Thursday, December 31, 2009

Happy New Year 2010




Happy new year everyone! I know I just started this blog a few weeks ago, so a big thanks to all of my followers for giving this blog such a great start! I'm looking forward to blogging about all the great books that are coming out this year, and reading all of your awesome blogs too. Here is to a wonderful 2010, may it bring you peace, joy, and a lot of great books!



Goodbye, gentle soul

THEME DAY: CHANGES • Siopao was a mixed breed and a gift to my father the year after my mom died in 1993. Daddy named him after the Chinese steamed bun popular in the Philippines because when he was a puppy and could fit in one hand when curled up, he looked exactly like one, including the dot on his back. When dad died in 1996 and his housekeeper left, care for Siopao fell on me since I'm the only one among my siblings still in the country. Siopao was the gentlest of dogs. Days could go by without a single bark from him; about the only things he barked at were strange dogs out in the street and stray cats crossing our yard (which he loved to chase though he never really tried to catch). He was perfect with our nieces and nephews, quietly tolerating unsure hands from the most fearful of them and ungentle caresses from the most daring. During the colder months, we kept his hair naturally long.

Siopao with long hair

But when he starts shedding just before the summer months, we would get him shaved. And long into the rainy season, we kept him short-haired until the days started getting cool again.

Siopao with short hair

At 15 years old, Siopao had a lot of health problems (liver, gall bladder) and was easily prone to infections. His eyesight, hearing and sense of smell had all weakened—except when we had chicken, his favorite (that one he didn't have any difficulty smelling!). In the early morning of November 24, 2009 Siopao passed away while he was at the pet hospital. I still miss his greeting when I get home, and his constant, quiet presence by my side, but I am thankful for the many years that were given to us to be able to love him. And to Jilly and Rob, thank you for your sympathy and comforting words the week after he left us. (ALL PHOTOS BY DOGBERRY)

Siopao with my nephew

What are the changes that City Daily Photo bloggers around the world have seen or experienced? Click here to view thumbnails for all participants.

What's for 2010 ?

Oscar Wilde said : " I have the simplest taste - I am always satisfied with the best." So i wish you better graffiti, photo, painting, … Whatever you do, do it better !



In order to improve this graffiti blog in 2010, please send me your suggestions.

Gas Masks

This picture was taken in 1942, and shows Army nurses training for Gas Warfare in World War II. This picture always had surreal look to me.

Wanted to let you know that I have a really good mystery person picked out for this Saturday's contest. Be sure to tune in, as it should be a good contest. Poor, Poor Nate. He will not have a chance.

Happy New Year!


Video directed by Sou Ootsuki.

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Have some pie

The pie that made the small bakeshop Banapple famous, especially among Quezon City residents: Banoffee. Think banana cream pie but the cream which holds the fresh sliced bananas together is caramel coffee; the cream on top is not just light whipped cream but a thick pastry cream; the cookie crust tastes like it's made of the cookie part of chocolate chip cookies, crushed and mixed with pure butter; then everything generously topped off with shaved dark chocolate. Heavenly! Or devilishly sinful, depending on how you look at it.

Banapple's Banoffee Pie
Wishing you all a new year filled with love and sweetness.

Nurses During Flu Pandemic of 1918

Today's picture is from 1918, and shows nurses transporting a victim of the Flu Pandemic. This was one of the worst pandemics of all time, and killed over 50 million people worldwide.

I am happy to report that the great furniture shopping spree has finally ended, and we got home last night, and got the furniture unloaded. Hopefully we will not have to go through this again for a long time.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Historical Fiction Reading Challenge 2010

I am really looking forward to this challenge! I will post all of my book reviews for this challenge here on my blog. I'll also link them to the widget for this challenge on my sidebar so you can check my progress easily. Happy reading everyone!

Challenge Outline:

1. Anyone can join. You don't need a blog to participate.
--Non-Bloggers: Include your information in the comment section.

2. There are four levels:

-- Curious – Read 3 Historical Fiction novels.
-- Fascinated – Read 6 Historical Fiction novels.
-- Addicted – Read 12 Historical Fiction novels.
-- Obsessed – Read 20 Historical Fiction novels.

3. Any book format counts.

4. You can list your books in advance or just put them in a wrap up post. If you list them, feel free to change them as the mood takes you.

