Talk:Cigarette holder
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Contents |
[edit] rudeness
67.166.42.66, my issue was not that you were trying to improve the article, but that you were both rude and removing important information. I can live with the wording, but I'm glad they've not made you an admin either. Chris 19:40, 24 March 2006 (UTC)
[edit] links
The top link doesn't come up dead for me, and the bottom link was originally spammed by someone, but it was discussed to leave it as it seems to grow into a forom for those interested. Chris 02:49, 15 June 2006 (UTC)
- Dead Link
- The link theholderlady.com leads to a dead site. Please don't continue to reinsert it.
[edit] image deletion
I am again reverting deletions by Sean Black, and have asked him to explain on the talk page first why these are "simply unacceptable". Nothing is ever so "simple" as to warrant unexplained deletions. If, as he maintains "a free image to illustrate this article would be trivial to locate", then he should do so. Chris 17:44, 24 September 2006 (UTC)
- The images you are adding are not covered under fair use on this article. The Breakfast at Tiffany's one has a fair use rationale for Breakfast at Tiffany's and nowhere else. The other: "However, it is believed that the use of this work in the article Tennessee Williams: To illustrate the person in question..."
- If you haven't noticed, Cigarette holder is neither Breakfast at Tiffany's nor is it Tennessee Williams. Please don't re-add them. If you'd like to take an image yourself, feel free to upload it to commons and display it proudly on this page, free of legal complications. --Keitei (talk) 18:35, 24 September 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Bad Link
Comes up with "forum removed...possible TOS violation".
[edit] Ad paragraph removal
Information, not advertising (or yellow advertising) please.
[edit] 1900's?
- I would think that it would probably be more accurate to say mid-1910's, since public cigarette-smoking amongst ladies was not popular or condoned until after the Great War began(though some Edwardian socialites had smoked indoors.)--Anglius 21:35, 24 December 2006 (UTC)