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Getting fixed by someone elseNow you have a one-of-a-kind Oakley!
Honestly though, looks like my 3-year old kid's watercolor artworks.
Next time get the confederate flag print on those glasses, so they match the swimming cap and car roof
It's pc name is confederate battle flag of northern Virginia. And it's not a swim cap it's a sa fishing face shield.Next time get the confederate flag print on those glasses, so they match the swimming cap and car roof
It's pc name is confederate battle flag of northern Virginia. And it's not a swim cap it's a sa fishing face shield.
It's pc name is confederate battle flag of northern Virginia. And it's not a swim cap it's a sa fishing face shield.
Stainless banner and the following version I believe are the recognized confederate flagsDesigned by William Porcher Miles, the chairman of the Flag and Seal Committee of the Confederate Provisional Congress, the flag now generally known as the "Confederate flag" was initially proposed, and rejected, as the national flag in 1861. The design was instead adopted as a battle flag by the Army of Northern Virginia under General Robert E. Lee.[4]
Most popular today is a rectangularized variant of the originally square ANV battle flag, common in modern reproductions. (A similarly rectangular flag was used during the war by the Army of Tennessee under General Joseph E. Johnston.[5][6]) Despite never having historically represented the Confederacy as a country nor officially recognized as one of the national flags, it is commonly referred to as "the Confederate Flag" and has become a widely recognized symbol of the American South.[7] It is also known as the "rebel flag", "Dixie flag", and "Southern cross" and is often incorrectly referred to as the "Stars and Bars".[8] (The actual "Stars and Bars" is the first national flag, which used an entirely different design.) The self-declared Confederate exclave of Town Line, New York, lacking a genuine Confederate flag, flew a version of this flag prior to its 1946 vote to ceremonially rejoin the Union.
- Wikipedia