
Rebranding for Arha, a jewellery brand built around archaic symbols, mythology, and objects as personal talismans.

De Indiase premier Narendra Modi heeft met de Iraanse president Masoud Pezeshkian gesproken. Hij heeft daarbij de aanvallen op infrastructuur in het Midden-Oosten veroordeeld en beklemtoond dat de scheepvaart moet worden gevrijwaard van de oorlogshandelingen. De strategisch gelegen Straat van Hormuz tussen de Perzische Golf en de Indische Oceaan is vrijwel gesloten als gevolg van de Amerikaans-Israëlische aanvallen op Iran.
Iran heeft de zeestraat gesloten, maar laat een klein deel van het scheepvaartverkeer door. India heeft daar in overleg met Iran op kleine schaal gebruik van kunnen maken. Zo zouden er momenteel twee tankers met lpg gereed zijn om in de komende dagen met toestemming van Iran door de zeestraat richting India te varen.
Door de zeestraat gaat normaliter ongeveer een vijfde van de olie bestemd voor de wereldmarkt en naar schatting meer dan een kwart van de stikstofmeststoffen voor de kunstmesthandel.
⚽ Updates from the 12pm GMT WSL kick-offs
⚽ Women’s Football Weekly | WSL table | Mail Emillia
Here we go!
The teams are out across the grounds and we’re about to get under way!
Continue reading...⚽ Updates from the 12.30pm GMT Premier League kick-off
⚽ Ten things to look out for | Table | Mail Scott
Florian Wirtz has been chatting to Steve McManaman on TNT Sports. Happily for you, for me, for all of us, David Tindall scribbled down a few choice words from the interview and published them in this morning’s Matchday Live blog, in an MBM-friendly cut-and-paste-able format. So here they are.
Wirtz said: “Everyone in the world knows that the Premier League is the most intense and physically it was maybe a bit more than I was thinking but there’s always difficult things on the pitch where you have to adapt. Maybe you have also a bit more responsibility for more people who are supporting you and wanting you to do good.
Continue reading...Iran war should be wake-up call about costs of not going full throttle towards EVs as Chinese have done, experts say
By the 1980s, Detroit’s once titanic carmakers were being upended by rivals from Japan. Ford, General Motors and Chrysler had grown rich selling gas guzzlers, but when oil prices rose and suddenly cheap, fuel-efficient Japanese models looked attractive, they were unprepared. The collapse in sales led to hundreds of thousands of job losses in the automotive heartland of the US.
Now western car manufacturers are making what one former boss calls a similar “profound strategic mistake” as they pull back from electric vehicles (EVs) and refocus on the combustion engine just as oil prices are soaring once again. Experts say the industry’s future – and that of tens of millions of jobs – could be on the line. This time, however, the threat is from China.
Continue reading...A decades-long study suggests that your daily caffeine fix might be doing more than jolting you through morning meetings – it could also be quietly helping your brain hold it together.…