5. Challenge begins January 1st thru December, 2010.

Challenge Host/Link:  Royal Reviews: Historical Fiction Challenge (you can sign up at this location)
 ------------------------------------------------
My goal: Level Obsessed.

Progress so far: 16/20

Links to my reviews of these challenge books:
  1. Outlander by Diana Gabaldon 
  2. The Queen's Mistake: In the Court of Henry VIII by Diane Haeger 
  3. The Last Queen by C.W. Gortner 
  4. The Boleyn Wife by Brandy Purdy
  5. Island of the Swans by Ciji Ware 
  6. Alice I Have Been by Melanie Benjamin
  7. The Queen's Governess by Karen Harper
  8. The Secret of the Glass by Donna Russo Morin
  9. The Scarlet Lion by Elizabeth Chadwick
  10. The Stolen Crown by Susan Higginbotham
  11. Secrets of the Tudor Court: Between Two Queens by Kate Emerson
  12. O, Juliet by Robix Maxwell
  13. The Highest Stakes by Emery Lee
  14. Cleopatra's Daughter by Michelle Moran
  15. Within the Hollow Crown by Margaret Campbell Barnes
  16. Mistress of Rome by Kate Quinn
  17. The Queen's Pawn by Christy English
  18. The Darcy Cousins by Monica Fairview
  19. The Botticelli Secret by Marina Firoato
  20. The Rules of Gentility by Janet Mullany
  21. Claude and Camille by Stephanie Cowell
  22. The Brothers of Gwynedd by Edith Pargeter
  23. The Dark Rose by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles

Squiggly

Remember the rainbow triangles which I posted five months ago? The Hong Kong-based Filipino artist, Joel Ferraris, found my post about it and pointed me to his own blog, and it turns out that its title is "Prism 24." I finally managed to get a couple more photos of his fun sculptures at SM City North EDSA's Sky Garden and here is another, titled "Rainbow Waterfalls." There's no real water, but I think it's appropriate enough to register in Watery Wednesday, don't you think? :)

Joel Ferraris' Rainbow Waterfalls sculpture at SM City North EDSA's Sky Garden

Natural or man-made, take a refreshing dip in Watery Wednesday.
Watery Wednesday

Christmas Eve in Santa Fe




I had the most wonderful vacation involving green tea, DH doing all the cooking, and reading many books on my Kindle. My one fiber-related Christmas gift was a beautiful Nordstrom cashmere scarf in my favorite color. It is actually a men's scarf but I like my scarves really long. (In case you're wondering what on earth I'm reading about mashed potato protests, it is The Food of a Younger Land by Mark Kurlansky.) 

I started the pretty Cross-Country Ski Hat from Norwegian Handknits but even using the same weight yarn and a smaller size needle, my gauge was way off. I could have easily omitted one 26 st pattern repeat and still have had a pretty large hat. The Ravelry pattern page also states there is a chart error so if I attempt another project from the book I'll check the pattern errata first.

Here are some Christmas Eve photos from Santa Fe.





The Splendorous Form of Noise

To see the following video you should enlarge it (double-click once playing).



The above is a compilation of works by the Swiss artist Zimoun.

1. Funny, one keeps telling oneself, enough of the minimal already, somehow feeling that less is a bore should be embraced, and the outrageously overflowing art of the recent years - appreciated and encouraged. And then, something like this appears, and it's irresistible. We've seen things from this universe before, also on this blog, and yet, the simplicity, yes, the damn purity takes over again.

2. I had a chance, recently, to visit several large factories. There were wonders there that could probably match most of the things on this video. Yet there was one thing they couldn't do: be useless. It's the sheer uselessness of it that gives it the power. We are not attached to anything but the thing. Art as the thing-that-cannot-be-used? Not necessarily, not in some purist sense. Great industrial design is to be cherished. And yet, there is a level of insanity here, of out-of-this-world-ness, that takes us to an exotic land, allowing for the silliest and most delicious connections to be made.

