ENGLEWOOD, NJ, September 15, 2012 (Press-News.org) PinkyThumb.com was created to provide a wide range of high quality, trendy, and unique fashion jewelry and accessories at affordable prices. The e-commerce website was launched on August 2012 with the premise that there is an incredible need for fun, trendy, and affordable fashion jewelry within the industry.
PinkyThumb.com is an online fashion jewelry online destination created for the young, fashionable woman who likes to keep up with the latest trend while maintaining her own unique style. PinkyThumb.com is for women who love to mix different jewelry pieces to create an individual stylish look. PinkyThumb.com sources the latest fashion jewelry and accessories from around the world so their clients have a variety to choose from in order to polish any outfit. Whether it's glamorous fashion jewelry for an evening out with the girls or contemporary fashion jewelry with just enough edge to make it both an understated design for the office while still showing off their own unique style, pinkythumb.com carries the perfect stylish accessories.
PinkyThumb.com carries a fabulous range of bracelets, which include chunky beaded bracelets, skull cord bracelets, leather cuffs, sparkling crystal cuffs, delicate crystal bracelets, sterling silver bracelets and many more. They also have a collection of carefully chosen necklaces, rings, and earrings. PinkyThumb.com's fashion jewelry is carefully selected so that the looks can go from day to night.
The jewelry is sent to the client in a pink box with a pink bow in a pink bubble envelope with a handwritten note on a card for that added personal touch.
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PinkyThumb.com is an online fashion jewelry and accessories website carrying the latest trends in fashion accessories at affordable prices.
PinkyThumb.com, an Online Fashion Jewelry Boutique Launches!
PinkyThumb.com carries high quality, trendy, and unique fashion jewelry and accessories.
2012-09-15
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Study reveals how common gene mutation affects kids with autism spectrum disorders
2012-09-14
Over the past decade, researchers have made great strides in identifying genes that lead to an increased risk of autism spectrum disorders (ASD), which result in a continuum of social deficits, communication difficulties and cognitive delays. But it's still critical to determine how exactly these genetic risk factors impact the brain's structure and function so that better treatments and interventions can be developed.
This led researchers at UCLA to look more closely at one particular culprit that's known to cause a susceptibility to ASD — a genetic variant, or mutation, ...
Study: Gingko biloba does not improve cognition in MS patients
2012-09-14
PORTLAND, Ore. – Many people with multiple sclerosis for years have taken the natural supplement Gingko biloba, believing it helps them with cognitive problems associated with the disease.
But the science now says otherwise. A new study published in the journal Neurology says Gingko biloba does not improve cognitive performance in people with multiple sclerosis. The research was published in the Sept. 5, 2012, issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
The current study was a more extensive look at the question after a smaller 2005 ...
Water quality study shows need for testing at state migrant camps
2012-09-14
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Sept. 13, 2012 – The drinking water at one-third of migrant farmworker camps in eastern North Carolina failed to meet state quality standards, according to a new study from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center.
"Testing drinking water is vital to protect the public from serious diseases," said lead author Werner E. Bischoff, M.D., Ph.D., health system epidemiologist at Wake Forest Baptist. "Contaminated water puts the health of the workers who drink it at risk. It also puts the health of the surrounding community at risk because they may be drinking ...
Healthy outlook leads to a healthy lifestyle: study
2012-09-14
Researchers from the Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research analysed data on the diet, exercise and personality type of more than 7000 people.
The study found those who believe their life can be changed by their own actions ate healthier food, exercised more, smoked less and avoided binge drinking.
Professor Deborah Cobb-Clark, Director of the Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, said those who have a greater faith in 'luck' or 'fate' are more likely to live an unhealthy life.
"Our research shows a direct link between the ...
X-rays unravel mysterious degradation of a Van Gogh painting
2012-09-14
Hamburg / Grenoble 14 September 2012 (jointly released by the ESRF and DESY): With a sophisticated X-ray analysis scientists have identified why parts of the Van Gogh painting "Flowers in a blue vase" have changed colour over time: a supposedly protective varnish applied after the master's death has made some bright yellow flowers turn to an orange-grey colour. The origin of this alteration is a hitherto unknown degradation process at the interface between paint and varnish, which studies at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility ESRF in Grenoble (France) and at Deutsches ...
Scripps Research Institute scientists show protein linked to hunger also implicated in alcoholism
2012-09-14
LA JOLLA, CA – Researchers at The Scripps Research Institute have found new links between a protein that controls our urge to eat and brain cells involved in the development of alcoholism. The discovery points to new possibilities for designing drugs to treat alcoholism and other addictions.
The new study, published online ahead of print by the journal Neuropsychopharmacology, focuses on the peptide ghrelin, which is known to stimulate eating.
"This is the first study to characterize the effects of ghrelin on neurons in a brain region called the central nucleus of the ...
Roman military camp dating back to conquest of Gaul throws light on part of world history
2012-09-14
In the vicinity of Hermeskeil, a small town some 30 kilometers southeast of the city of Trier in the Hunsrueck region in the German federal state of Rhineland-Palatinate, archaeologists from Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) have confirmed the location of the oldest Roman military fortification known in Germany to date. These findings shed new light on the Roman conquest of Gaul. The camp was presumably built during Julius Caesars' Gallic War in the late 50s B.C. Nearby lies a late Celtic settlement with monumental fortifications known as the "Hunnenring" or "Circle ...
Learning faster with neurodegenerative disease
2012-09-14
People who bear the genetic mutation for Huntington's disease learn faster than healthy people. The more pronounced the mutation was, the more quickly they learned. This is reported by researchers from the Ruhr-Universität Bochum and from Dortmund in the journal Current Biology. The team has thus demonstrated for the first time that neurodegenerative diseases can go hand in hand with increased learning efficiency. "It is possible that the same mechanisms that lead to the degenerative changes in the central nervous system also cause the considerably better learning efficiency" ...
Whole-genome scan helps select best treatment for childhood cancer
2012-09-14
A whole-genome scan to identify large-scale chromosomal damage can help doctors choose the best treatment option for children with neuroblastoma, one of the most common types of childhood cancer, finds an international collaboration jointly led by The Institute of Cancer Research, London.
The researchers called for all children diagnosed with neuroblastoma worldwide to have a whole-genome scan as a standard part of their treatment.
Neuroblastoma, a cancer of the developing nervous system, is sometimes very treatable but other forms are highly aggressive, making the ...
New test to crack down on sporting drugs-cheat test
2012-09-14
Scientists from three UK universities have developed a new test to catch drugs-cheats in sport.
Over the last 10 years, the GH-2004 team, which is based the University of Southampton, has been developing a test for Growth Hormone misuse in sport with funding from the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) and US Anti-Doping Agency and with support from UK Anti-Doping.
The test, developed by scientists at the University of Southampton, King's College London and University of Kent at Canterbury, is based on the measurement of two proteins in the blood, insulin-like growth factor-I ...
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[Press-News.org] PinkyThumb.com, an Online Fashion Jewelry Boutique Launches!PinkyThumb.com carries high quality, trendy, and unique fashion jewelry and accessories.

