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How a Sparkly, Tinsel-Loving Australian Designer Pays Homage to The Little Mermaid

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broadsheet.com.au

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reply@broadsheet.com.au

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Thu, Sep 19, 2019 05:06 AM

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In 1989 we met a pearlescent princess named Ariel whose main interests were “dinglehoppers�

In 1989 we met a pearlescent princess named Ariel whose main interests were “dinglehoppers” (also known as forks), her best friend Flounder (a talking fish) and those strange creatures who walk on land (which led her to make a deal with an evil sea witch but, look, it worked out in the end). To celebrate The Little Mermaid’s 30th anniversary, Broadsheet and Disney enlisted the help of artist and self-professed tinsel maven Rachel Burke to help us commemorate the event, and to throw a sparkly party to rival Ariel’s underwater treasure grotto. [How to Bedazzle Your Shoes (In a Grown-Up Way) The country’s foremost authority on beads and hot-glue guns shows us to how to transform a pair of shoes into a glittering piece of wearable art.]( [Gallery: Our Shimmering Little Mermaid Craft Party With Rachel Burke It was a day of tinsel, champagne cocktails and a particularly shiny DIY tutorial.]( [Watch: Rachel Burke Wants Us All to Dress Like Mermaids The brief? “Ariel, but make it fashion”.]( You can see more of Broadsheet's content in partnership with Disney [here](. [See More]( [Update email preferences]( or [unsubscribe]( ©2019 Broadsheet Media [Design The Company You Keep](

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