Pre ducha y agua jabonosa
Brocha Boti mango Sol Rojo de resina y pelo sintetico 2020 N3C
Jabón Portus Cale, voy a darle un repaso a este jabón hasta finalizarlo, y lo acompañará con la crema Lea clásica en tarro, tambien hasta su finalización, de esta forma acabo con dos jabones
Espumado bol Yaqi
Navaja Gold Dollar 100 13/16
Post espuma de confort y Loción Brummel
Asentador Vergel del artesano Juan Carlos @TaurinoV5
Y ahora dispuesto para otro
Todo se consigue poco a poco
Curiosamente, el Daily Mail publicó a principios de este mes un par de artículos sobre Jack el Destripador. Parece que fue un inmigrante polaco llamado Aaron Kosminski.
In 2007, Russell Edwards – a businessman from North London and Ripper enthusiast – stumbled across a shawl at an auction in Bury St Edmunds alleging to have been found on Catherine Eddowes’s corpse.
Edwards was wary. How on earth could a silk shawl have survived the past century without being cleaned or – indeed – incinerated? Before the advent of DNA profiling in 1984, blood-splattered clothing was rarely kept as evidence, but rather burnt to prevent disease.
But this shawl was fully intact and even marked with what appeared to be blood and semen stains.
Edwards enquired further before purchasing the shawl and discovered that, as Catherine Eddowes’s body was being carted to the morgue on that chilly morning in 1888, Acting Police Sergeant Amos Simpson spotted the shawl and – it being made of fine silk – took it as a gift for his wife, Jane.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, Jane was more than a little perturbed when she noticed the blemishes and declined her husband’s well-intentioned gift. Nevertheless, it remained in the family until eventually finding its way to auction courtesy of Sergeant Simpson’s great-great-nephew David Melville-Hayes in 2007.
But while the provenance appeared legitimate, Edwards remained bemused as to how a shawl made of silk and ornately decorated with flowers could have been owned by Eddowes, a destitute drunk who paid for the bottle by selling her body.
The detailing and dyes used to pattern the fabric were adjudged by an expert to be reminiscent of those manufactured in St Petersburg in the 19th century. Edwards had an inkling that perhaps the shawl actually belonged to Aaron Kosminski, a longtime Ripper suspect who had emigrated from the Russian Empire. The pieces were falling into place.
Edwards set to work examining the shawl for DNA alongside a crack team of forensic scientists. It wasn’t long before Edwards had a positive match between the DNA in the blood stains and a direct descendant of the murdered Catherine Eddowes. In other words, the shawl was genuine.
Incredibly, Edwards’s team was also able to identify the DNA found in the semen as Aaron Kosminski’s. They did so by ingeniously matching it to the DNA of one of Aaron’s sister’s descendants, known only as ‘M,’ after requests to exhume Kosminski’s body were rebuffed.
Lunes, 14-10-2024
Martin de Candre: Huile végétale camomille et citron pre shave and Shaving soap Vetiver. H.L. Thäter, 4125-4, fx. - ivory, 2 band bulb. MERtens & HEIder, nº 40, 7/8: SOlingen (MERHEISO). Fine, green vetiver, lotion aftershave. Floïd, aftershave balm, vetiver splash.
Bien la alemana tipo 14. Floïd bálsamo, bueno, pero con un aroma vetiver tan bueno como corto en duración.
Buenos dias, tenía pendiente el estreno de este Moon Santa Cruz, Potente y desenfadado aroma a chicle de plátano, un aroma menos serio y distinto que el de los otros Moon que conozco. Saludos
Lunes 14/10/2024 Afeitado N° 89
Arrancamos semana con esta Palmera Juan Vollmer,que si bien no me ha dado un afeitado malo, pienso que necesita un repasito
Buen comienzo de semana a todos
Un saludo