Examples of using Filippone in English and their translations into Dutch
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Official
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Medicine
-
Financial
-
Computer
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Official/political
-
Programming
Organic' needs to be respected,” said Filippone.
Filippone grew up around, and in, the fabric mills of New Jersey.
That's not the market for U.S. hemp, Filippone noted.
They had the money and Filippone had the contacts
Vijay came into my life at exactly the right moment,” Filippone explains.
Filippone mortgaged her home
I knew a capo, gaetano filippone.
Today, Barbara Filippone is again the main player in the hemp fabric industry.
labels,” said Filippone.
a name that Filippone was given by the three Davids.
gaetano filippone.
Filippone decided that she“no longer wanted to contribute to harmful work environments.”.
In 2000, some investors approached Filippone with the opportunity to develop a“real company.”.
Filippone was featured on Denver 9 News burning a skirt made from the flammable fabric.
with commentary by Barbara Filippone.
Filippone left Earth Goods in 2002 to form her own company with the help of her daughter, Summer.
still using fabric technology that Filippone helped develop.
Filippone believes she has come up with something to take the place of the term“organic clothing”.
said Barbara Filippone, founder of EnviroTextiles in Glenwood Springs.
Filippone was constantly out of the country in eastern Europe
Ms. Filippone began to assemble the message behind the ad.
At Dong Ping, Filippone had been able to build up a customer base, and they followed her to Earth Goods.
other building materials, Filippone said.
Filippone has trademarked the terms SBP™, Sustainable/ Biodegradable Products™,
sent Filippone there to design
Filippone said seeds
under the name Earth Goods, leading to the job opportunity Filippone needed to get away from the sweatshops in India.
Earth Goods hired Filippone because she was the only person they could find who could work with the Thailand-made hemp;
where Filippone viewed first-hand the life of Indian workers in dingy textile sweatshops.
Francesco Filippone voice is a matter of taste
