A Quote by Harry Kane

When I was growing up, Keane and Sheringham were my idols, and they wore 10. So it was always my dream to wear it. — © Harry Kane
When I was growing up, Keane and Sheringham were my idols, and they wore 10. So it was always my dream to wear it.
The toppling of idols - even respectable, admired, best-practice, fastest-growing idols - is always the road to liberation.
I didn't really have idols growing up, but some of my friends were huge fangirls.
Growing up, my idols were Lucky Luke and Jolly Jumper. And Scottie Pippen.
An Islamic writer recalls her joy in the clothes she wore as a young girl at a wedding: They were always in beautiful bright colors: crimson, pink, turquoise, purple, and embroidered with sparkling crystals, sequins and beads. ... The older girls and women would wear glamorous heavily-beaded silk blouses and long, princess-like skirts. I wanted to wear those fairy-tale clothes too. I longed even more to wear a sari which the women wore so elegantly and which flattered their curves.
Streetwear for me is what I was raised wearing in London, and my style influences growing up were always people who wore streetwear.
Growing up, Guess always had these amazing billboards and cool affordable clothing. I wore it then, and I still wear it now! It's come full-circle. When I design the clothes, I have a very good team around me, showing me different pieces and cuts.
Rachel Bilson, Nicole Richie, Vanessa Hudgens... so many of my idols growing up were Bongo girls.
Hip-hop influences my talent, but I think that punk and everything else I listened to growing up was who my idols were.
When I was growing up, my mother always wore Chanel.
My football idol growing up, I was named after Walter Payton, but my idols at RB were Barry Sanders and Emmitt Smith.
As a little girl growing up in a small farming town in Michigan, my idols were women like Marlene Dietrich and Rita Hayworth.
I like the dream, like fantasy dresses. Women can dream at 9 in the morning and at 10 o’clock at night, it doesn’t matter. I think it is also important for me to make it pragmatic and practical and wearable. I always say, 'If you can’t eat it, it’s not food, and if you can’t wear it, it’s not fashion, it is something else.'
Even though I accomplished the whole WWE thing, which I feel like was everybody's dream when you were growing up, but it wasn't until I got to Lucha Underground that I felt how I thought I'd feel at 10 years old to be a pro wrestler.
To wear the number 10 for your country is a very special thing. This was not only my dream, but the dream of every single Brazilian.
It's almost like he has Dr. Who's Tardis because he always turns up on time. (on Teddy Sheringham)
You see all the greats, people who were idols of mine growing up. You see those guys on the cover of video games.
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