Thursday, 31 October 2013

Happy Halloween!

 
Halloween is another excuse to get out the fancy dress, my FAVOURITE hobby!! Seriously! I love any reason for dressing up and going a bit crazy. Over the years I’ve dressed up as a mummy, witch, a zombie and may more random creatures! This year I’m not getting the opportunity due to work and things being so busy but I hope some of you lovely lot are! I will definitely be decorating a pumpkin at some point today!
Anyone got any fancy dress plans?
Happy Halloween!

Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Hot Rod Red Gelish Nails


I have no will power! I was going to resist getting Gelish on my nails again. However as someone who has a nasty habit of biting her nails, this is the longest my nails have ever been. They are also stronger and not snapping, I am in LOVE with Gelish!
Therefore I have made the decision to live off baked beans and super noodles for the next week and treat myself for the last time (*cough, cough). Who needs to eat when you have nice nails?!
This time I went for ‘Hot Rod Red’ which is an awesome fire engine red. I love a bright nail and red goes with most of my (black) wardrobe. I am also heading out for a hen do this weekend and we are all dressing up as ladybugs, so my red nails are perfect for that too!

Monday, 28 October 2013

Motivational Monday #30

I can’t believe there have been 30 of these posts! It’s crazy! I started these posts with the theory that it would motivate me and keep me positive. I wanted to look for the good in things instead of the negative and just in general, smile more! So how’s it worked out I hear you all asking? Well, I actually think it’s worked! I feel that I have a much more positive perspective on life. Yes I have my ups and downs, I am only human but I am working it through and I feel like I am definitely much happier! Therefore I am going to continue them for a while yet.
 
As I mentioned in last week’s motivational Monday post I’ve been feeling a little sensitive lately, for no real reason I just am. I’m finding myself looking into things too much and taking things a little too personally. It’s not a healthy way to be, I don’t enjoy it so I am determined to change!
 
I HEART THIS QUOTE! I am tempted to get a massive print out of it. Why do we care so much about what others think? Why is there opinion so important? At the end of the day who are they to judge us? We are all so much better than that, which is what I am going to keep reminding myself this week. I am who I am and I’m a tiger!
Happy Monday Lovelies!
 

Sunday, 27 October 2013

My Blogging essentials...

 
I thought I would do a slightly different post for you today and share with you essential tool kit for blogging. These are things I need to be able to blog and would struggle without....
1.    Camera
I have a Panasonic LZ20 Lumix Bridging Camera. When I first started blogging I used to use my phone but was never happy with the quality of the pictures so I decided to treat myself to a decent camera. This camera isn’t top of the range, I have a massive habit of breaking things so didn’t want to spend too much. However I LOVE it so much, it does a great job and I think my blogs definitely improved since I started focusing more on the images and their quality. To edit my photos I use picmonkey.com, it’s so easy to use and really helps to fine tune my pics. I am also a fan of instagram if I do use my phone for any photography.
2.    Phone
I have an Iphone 4s. It has become a bit like my left hand when it comes to blogging. It means I can access my emails and twitter on the go. I have the blogger app on my phone too but I don’t tend to use it as it doesn’t give you as many options as the website. I also am a huge Lister, I heart lists! The notes section on my phone is filled with so many lists including, blog ideas/post ideas/reminders etc. I can also photograph things on the go. It definitely helps me stay interactive whilst away from my laptop.
3.    Twitter
I think I spend just as much time on twitter as I do on my blog. I wasn’t a huge fan of it when I first started using it but it’s such a fantastic way of interacting with other bloggers and sharing your links. The blogging community on twitter is such an amazing source of support and all the regular chats keeps me motivated. I definitely don’t think my blog would be the same if I didn’t have twitter.
4.    Notepad
I always carry a notepad in my hand bag, and have a few on the go at any one time. I use them to write rough drafts of posts, jot down any ideas that come into my head. It’s great for getting whatever’s on my mind on to paper. My notepads are where all my posts begin.
5.    My Laptop
This one is slightly obvious! As a blogger I spend a large amount of time on my laptop and would be massively stuck if I didn’t have it! I use it to write and post on my blog, I use it email in regards to my blog, to tweet, to edit photos, the list is endless!
And of course copious amounts of tea also helps! I would love to hear what’s on everyone else’s toolkit list? Of course I have equipment to help me photograph products and a few other bits that help me out when it comes to blogging but these are my top 5. What are your blogging essentials?
 

