[ad_1]
On Friday, Silje Sandmæl (42) visited “Senkveld med Helene og Stian”, where, among other things, she is entering her student period in the United States.
Sandmæl offers constant and constant advice to others on how to manage their finances, even on the TV 3 program “Luksusfellen”.
Hard times: it brightened my hair
Now, however, the 42-year-old can recount a time when she didn’t have that much in her wallet, leading her to make decisions she’s not so proud of today.
It was TV 2 that brought up the case for the first time.
During the show, you can reveal how she, like a bad student, chose to decorate her room in the cheapest way possible.
Art with the body
– I received advice, in fact, that I shouldn’t follow. I wanted art on the wall. I couldn’t afford it, and then someone advised me: “Yes, but how about you paint something yourself?” I can’t paint, says Sandmæl on the show.
In addition, he tells of a tip he received about smearing himself with body paint and then leaving a mark on canvas. Sandmæl thought it sounded like a good idea and carried it out, just with oil paint.
Tribute to nude photos
– It was beautiful, it was, absolutely true. (…) But then I had to wash the paint off, and what the person had forgotten to say was that the oil paint people … have they ever gotten oil paint stained? Because then the water makes it stick even more, it flows and then it doesn’t go off, continues to laugh, and adds that as a consequence it was completely green for several days.
When it was time to go home to Norway, Sandmæl reveals that he put the painting on the market with a price tag of $ 100, which is equivalent to just over 900 NOK. She thinks this was profitable.
Silje Sandmæl has so far not responded to Dagbladet’s questions.
The revelation about home art comes a few months after Sandmæl was hugely surprised on TV 2’s “A Night at Kloppen.”
There she was exceptionally open about her upbringing in the far east of Oslo and could, among other things, reveal that she has a past as a labeller.
Exchange nude photos for donations
Passed as labels
When her parents divorced in her childhood, her mother decided to move to Romsås in Groruddalen. It was here that it was cheap, as well as being located next to the countryside and connected to the city center by metro.
It still shouldn’t be underestimated that the 1970s slum city even then had a somewhat messy reputation, something Sandmæl confirmed to be true when speaking to Dagbladet.
– It looked like a jewel, but there is always a side to the coin. I could really prove it. There are probably congested environments everywhere, but the ones in Romsås were particularly heavy, he said, recalling his youth.
Long before graduating as an economist, she was found with a graffiti painting in Oslo. She laughs at that today, noting that she was never particularly good or engaged, but has tagged a few times.
While someone tagged “Crew” around the eastern edge walls, she tagged “Raven.” Only when he knew it meant raven, and that it wasn’t so cool after all, did he put the boxes down.