Biological sisters and actresses Jennifer Tilly, 51, and Meg Tilly, 49, showed off their stellar genes at the same event in L.A. the other day.
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(Page 1 of 2) | 1 | 2 | Most Recent | Next 15 CommentsHmm have word done or look like my raggedy ass sister????? I go for the work. IDC if you are a hippie or w.e dye your damn roots. That looks a hot mess.
What the heck happened to MEG?!? OMG! She was always cutier than Jen. HOLY!
ENVELOPE
An envelope is a packaging product, usually made of flat material such as paper or cardboard, and designed to contain a flat object, which in a postal-service context is usually a letter, card or bills. The traditional type is made from a sheet of paper cut to one of three shapes: the rhombus (also referred to as a lozenge or diamond), the short-arm cross, and the kite. These designs ensure that in the course of envelope manufacture when the sides of the sheet are folded about a delineated central rectangular area, a rectangular-faced, usually oblong, enclosure is formed with an arrangement of four flaps on the reverse side, which, by virtue of the shapes of sheet traditionally used, is inevitably symmetrical.
In 1876 William Irwin Martin published the Stationer's Handbook. He worked for the Samuel Raynor & Company in New York. He created the first commercial sizes of envelopes and simply numbered them from 0 through 12.
Prior to 1845, hand-made envelopes were all that were available for use, both commercial and domestic. In 1845, Edwin Hill and Warren De La Rue were granted a British patent for the first envelope-making machine.
The "envelopes" produced by the Hill/De La Rue machine were not as we know them today. They were flat diamond, lozenge (or rhombus)-shaped sheets or "blanks" which had been precut to shape before being fed to the machine for creasing and made ready for folding to form a rectangular enclosure. The edges of the overlapping flaps treated with a paste or adhesive and the method of securing the envelope or wrapper was a user choice. The symmetrical flap arrangement meant that it could be held together with a single wax seal at the apex of the topmost flap. (That the flaps of an envelope can be held together by applying a seal at a single point is a classic design feature of an envelope).
Nearly 50 years passed before a commercially successful machine for producing pre-gummed envelopes effectively as we know them today appeared.
You guys really need to add a "Neither" button to these polls.
Then more people would vote.
WHAT IN THE HEEL HAPPENED TO MEG TILLY? SHE WAS ONCE VERY CUTE, SHE REALLY LOOKS LIKE SHE IS 65+. BUT HONESTLY, JENNIFER ALWAYS WAS THE HOT SEX POT AND STILL IS.
ALSO JENNIFER LOOKS LIKE SHE DID 25 YRS AGO, LOVE HER.
I have just THREE words for Meg..................HAIR DYE QUICK!! You look 100 freakin years old !!! You women out there who think GOIN GREY is attractive and the way to go................THINK AGAIN. The top layer of my retina just burned itself off after seeing this picture. OUCH!
"Biological sisters"? Why not just "sisters"? And Meg hasn't aged because she is made of plastic.
Oh Meg! Get yourself together, girl! Whatever Jennifer is doing, copy her!
Jennifer Tilly can bring an enormous power of dynamic, interactive character to a role. She can steal a scene easily and that can be in any style however under-played, dramatized or overplayed. She has it. As soon as I see in on screen she typically seems the focus of energy and potential scene control. Few people have that kind of electricity.
Meg used to be very pretty. She definitely needs to get some hair color in that grey hair. Not fair that men look good with grey hair and not women (example: Richard Gere).
meg is a hippie that lives on a farm. she's not into dying her hair. she raises horses and had a son by colin firth about 20 years ago.
















