SKU: 91337535809
corset fairy dress

corset fairy dress Wonderful Fairy Corset Gown

Sale price$20.40 Regular price$22.67
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Size: 4

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Description

corset fairy dress Wonderful Fairy Corset GownSize Chart Top Size Bust Waist Length XS 78 82 58 62 46 S 82 86 62 66 46. 5 M 86 90 66 70 47 L 90 94 70 74 47. 5 XL 94 98 74 78 48 Skirt Size Waist Length XS 60 97 S 64 97 M 68 97 L 72 97 There is 2 3 cm difference according to manual measurement. Please check the measurement chart carefully before you buy the item. Due to the light and screen, a slight color difference may be expected. Thank you for your understanding! Picnic season has met its muse

Size Chart

Top

 Size Bust Waist Length
XS 78-82 58-62 46
S 82-86 62-66 46.5
M 86-90 66-70 47
L 90-94 70-74 47.5
XL 94-98 74-78 48

Skirt

Size Waist Length
XS 60 97
S 64 97
M 68 97
L 72 97

There is 2-3 cm difference according to manual measurement. Please check the measurement chart carefully before you buy the item. Due to the light and screen, a slight color difference may be expected. Thank you for your understanding!

Picnic season has met its muse in the ‘Wonderful Fairy’ set, where a boned corset and a cloud of pleated tulle conjure a girl who wanders orchards with daisies in her arms.

The corset rewards a closer look. Fine pleated fabric panels the bust, drifting and lifting like wings caught mid-flutter, while clusters of handmade ribbon flowers in marmalade, apricot and cream garland the neckline, each bloom positioned and stitched by hand, one at a time, for the kind of slow handwork you feel before you can name it. We’ve laced the front centre with a tie that adjusts to your shape, its ends curling out like delicate antennae, playful and precise. Sheer little off-shoulder sleeves float as light as a wing, skimming the arms for a softly slimming line, and they switch between two ways to wear, on the shoulder or slipped down, whenever the mood turns.

Slipping it on is just as easy. An adjustable lingerie-style hook-and-eye row sits at the back for a comfortable hold that never digs in, and a discreet side zip slips you in and out in seconds.

Below, the skirt drifts and sways, weightless layers in a tender sage-meets-buttercream wash, like sunlight filtering through new spring leaves, falling full and floor-sweeping like meadow mist at golden hour.

Worn together, the ‘Wonderful Fairy’ set is pure enchanted-garden reverie, ethereal and soft-focus, made for flower fields, fairy-lit evenings and lingering where the light turns honey-gold.

*Carefully curated from a limited or archive selection. All sales are final.

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SKU: 91337535809

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4.7 ★★★★★
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H
Verified Purchase
Hab Madoyan
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
very good book
Format: Paperback
I was 8 when the Union collapsed. I don’t remember much, but the years that followed were full of conspiracy theories and stories about who “razvalil Sovetskiy Soyuz.” This book tries to answer that question. You can sense from the book that the author is not happy with how everything ultimately evolved. The Soviet system was corrupt, inefficient, and ill, but probably there was a chance to cure it rather than kill it. However, I think the book is overall quite balanced and very informative and is a must read.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2026
B
Brandon Nelson
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 4
So very long….
Format: Paperback
Every time Yeltsin takes a nap? Paragraph. Bush mumbles something indecisive to Scowcroft? Boom—chapter! I felt like I was experiencing the fall of the Soviet Union in real, agonizing time. Look, it’s a fine book. If you’re going for a career in the foreign service, this is a good place to start. Otherwise, you can get a fine rendering of these events in much more concise form elsewhere.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2023
B
Verified Purchase
Blu
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
P O W E R F U L .
Format: Paperback
The author summarized: "The ghost of the disappeared Soviet Union ... still haunts the imagination of contemporaries .... This amazing story teaches us not to trust in the seeming certainty of continuity and should help us prepare for sudden shocks in the future" (p. 439). An engrossing in-depth eloquent analyses concerning the events and individuals affecting the 1991 demise of the Soviet Union. Moreover, the unforeseen Chernobyl nuclear disaster on April 26, 1986, crystallized the horrors of a possible nuclear war. Thus, a new orientation to end the exorbitant arms race with the United States. Further, General Secretary Gorbachev promulgated new reforms, including, relaxing travel restrictions in 1989: "... [T]he shock that thousands of Soviet people experienced when they crossed Soviet borders and visited Western countries .... For first-time Soviet travelers to the West a visit to a supermarket produced the biggest effect. The contrast between half-empty, gloomy Soviet food stores and glittering Western palaces with an abundant selection of food was mind-boggling.... This experience changed Soviet travelers forever" (p. 82). At times, repetitive and somewhat confusing. For instance, U.S. President Bush needed Gorbachev's approval for his Iraq offense, which was initially described on Page 143, then inexplicably again, on Page 172. On another occasion, the author indicated that Yeltsin was influenced by Alexander Solzhenitsyn's brochure "How To Rebuild Russia," on Page 150, which is again repeated, on Page 173. Scrupulous editing needed. Notwithstanding such glitches, nonetheless, a fascinating detailed portrayal of the unexpected implosion of a superpower. Having read other books on the subject, if I had to select only ONE about the USSR collapse, I would choose this as the best.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2025
A
Verified Purchase
Andrew Platek
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
Thought Provoking
Format: Kindle
I bought this book after I heard the author on a podcast. Growing up in the US we have been inundated with the story that the collapse of the Soviet Union was an inevitable triumph of liberal, Western values. I had my doubts. Even poorly run dictatorships can muddle along for years. What the author did was center Gorbachev in the story. He was the eye of the storm. It was the terrible combination of Gorbachev’s ambitious idealism and gross ineptitude that led to the dismantling of the Soviet Union. Unlike much of Marxist historical narratives which emphasize the forces of history; the author shows that it’s individuals who shape events and are shaped by them. A different person than Gorbachev could have turned the tide in a different direction and left us a different world than we have today. This is a history book that teaches lessons not just about the Soviet Union but about human history in general.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2025
L
Verified Purchase
Luca turin
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
A compelling account of the fall of the USSR
Format: Kindle
Zubok describes blow by blow the series of decisions that sent the USSR towards disaster. Gorbachev, widely hated in Russia, comes across as principled but indecisive, ignorant of economics, and incapable of translating his worship of Lenin into coherent action. The book reads like a thriller despite the density of facts. Zubok is a pessimist, but his thesis is convincing.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 21, 2024

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