Gillette Venus ComfortGlide Razor Blades Refill, White Tea, 6 ct
However you pick to reveal your pores and skin, do it your way. Venus razors for girls are designed with a girl’s body in thoughts. From handles designed for a relaxed grip to pivoting heads that contour to curves, Venus razors are designed to assist screen touchably easy pores and skin. Discover the secret to an easy yet indulgently near shave with Venus ComfortGlide White Tea scented disposable razors, featuring three blades and flexible moisture bars that are water activated. The pivoting, rounded head hugs curves and fits easily into hard-to-shave regions. Did you know that any Venus blade fill up fits any Venus razor cope with? Shave your way with out shopping for a whole new Venus cope with.
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$15.00
$21.72Gillette Mach3 Men’s Razor Blades, 8 Blade Refills
$15.00$21.72
Gillette Venus ComfortGlide Womens Razor Blade Refills, White Tea 6 ct: REFILLS FIT ALL VENUS RAZOR HANDLES three BLADES for a clean shave WHITE TEA SCENTED bendy soap bars PIVOTING, ROUNDED HEAD hugs curves and suits effortlessly into tough-to-shave areas No need for separate shaving cream
6 (six) is the natural number following 5 and preceding 7. It is a composite number and the smallest perfect number.
Gillette is an American brand of safety razors and other personal care products including shaving supplies, owned by the multi-national corporation Procter & Gamble (P&G). Based in Boston, Massachusetts, United States, it was owned by The Gillette Company, a supplier of products under various brands until that company merged into P&G in 2005. The Gillette Company was founded by King C. Gillette in 1901 as a safety razor manufacturer.
Under the leadership of Colman M. Mockler Jr. as CEO from 1975 to 1991, the company was the target of multiple takeover attempts from Ronald Perelman and Coniston Partners. In January 2005, Procter & Gamble announced plans to merge with the Gillette Company.
The Gillette Company's assets were incorporated into a P&G unit known internally as "Global Gillette". In July 2007, Global Gillette was dissolved and incorporated into Procter & Gamble's other two main divisions, Procter & Gamble Beauty and Procter & Gamble Household Care. Gillette's brands and products were divided between the two accordingly. The Gillette R&D center in Boston, Massachusetts, and the Gillette South Boston Manufacturing Center (known as "Gillette World Shaving Headquarters"), still exist as functional working locations under the Procter & Gamble-owned Gillette brand name. Gillette's subsidiaries Braun and Oral-B, among others, have also been retained by P&G.
A razor is a bladed tool primarily used in the removal of body hair through the act of shaving. Kinds of razors include straight razors, safety razors, disposable razors, and electric razors.
While the razor has been in existence since before the Bronze Age (the oldest razor-like object has been dated to 18,000 BC), the most common types of razors currently used are the safety razor and the electric razor.
Refill may refer to:
- Free refill, a drink that can be filled again, free of charge, after being consumed
- Refill (campaign), British environmental campaign
- "Refill" (song), 2012 song by Elle Varner
- Relapse: Refill, 2009 album by Eminem
Tea is an aromatic beverage prepared by pouring hot or boiling water over cured or fresh leaves of Camellia sinensis, an evergreen shrub native to East Asia which probably originated in the borderlands of south-western China and northern Myanmar. Tea is also made, but rarely, from the leaves of Camellia taliensis. After plain water, tea is the most widely consumed drink in the world. There are many different types of tea; some have a cooling, slightly bitter, and astringent flavour, while others have profiles that include sweet, nutty, floral, or grassy notes. Tea has a stimulating effect in humans, primarily due to its caffeine content.
An early credible record of tea drinking dates to the third century AD, in a medical text written by Chinese physician Hua Tuo. It was popularised as a recreational drink during the Chinese Tang dynasty, and tea drinking subsequently spread to other East Asian countries. Portuguese priests and merchants introduced it to Europe during the 16th century. During the 17th century, drinking tea became fashionable among the English, who started to plant tea on a large scale in British India.
The term herbal tea refers to drinks not made from Camellia sinensis. They are the infusions of fruit, leaves, or other plant parts, such as steeps of rosehip, chamomile, or rooibos. These may be called tisanes or herbal infusions to prevent confusion with tea made from the tea plant.
