@connie.mp4: Replying to @Faithrutkowski I thought I had seen every Staud beaded Tommy bag on the face of planet earth but I guess not bc it turns out there’s a zodiac collection!! #staud #handbag #staudtommybag #beadedbag #fashion #greenscreen @STAUD

Connie ❀
Connie ❀
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Region: US
Tuesday 26 November 2024 23:06:52 GMT
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aquaviris
Ren :
Why is the Aquarius bag so ugly?!!!Onggg we can’t have anything
2024-12-31 01:26:13
237
lovelinayuu
lymphfluencer 💦✨ :
THANK YOU FOR YOUR CONSTANT STAUD SERVICE ❤️🙏❤️🙏❤️🙏❤️🙏❤️
2024-11-27 00:13:12
32
danimmalss
dani :
Aqua bag is a crime
2024-12-31 01:52:06
71
kingjuliensfeet
Camille ꕤ*.゚ :
Leo’s is soooo cuteeee
2024-12-01 02:46:25
0
shiama.llama
shiama.llama :
I love the Tommy bags, but I’m not super into the look of these 🙈
2024-11-27 01:13:13
9
carewithkate
Care with Kate :
Connie you influenced me to buy my first Staud bag last night!! I can't wait to show you once it arrives ❤️
2024-11-27 03:37:37
10
myceruleansweater
my cerulean sweater :
Can you make a video of what you’ll be purchasing this Black Friday? 👀
2024-11-26 23:30:18
1
solodolo177
solodolo177 :
Taurus???
2024-11-27 07:28:42
0
miaayeve
mia :
🥰
2025-01-02 02:02:33
0
ritvariecha
Ritvarie Cha :
🤣
2024-12-31 20:11:22
0
xxt7040
xxt :
🥰
2024-12-29 07:44:17
0
shay_zafar
Shaysays :
Why is Aquarius always so ugly 😭
2024-12-13 15:21:06
15
tutubotu
xxamyxxc :
They need Chinese zodiacs 😳
2024-11-27 00:12:35
2
gibbleglobber
Katie :
Ugh Leo and Cancer winning. Don’t love the Taurus
2024-12-13 15:40:23
0
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⛴ ⚓️ FAIR WINDS & FOLLOWING SEAS to Steamship Authority captain Robert Sicard, who retired last week after 47 years plying the waters of Nantucket Sound. This video shows the end of Capt. Sicard’s final voyage last week as he walked off the M/V Gay Head in Hyannis.  “It’s a nice place to have an office,” Sicard said of the wheelhouse atop the Steamship vessels. “You get to see the sunrise and sunset, you see all the nature out there - birds, fish, mammals. A lot of people work in cubicles and don’t get to experience that sort of thing. That was the draw for me. When you pull away from the dock, you’re your own boss. Back in the day they couldn’t get a hold of you after you left port. There was a certain joy in that. You had policies you had to follow of course, but as soon as you left the dock it was all yours.” Sicard, who owns a home in West Barnstable, logged thousands of trips to and from Nantucket during his nearly five decades with the Steamship Authority, carrying countless passengers, vehicles and freight to the island. His time with the Steamship was so long that it bridged several different eras. For one summer early in his career, Sicard was the captain the SS Naushon, the Steamship’s last real steamboat.  “That was the most fun of all,” he recalled. “They had a telegraph system, it was a totally old fashioned setup. We had probably 20 people in the crew. There were state rooms with stewardesses, firemen, wipers, and two engineers. I spanned a time where they had crystal radios, each radio was dedicated to a specific channel.” Inside the wheelhouse of the Steamship’s vessels, you’d probably find Captain Sicard listening to jazz or WMVY - the Martha’s Vineyard radio station - so he could expose his crew to music they’d likely never heard before. The job of being a Steamship Authority captain, he said, could be characterized as “hours and hours of boredom intermingled with moments of sheer terror.” Read our full interview with Capt. Sicard in the Wednesday edition of the Nantucket Current newsletter. Subscribe free at www.NantucketCurrent.com #nantucket
⛴ ⚓️ FAIR WINDS & FOLLOWING SEAS to Steamship Authority captain Robert Sicard, who retired last week after 47 years plying the waters of Nantucket Sound. This video shows the end of Capt. Sicard’s final voyage last week as he walked off the M/V Gay Head in Hyannis. “It’s a nice place to have an office,” Sicard said of the wheelhouse atop the Steamship vessels. “You get to see the sunrise and sunset, you see all the nature out there - birds, fish, mammals. A lot of people work in cubicles and don’t get to experience that sort of thing. That was the draw for me. When you pull away from the dock, you’re your own boss. Back in the day they couldn’t get a hold of you after you left port. There was a certain joy in that. You had policies you had to follow of course, but as soon as you left the dock it was all yours.” Sicard, who owns a home in West Barnstable, logged thousands of trips to and from Nantucket during his nearly five decades with the Steamship Authority, carrying countless passengers, vehicles and freight to the island. His time with the Steamship was so long that it bridged several different eras. For one summer early in his career, Sicard was the captain the SS Naushon, the Steamship’s last real steamboat. “That was the most fun of all,” he recalled. “They had a telegraph system, it was a totally old fashioned setup. We had probably 20 people in the crew. There were state rooms with stewardesses, firemen, wipers, and two engineers. I spanned a time where they had crystal radios, each radio was dedicated to a specific channel.” Inside the wheelhouse of the Steamship’s vessels, you’d probably find Captain Sicard listening to jazz or WMVY - the Martha’s Vineyard radio station - so he could expose his crew to music they’d likely never heard before. The job of being a Steamship Authority captain, he said, could be characterized as “hours and hours of boredom intermingled with moments of sheer terror.” Read our full interview with Capt. Sicard in the Wednesday edition of the Nantucket Current newsletter. Subscribe free at www.NantucketCurrent.com #nantucket

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