3. Luxury requires waste. A truly luxurious lifestyle is one where perfectly good things get wasted, as if to outplay their natural use and dying away. The true master of luxury seems to be saying her opulence is so great, the very perseverence of things is no match - they lose their original function and only exist to the extent they are participating in this out-of-this-world-ness of luxury.
You know what I'm aiming at? Here's the hypothesis:

4. This, this minimalist joyful pleasure-making, is the true luxury. Not the apparent richness of the new complexities. In the world of useless purity, everything only serves the joy of simple aesthetic pleasure. More complex works are not quite like that - they have an inner game to play. The elements enter a dialogue, start relations and societies, with their conflicts and functions and disruptions. Here, there is only the ping of a shot of pleasure. This engine moves nothing. It is here to make me smile (or bring inspiration, or scare) - and I turn it off as soon as I have. And don't be mistaken - if I had one of those and got bored with and could afford it, it would go to waste.

4a. Ah, you might say, but the truly great art is one we don't get bored with. Possibly. Yet how often do we actually go back to contemplate (not just think about or admire or analyze) a work of contemporary "minimalist" art? Does it mean it's because it's not that great? What if it's about something else? What if it is an element of luxury, a game we play with ourselves, to feel the exquisite taste of the sophisticated dish, and then to ditch it as soon as we're fed up? It wouldn't be a question of bluff, of fakeness, of shallowness. It would be a question of use. Of why we crave it, this new. Of how we make it useful after all.

David Foldvari, Wrestler


(via)

Ninia, from Barcelona

ninia graffiti barcelona

ANIS

Anis graffiti
anis graffiti

Alora

alora espana

CNN199

CNN199

PSK

psk spray

Alora

green graffiti

Niks, Nawas

Niks nawas

Nomor from Hamburg

Nomor 180 wilhelmsburg hamburg nks ean

Unfinished

red graffiti

Horme

mhs crew

Reti

reti graffiti

Unfinished blue

blue graffiti

Pores ?

pores graffiti

Metro

metro bxl

Nilem - Melin

melin graffiti

JR1

title="jrone

Okyes Crew

okyes crew

OiC and IOR Crew - German graffiti

german graffiti





OiC graffiti



IOR graffiti Oic



graffiti from germany







KST CREW

kst graffiti



kst crew



kst graffiti crew

World War I Nurse

Good Morning from San Antonio, Texas, the Shopping Capitol of the World. Well, at least it feels that way. Anyway, today's picture shows a World War I Red Cross Nurse. I really like the old cars, and I like the old-style clothes she is wearing.

Anyway, I mentioned yesterday that Mrs. PJM has taken me on a cross-state spending spree I am referring to as "The Great Spending Spree of '09". You can read in the comments on yesterday's post for updates on the budgetary damage done. Mrs. PJM is sitting over on the bed right now with her notebook detailing all the furniture items to be bought on our way home. Hopefully this nightmare will end today.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Sherlock Holmes...Old story, new look.




"The game is afoot" or should I say movie? This Christmas, Hollywood gave us the present of Sherlock Holmes, staring Robert Downey Jr., Jude Law, and Rachel McAdams. This movie is a  fast paced, high action adventure that never slows down. With some humorous banter between Holmes and Watson and the unquestionable good looks of Holmes this movie would seem to have it all...

When first hearing that there was going to be a new Sherlock Holmes movie, I was ecstatic. Then when I saw the trailer I became a little wary of what they had done to the Holmes character. There have been so many adaptions of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes, but this one is by far the most edgy and loose interpretation. This is no suave and methodical Holmes, playing the violin in thoughtful silence. Instead he is more brawn then brains; from beating up villains with fists and sticks to wearing nothing but his pantaloons while participating in a boxing match.

- Here are some comparisons between the new Sherlock Holmes and the original.
                                                                                            
  New Version- Robert Downey Jr.


   Original Version- Basil Rathbone



The movie is set during Victorian England but has all the action, explosions, and crazy plots of today. The action never stops and can be a bit overwhelming at times. Besides the action, the plot is also intense, but that is better then no plot at all. The scene sets are very well done, the only complaint I have about them is that at times, I felt as if their clothes did not always flow with the time period.

Overall it is really a good movie, as long as you look at it with an open mind. If I compare the original and new version, I prefer the Sherlock Holmes played by Basil Rathbone in every way possible. Yet if I view this movie as if it's the first Sherlock Holmes movie I have ever seen and let it stand completely alone, it becomes a good movie.

Hopefully the rumored sequel will be more true to the original...even if just a bit.