The line takes influence from a variety of fashions, including Guatemalan, Japanese, and Jamaican styles.
Fascinating combination of continental European and Jamaican styles.
It evolved from a Jamaican style of street dance called bruk-up which is performed to dancehall and reggae music.
However, these British influences have, even from the earliest days of colonial rule, always been tempered and molded to the Jamaican style.
It was built around 1894 of timber in the Jamaican Georgian architectural style.
The style of music is very similar to the Jamaican style and so like all imported genres, the only major difference is in language used.
The line is influenced by a variety of fashions cultures, including Guatemalan, Japanese, Indian and Jamaican styles.
Anything prepared blackened or Jamaican style calls for a discussion with the server; make your heat tolerance known.
Although it took many years for true Jamaican styles to develop, eventually they became more prevalent than European works.
Of course, the true Jamaican style is coffee served with condensed milk and perhaps even a splash of the island's other national treasure - overproof rum.