Who would've thought that something so mind-blowingly easy, like pinching your skin like this could reveal how fast your skin is aging?

So if you feel that you look older than you are…

If your skin is not as firm or bright as you would like…

Or if you have noticed wrinkles or age spots that have appeared almost overnight…

Take this quick pinch test and see if your skin is aging much faster than it should be.

Also, by watching the short video below, you will learn how to look years younger.

The Simple 10-Second Skin Rejuvenation Method That You Should Try Right Now











 


















annular brooches, but have a small section joining the two terminals. Others have fully joined terminals, and emphasize in their design the central area where the gap would be—for example the Tara Brooch. Pseudo-penannular brooches may also be described as "annular", or as "ring brooches". The Rogart brooch, National Museums of Scotland, FC2. Pictish penannular brooch, Scotland, 8th century, silver with gilding and glass. Classified as Fowler H3 type. The terms "open brooch" or "open ring brooch" are also sometimes used for penannular brooches. There is a scheme of classification originally set out, in relation to earlier types, by Elizabeth Fowler in the 1960s, which has since been extended in various versions to cover later types. Brooches of either penannular or annular type, where the pin is very large in relation to the ring, so that the ring cannot play any part in the fastening of the brooch, may be cal led "ring brooches", "pin brooches", or "brooch-pins"; or, especially where the ring is small and plain, "ringed pins". In these, the design of the pin head typically shows that the pin is intended to sit underneath the ring (seen from the front), rather than on top of it as in the larger brooches. "Celtic" is a term avoided by specialists in describing objects, and especially artistic styles, of the Early Middle Ages from the British Isles, but is firmly fixed in the popular mind. The term Insular art is used to describe the distinct style of art originating in the British Isles and combining Germanic, Celtic, Pictish and Mediterranean elements. Although some simpler and relatively early penannular brooches are found in Anglo-Saxon contexts, and some sub-types predominantly so, as far as is known the Anglo-Saxons did not use these brooch styles for prestige elite jewellery. However, there are elements in the style of Irish and Scott ish brooches deriving from Anglo-Saxon art, and related to Insular work in other media, especially illuminated manuscripts. Fibula is Latin for "brooch" and is used in modern languages to describe the many types of Roman and post-Roman Early Medieval brooches with pins and catches behind the main face of the brooch. The brooches discussed here are sometimes also called fibulae, but rarely by English-speak