their elaborate headgear, which they make from the strangest of materials  bottle caps, wristwatches, hairclips, and other discarded pieces of plastic and metal.<br />
The Daasanach spend months collecting bottle caps and scratching around for cash to pay for broken watches, which the women makes into jewelry and wigs. These are worn by both men and women, young and old.<br />
<br />
Younger girls and children get the most basic version of the wig, while the oldest women are treated to the heaviest numbers with the most embellishment.<br />
Men are only allowed to wear the bottle top wigs until they marry - after that, they create small clay headpieces decorated with a colourful harlequin pattern and enlivened with a feather, although the latter is only allowed after a hunt or a successful clash with an enemy.<br />
<br />
The young men love to wear necklaces and earrings while the girls have bigger muscles because they do the most difficult work like carrying water, To prevent their headgears from getting spoiled while they sleep (apparently, they never take them off).<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_African_tribe_turning_Western_...jpg
  • Ethiopian Tribe Recycles Modern Worldís Discards Into Fashion Accessories<br />
<br />
The Daasanach are a semi-nomadic tribe numbering approximately 50,000 individuals who live in the Omo Valley in southern Ethiopia. In the past, the tribe roamed from place to place herding livestock around open areas according to the seasons and the changing availability of water. But over the last fifty years, having lost the majority of their lands, they have also grown dependent to agriculture. Like many tribes in the region, the Daasanach have moved to areas closer to the Omo River, where they attempt to grow enough crops to survive.<br />
<br />
French photographer Eric Lafforgue has spent several years documenting the life and culture of these people, and how they have changed under the influence of modern manufactured goods. An interesting fashion trend amongst the Dassanach is their elaborate headgear, which they make from the strangest of materials  bottle caps, wristwatches, hairclips, and other discarded pieces of plastic and metal.<br />
The Daasanach spend months collecting bottle caps and scratching around for cash to pay for broken watches, which the women makes into jewelry and wigs. These are worn by both men and women, young and old.<br />
<br />
Younger girls and children get the most basic version of the wig, while the oldest women are treated to the heaviest numbers with the most embellishment.<br />
Men are only allowed to wear the bottle top wigs until they marry - after that, they create small clay headpieces decorated with a colourful harlequin pattern and enlivened with a feather, although the latter is only allowed after a hunt or a successful clash with an enemy.<br />
<br />
The young men love to wear necklaces and earrings while the girls have bigger muscles because they do the most difficult work like carrying water, To prevent their headgears from getting spoiled while they sleep (apparently, they never take them off).<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_African_tribe_turning_Western_...jpg
  • Ethiopian Tribe Recycles Modern Worldís Discards Into Fashion Accessories<br />
<br />
The Daasanach are a semi-nomadic tribe numbering approximately 50,000 individuals who live in the Omo Valley in southern Ethiopia. In the past, the tribe roamed from place to place herding livestock around open areas according to the seasons and the changing availability of water. But over the last fifty years, having lost the majority of their lands, they have also grown dependent to agriculture. Like many tribes in the region, the Daasanach have moved to areas closer to the Omo River, where they attempt to grow enough crops to survive.<br />
<br />
French photographer Eric Lafforgue has spent several years documenting the life and culture of these people, and how they have changed under the influence of modern manufactured goods. An interesting fashion trend amongst the Dassanach is their elaborate headgear, which they make from the strangest of materials  bottle caps, wristwatches, hairclips, and other discarded pieces of plastic and metal.<br />
The Daasanach spend months collecting bottle caps and scratching around for cash to pay for broken watches, which the women makes into jewelry and wigs. These are worn by both men and women, young and old.<br />
<br />
Younger girls and children get the most basic version of the wig, while the oldest women are treated to the heaviest numbers with the most embellishment.<br />
Men are only allowed to wear the bottle top wigs until they marry - after that, they create small clay headpieces decorated with a colourful harlequin pattern and enlivened with a feather, although the latter is only allowed after a hunt or a successful clash with an enemy.<br />
<br />
The young men love to wear necklaces and earrings while the girls have bigger muscles because they do the most difficult work like carrying water, To prevent their headgears from getting spoiled while they sleep (apparently, they never take them off).<br />
©Eric lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_African_tribe_turning_Western_...jpg
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