

Additionally, Noritoshi feels that Yuji Itadori must be eliminated because he's a threat. Instead, he speaks familiarly with Megumi despite his lack of real ties with the Zenin family.

Noritoshi has actively treated Mai as though she were beneath him because she didn't inherit the Ten Shadows Technique. Memories of his mother drive Noritoshi forward. His loyalty to the sorcerer families has distorted his feelings when it comes to others. He also feels a kinship to those who come from sorcerer families such as Megumi. Excluding Aoi, he is a senior and a leader for his peers at the Kyoto school other than Aoi. Noritoshi is normally very calm and stoic in most situations, whether it be in front of his allies or rivals. Noritoshi completes this new look with black pants and shoes with white trim. He also sports a waste guard that covers both sides of his hips and holsters the quiver for his arrows.

He wears a long-sleeved black shirt underneath a protective breastplate that covers the left side of his chest. For the Culling Game, Noritoshi sports a new outfit instead of a Jujutsu High uniform. As a child, he wore a dark yukata robe.įollowing the Shibuya Incident and Kenjaku's hostile takeover of the Kamo clan, Noritoshi cut his hair into a much shorter, spikier style. He casually wore a light-colored kimono with dark pants around the Kamo clan estate. While still heir to the Kamo Clan, Noritoshi sported a dark blue tinted shozoku version of the Jujutsu High uniform with zori sandals with white socks. The rest of his hair behind his head reached to the bottom of his neck. He has long black hair he used to keep in a unique style where two strands in front of his face were styled with bandage-like wrappings. He has gray-colored eyes that are normally obscured because Noritoshi normally keeps his eyes completely shut. It’s stunning.Noritoshi is a tall young man who stands above all his peers at Kyoto Jujutsu High other than Todo. It’s touristy, but it’s touristy for a reason. It’s on top of a cliff with a view of the Mediterranean Sea. It’s one of the most famous villages in the south of France. Then it’s time for a nap.Īnd before heading home, we drive from Marseille to Saint-Paul-de-Vence, which is about a two-hour drive. Noon: Order the bouillabaisse, take a napĪfter spending time in nature, we head back to the village of Les Goudes and enjoy the bouillabaisse at Grand Bar des Goudes (28 Rue Désiré Pelaprat, 13008 Marseille). If we are in the mood for exploring, we head to Calanques National Park. They have the souvenirs, it’s paradise! Well, at least for me, not for my husband, who then waits. I could spend half a day just looking at everything. It’s that store everybody goes to for anything you can imagine in a vintage vibe. Maison Empereur (4 Rue des Récolettes, 13001 Marseille, France) has everything you can imagine for self and home like sheepskin slippers and enamel glasses. You can spot poppy fields (in late spring) or lavender fields (in summer). I land at the Marseille airport, which is between Marseille and Aix-en-Provence, and then my dad picks me up and we drive about 45 minutes, depending on traffic, passing Aix-en-Provence to my dad’s village, La Bastidonne. A Del Val–approved holiday meanders through the sun-washed villages and open-air markets with the hum of cicadas in the background. “It’s warm but dry - the nature is gorgeous.” Del Val last traveled to Provence from New York this spring, and flew back with her husband for their seventh summer and 11th trip in late July. When Delphine Del Val’s father retired and moved from Paris to Provence, the talent agent and founder of Pool Creatives started visiting his home near Aix-en-Provence every summer, at first for one week, then two weeks, then when COVID arrived for a month at a time. In this recurring series, we find those people who’ve done all the work for you and have them walk us through a particularly wonderful, especially well-thought-out vacation they took that you can actually steal. Photos: Delphine Del ValĮveryone knows that person who spends weeks sniffing around travel blogs, going deep into Tripadvisor rabbit holes, collecting Google docs from friends of friends, and creating A Beautiful Mind– style spreadsheets to come up with the best vacations and itineraries possible.