Venus is the second planet from the Sun. It is often called Earth's "twin" or "sister" planet, being orbital neighbours as well as Venus having the most similar mass and size to Earth among the planets of the Solar System. While both are rocky planets, Venus has an atmosphere much thicker and denser than Earth and any other rocky body in the Solar System. Its atmosphere is composed of mostly carbon dioxide (CO2), with a global sulfuric acid cloud cover and no liquid water. At the mean surface level the atmosphere reaches a temperature of 737 K (464 °C; 867 °F) and a pressure 92 times greater than Earth's at sea level, turning the lowest layer of the carbon dioxide atmosphere into a supercritical fluid. Venus is the third brightest object in Earth's sky, after the Moon and the Sun, and, like Mercury, always appears relatively close to the Sun, either as a "morning star" or an "evening star", resulting from orbiting closer (inferior) to the Sun than Earth.
Compared to the other planets of the solar system, the orbit of Venus is relatively close to the orbit of Earth. Therefore, for spacecraft traveling from Earth, Venus has the lowest delta-v compared to the other planets and is often used for gravity assists and as a common waypoint for interplanetary flights from Earth. Venus and Earth stay on average to each other the second closest planets, with only the most inferior orbiting Mercury staying closer to all the Solar System planets. Venus and Earth approach each other in synodic periods of 1.6 years. The rotation of Venus has been slowed and turned against its orbital direction (retrograde) by the currents and drag of its atmosphere. A Venusian day is 116.75 Earth days long, about half a Venusian solar year, which is 224.7 Earth days long, and has no moons.
Venus has a weak magnetosphere, lacking an internal dynamo it is induced by the solar wind and the atmosphere interacting. Internally, Venus has a core, mantle, and crust. Internal heat escapes through active volcanism, resulting in resurfacing instead of plate tectonics. Venus may have had liquid surface water early in its history with a habitable environment, before a runaway greenhouse effect evaporated any water and turned Venus into its present state. Currently conditions at the cloud layer of Venus have been identified as perhaps favourable for life on Venus, which has spurred new research and missions to Venus.
Throughout human history, Venus has been ascribed particular importance in the mythology, astrology, and fiction of various cultures across the world. The planet's characteristics ultimately proved crucial for the development of astronomy. The first telescopic observations of Venus in 1610 crucially proved the heliocentric model. In 1961 Venus was for the first time visited by a spacecraft (Venera 1), as a result of the very first interplanetary flight, but only the next interplanetary spacecraft, a year later, returned data (Mariner 2). Furthermore in 1967 the first atmospheric entry (Venera 4) and in 1970 the first soft landing (Venera 7) took place, the first on another planet than Earth. The study of Venus has informed the understanding of the greenhouse effect, global warming and climate change on Earth. Currently there are no active, but a range of planed Venus missions.
White is the lightest color and is achromatic (having no chroma). It is the color of objects such as snow, chalk, and milk, and is the opposite of black. White objects fully (or almost fully) reflect and scatter all the visible wavelengths of light. White on television and computer screens is created by a mixture of red, blue, and green light. The color white can be given with white pigments, especially titanium dioxide.
In ancient Egypt and ancient Rome, priestesses wore white as a symbol of purity, and Romans wore white togas as symbols of citizenship. In the Middle Ages and Renaissance a white unicorn symbolized chastity, and a white lamb sacrifice and purity. It was the royal color of the kings of France as well as the flag of monarchist France from 1815 to 1830, and of the monarchist movement that opposed the Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil War (1917–1922). Greek temples and Roman temples were faced with white marble, and beginning in the 18th century, with the advent of neoclassical architecture, white became the most common color of new churches, capitols, and other government buildings, especially in the United States. It was also widely used in 20th century modern architecture as a symbol of modernity and simplicity.
According to surveys in Europe and the United States, white is the color most often associated with perfection, the good, honesty, cleanliness, the beginning, the new, neutrality, and exactitude. White is an important color for almost all world religions. The pope, the head of the Roman Catholic Church, has worn white since 1566, as a symbol of purity and sacrifice. In Islam, and in the Shinto religion of Japan, it is worn by pilgrims. In Western cultures and in Japan, white is the most common color for wedding dresses, symbolizing purity and virginity. In many Asian cultures, white is also the color of mourning.
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