Friday, 25 October 2013

BOOK CLUB TAKEOVER: Anthony from 'I, Contra Mundum'

Here are my thoughts… I LOVE hearing other people’s views and reviews on pretty much anything especially books! Some of my favourite reads are ones that have been suggested by other people. So thinking along those lines,’ The Book Club Takeover’ was born! Hopefully each week I will bring to you a post from one of my lovely and amazing fellow bloggers who will in turn share with you what their favourite book is, why they love it and a review. I hope you enjoy this feature as much as I do!

A short introduction, hmm? Well, I'm Anthony, a French-Kenyan opera conductor, freelance fashion journalist, budding architect, bitcoiner, and polo player. My interests lie in Franco-Japanese literature, fashion and cuisine; Post-modernism; Futurism; Lepidoptery; Impressionism; Plato and Herodotus. I'm new to blogging and write over at I, Contra Mundum about everything from fashion and philosophy, to graphic novels and mental health. Though my writing may make me seem grumpy and serious, I'm actually the laziest, most melodramatic prankster one'll ever know. Want to know more? Just ask.
 
Review 
Voici mon secret. Il set très simple: on ne voit bien qu'avec le cœur. L'essentiel set invisible pour les jeux. (Renard, Chapter XII - Le Petit Prince)
As an keen reader, I like slipping away into the admittedly wonderful exercise of dissolving into a narrative - escaping the present, escaping critical eyes, escaping time - as does happen in the case of those rare novels that are convincing, thought provoking and entertaining. Having, rather fortuitously, read many such novels, picking my favourite seemed to be, at first, quite the onerous task. I kept oscillating between Dante, Murakami, di Lampedusa and Saint-Exupéry. But I decided to go with my heart, as one should with choices such as these; and the French aristocrat, writer, poet and aviator Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's children's book, The Little Prince, won me over.
Le Petit Prince, as it's known in French, was written during Saint-Exupéry's self-imposed exile to the US after the fall of France to Nazi Germany. He was on a mission to convince the US government to intervene and amidst personal turmoil wrote a delicate story about friendship, love, loneliness and loss. The story, self-illustrated too, tells of a pilot (the narrator, Saint-Exupéry himself) stranded in a desert who happens to meet a Prince - believed to be from asteroid B-612 - who has fallen to Earth. The Prince begins relaying to the pilot his life on the asteroid and travels from planet to planet in search of the meaning of life.
 
I first encountered The Little Prince when I was twelve, sometime after my parent's messy (read: expensive) divorce, and a few weeks into my new life in Neuilly-sur-Seine with my grandmama. It was in her study that I first found the book. My French wasn't very good back then, I struggled, so grandmama used the book to teach me French, and she'd also read it to me before bed-time. As a child, a lot of the book's more profound observations were lost on me. At that time, what interested me most, were the analogues of human society that the Prince encountered, from the Tippler who drinks because he is ashamed of his drinking problem, to the merchant who sells pills that quench thirst and, therefore, save one 'fifty-three minutes in every week.'
Albeit it's classification as a children's book, The Little Prince is also philosophical in nature. It weaves an endearing message of childhood innocence through the perspective of an adult's analytical mind. The Prince's incredulity at how boring and unimaginative adults are - 'Grown-ups never understand anything by themselves, and it is tiresome for children to be always and forever explaining things to them.' - mirrored how I felt with the grown-ups around me. It was the first time in my life that I felt a real connection with a fictional protagonist - a feeling that I have rarely encountered since and only matched with Fitzgerald's Amory Blaine. But even in my youth certain scenes struck me with their significance, like when the Prince encounters a group of roses and compares them to his own rose on B-612, and he says to them, 'You are beautiful, but you are empty…No one could die for you.'
As I grew older, I read and re-read The Little Prince a few times with a tear. Reflecting while I read, encouraged me to think of other tales similar in scope; tales whose foundations were built on themes of youth, discovery, and a critical examination of our society. The Prince's words serve to highlight the flaws and the unimaginative reality of being an adult in modern society. The universality of this message can be witnessed in J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan, C.S. Lewis' Chronicles of Narnia and Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials. They all, in their own way, play with the notion of saudade (to borrow a Portuguese word), bringing into focus the rites of passage we all go through in our ascent, or descent if you're a cynic like me, into adulthood.
 
