VICEのインスタグラム(vice) - 10月20日 05時01分
For the low price of a month of Netflix, shoppers in Northern California who don't feel like making the drive to see the leaves change color can get an eyeful in the produce section of a San Francisco supermarket.
Two Bi-Rite locations in the city are selling brown-paper-wrapped bundles of fall leaves, and for $14.95, you can have around two handfuls' worth of seasonally appropriate plant refuse. Spending $15 on what's essentially compost material would seem ridiculous if there weren't SO MANY THINGS that you could use those leaves for: You can throw them in the air and briefly experience what it's like to be in a Hallmark movie. You can arrange them on the counter to give the kitchen a vibe that says either "quirky craft project" or "disused picnic shelter." Or you can carefully press them in a scrapbook, so you'll have a visual aid when your future children ask what 'depression' means.
Truly, the options are endless.
Link in bio.
📸: PHOTO: EMILY IVERSON
[BIHAKUEN]UVシールド(UVShield)
>> 飲む日焼け止め!「UVシールド」を購入する
5,102
221
2020/10/20