Tuesday, January 4, 2011

2011 Fashion of Arctic fox fur Features in the World

In the new season 2010-2011 there are: caps and hats, shawls and scarves, headbands and cowls, and caps and berets. What to choose? It depends on your style and preferences. There is a large number of varieties, which have different design, sewing and prices, so everyone chooses to wear whatever he likes. One of the fashion trends this year is represented by female downy fur hats and caps, which have a fairly large amount, made from real fur of mink, arctic fox, and fox.

For those who like hats, but do not want to stay behind fashion, there were designed new cap from fur.
Autumn-winter 2010-2011 periods proved to be quite various in matter of hats selection. We can say that women are lucky because they are avid fashionable.

The collections emphasize the elegance and chic. The
main colors are: black, red and gray-pearl. Are fashionable hats with a rounded crown and slightly curved margins; they are highlighted by a decoration or a brooch with rhinestones. Designers recommend wearing such hats with leather coats, umbrellas, walking sticks, chiffon scarves. As you already understood, now is fashionable the lady image.

The renowned designer Salvatore Ferragamo introduced, at his new collection in Milan, a variety of
men hats styles of beige and gray tones. Most of them are designed in a business style that is often used to create models for youth. These hats are very versatile and can be used at absolutely any style.

No less world-renown designer,
John Galliano, in Paris surprised the audience with its collection, which presents a very large hat, and it also has a bigger height. Frankly, it is quite difficult to imagine such a hat in the new season 2010-2011 in everyday life.

For those people who do not like the usual hats, their replacement will become the cowls. This season there are fashionable big cowls, made from fur.

New idea, presented by Jean Paul Gautier, is a fur hat-scarf. The color scheme, in which was presented this type of hat is gray and beige. This version is pretty fine, as fur hats for women are expected to be extremely popular this winter.

A great popularity obtained the berets from Paris collections of
Jean Paul Gaultier. They combine a mixture of styles such as the Military and bohemian chic. They are worn asymmetrical; such headgear especially combines with a hairstyle arranged to one side. These berets have mainly outstanding bright patterns. The same mixture of styles have hats with ear flaps, they have quite bright colors. These hats are warm, and most importantly, are comfortable. Designers recommend wearing them with the usual classic coat; it does not disobey the strictness of your attire. 
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The Arctic fox is an extremely resistant animal of the polar regions of the northern hemisphere, able to live when temperature drops to -50C. Its fur is white or, sometimes, Grey-blue in winter to camouflage into the snow and, when the season changes, this fur is replaced by a Grey or brown shorter coat that allows it to hide among stones and soil of the tundra.
- Its main physical adaptation to polar climate are little and round ears, a short muzzle and furry soles to minimize heat dispersion from her little body.
- The Arctic fox is less long living than a dog or a cat, with its lifespan of only 3-6 years, but the site of Blue Planet Biomes reports a maximum lifespan of 15 years, besides the value of 3 years of average life.
- Its tail fur is particularly thick and it can help the fox to better balance during running and, above all, it is a soft and warm cover against the cold.
-Habitat:
The Arctic fox is diffused in all the northern polar regions occupied by the tundra, where trees can't grow anymore; from North America to northern Siberia.
- Food:
The Arctic fox seasonal colours help it very much in hunting rodents, birds and their eggs and chicks, insects and even fish. Rodents (mainly lemmings and voles) are abundant, but they frequently hide underground and under the snow in winter, where they dig their dens. So, the Arctic fox, helped by its acute hearing and smell senses, must dig to catch them, just where it feels their movements.
During the long winter, this kind of food is too scarce and the Arctic fox is ready to become a scavenger. So, it must follow (at respectful distance!) polar bears, the top predators of polar regions, patiently waiting the right moment to profit of the leftover parts of bears' preys. In any case, the Arctic fox is omnivore and, frequently, it eats berries and seaweed, when meat is scarce. On the opposite, when food is particularly abundant, it buries it for later in the frozen soil of permafrost. 



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