As this story gnaws at the facade of the authoritarian and materialistic universe in which the Little Prince resides, the reader is able to witness the self-indulgent nature of the universe surrounding our protagonist. His asteroid is a reminder, to him and to us, of the simple things that matter and of where youthful delights still exist. In turn, when he hastily leaves this simple existence behind after an argument with his love (a rose flower), his search for meaning leaves him with more questions than answers. To comprehend the quantitative nature of the world around him becomes an arduous task. The Prince’s bewilderment with adult society is what we must all grapple with as we grow up. The road taken to achieve our aspirations and gain maturity is littered with the discarded innocence of our youth. Much in the same way as Blake's Songs of Innocence and Experience
Yet, a few years ago in boarding school, I encountered and was subsequently tasked with defending the Prince from friends who challenged the book's overall optimism. They argued, as Goethe wrote that, 'At the end of their lives, all men look back and think their youth was arcadia.' This was apt considering Saint-Exupéry was very ill when he wrote the book. If, like my friends, you read this book and are similarly pessimistic I guide you to the quote at the start of this review. It comes from Chapter XXI of the book, when the Prince befriends a fox. The tale's essence, it's heart, is contained in the parting lines the fox utters to the little Prince, 'Here is my secret. It is very simple: It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.' A message we, like the little Prince, can all live by.
P.S: I hear Hollywood is releasing a film of The Little Prince next year, starring James Franco, Rachel McAdams and Jeff Bridges. I really don't know what to think of that cast but similarly I can't wait to see what they do. Wish it wasn't in 3D though.
Note: For those who can't read French and are thinking of getting an English translation, I highly recommend Katherine Woods' translation. A few errors aside, she really hits the poetic flow of the book. Happy reading!

Thursday, 24 October 2013

MAC Lipglass in Viva Glam

 
I purchased my first MAC Lipglass whilst I was in New York in January. Whilst being a huge fan of the brand I was a little hesitant whether to pay a bit more for a lip gloss or stick to my usual high street brands. Being on holiday in the best city in the world, I figured I’d throw caution to the wind and give it a try.
To the detriment of my bank balance, I’ve not looked back and bought a few more! MAC Lipglass is pigmented, very shiny and can be used for subtle or dramatic colour. It contains Jojoba Oil to help soften and condition the lips.

 
My most recent purchase was the shade ‘Viva Glam’ which is a deep dark red colour. A gorgeous shade for the autumn months. As with the other Lipglass shades I’ve tried, the colour lasts for ages and provides good coverage.
The consistency isn’t too thick, but thick enough to not be sheer. It also leaves a good shine but is moisturising rather than sticky.
If you are looking to invest in a new gloss I would definitely recommend trying any of the MAC Lipglass collection, you won’t be disappointed!

Wednesday, 23 October 2013

He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not

I HAVE NO WILL POWER!!! I am an epic failure when it comes to resisting spending money on naughty treats, and this highlights it all! I am pretty skint at the mo and I’m trying to be good, however after venturing into the world of Gelish nails I couldn’t stop myself from having them one more time. I know, I know, the next few weeks till pay day I shall be living on beans on toast. Oh well at least I have pretty nails!


So here is what I went for, a gorgeous lilac colour called ‘He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not’ with a top coat of glitter. I LOVE it so much. The Gelish has really helped my nails to grow and strengthen, and I love that it stays put for a couple of weeks with no chips.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...