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It would not be a British occasion without a touch of the eccentric, irreverent and even downright tacky. House and garden supply chain B&Q says it has sold 3,100 jubilee garden gnomes
-- pointy-headed lawn ornaments styled on the queen and her husband, Prince Philip. An online sex toy retailer is offering -- to put it delicately -- glittering royal adornments for the nether regions. And enterprising English designer Lydia Leith, who had a cult hit last year with her custom-made royal wedding sick bags, has designed a series of temporary tattoos of corgis, crowns and carriages, as well as a jelly mold in the shape of the queen's head. "It's not meant to be offensive in any way. It's just meant to be fun," said Leith, who will be selling her wares at a jubilee festival in London's Battersea Park on Sunday. "There's something for everyone. If you don't like the royal family, you can buy a sick bag. If you do, you can buy a tattoo."
[Associated
Press;
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