Wednesday 31 March 2010

Lazy

A slightly lazy post tonight, because I haven't uploaded any pictures from my Devon trip just yet, & also realised that I haven't done a picture (or three) of the day about HW! (Or Helen, sure).

(Helen & I dressed up for Sj's birthday...about a year & a half ago)



(& this is just a delightful picture of Hw in Kaos one time-loving life!)
This picture makes me giggle :]

I love Helen. We met because she started working at the bar I work at (for 5 more days!) & then we went out a lot...& the rest is history!

I think one of the things I love most about her (the way she dresses & cares about it as much as I do aside), is her amazingly positive attitude & outgoing-ness! She's always such a hyper, happy person...♥♥♥ it.

 (From the German Market, Christmas just gone, with hot chocolates after our fake Christmas day♥)
xo

Sunday 28 March 2010

London Baby!

Recently The Boy & I went to London, (13 days 'till I move there!) & it was awesome!

I made a delightful route-plan, 'cause we wanted to do quite a lot in the time we had;

On our itinerary was a trip to the Tate Modern, Oxford Street, a road called Denmark street, where Dan wanted to go (I'd never heard of it before, so looked it up on Wikipedia - more on that later). We then planned to go to Harrods as Dan had never been, & I really wanted to see the puppies on the fourth floor! After that, we planned to end the day with a trip to Southfields to have dinner with my Gran.

The plan worked out pretty well over all! We started by getting a Megatrain to Waterloo. If you've not gotten a mega bus/train, I would strongly recommend it - it cost the two of us £10 for a day return from Southampton to Waterloo! & you can sometimes get even cheaper fares if you book further in advance. Bargain-tastic!






Loving life on the train.








An elephant at Waterloo!






Dan ran away while I was taking a picture of the elephant.



 



 
After navigating the tube, we went to the Tate. I was a little surprised to find that some of the floors/exhibitions were closed due to lack of staff - I think they were striking, but I'm not sure. There were a few signs at the entrances to some of the rooms saying that the staff had issues with the company that employed them, as opposed to the Tate itself...which was pretty strange. & when I mentioned it to my Gran later that day she pointed out that it was interesting how there hadn't been anything in the press about it, & you wouldn't know if you hadn't been to the Tate & seen the signs...Does this mean the Tate are being sneaky & covering it up so as not to seem bad? I wonder.
 But regardless of that, we still managed to find a lot of fun things to see & do whilst there!

There was a huuuge metal box in the entrance hall;

    Dan said it was the biggest thing he'd ever seen. It was pretty impressive! & we then discovered you could go inside...

It was horribly dark. You literally couldn't see your hand in front of your face. Which made walking around in there pretty weird because you couldn't see where you were going, which kinda made it feel like you were about to fall off the edge of something!

"Miroslaw Balka’s box of darkness is disturbing in its historical echoes but beautiful as well." The Times
"Miroslaw Balka's black hole at Tate Modern is terrifying, awe-inspiring and throught-provoking. It embraces you with a velvet chill." The Guardian

This is what the Tate Modern website had to say about the 'piece';

"The latest commission in The Unilever Series How It Is by Polish artist Miroslaw Balka is a giant grey steel structure with a vast dark chamber, which in construction reflects the surrounding architecture - almost as if the interior space of the Turbine Hall has been turned inside out...It stands 13 metres high and 30 metres long. Visitors can walk underneath it, listening to the echoing sound of footsteps on steel, or enter via a ramp into a pitch black interior, creating a sense of unease.
Underlying this chamber is a number of allusions to recent Polish history – the ramp at the entrance to the Ghetto in Warsaw, or the trucks which took Jews away to the camps of Treblinka or Auschwitz, for example.
  By entering the dark space, visitors place considerable trust in the organisation, something that could also be seen in relation to the recent risks often taken by immigrants travelling. Balka intends to provide an experience for visitors which is both personal and collective, creating a range of sensory and emotional experiences through sound, contrasting light and shade, individual experience and awareness of others, perhaps provoking feelings of apprehension, excitement or intrigue."


We also saw the biggest furniture I've ever seen;



Outside the Tate along the Southbank, we saw a 'beach'!

(Dan's fancy phone picture)


(& mine, with people in suits on the beach! A strange (but nice) sight)

We then got the tube along to Oxford street & saw a delightful busker;


& found Denmark Street!

"Denmark Street is a short narrow road in central London, notable for its connections with British popular music, and is known as the British Tin Pan Alley.
 Venues on Denmark Street have strong connections with the histories of British jazz, rhythm and blues and punk music. The Beatles and Jimi Hendrix recorded in basements in the street. Elton John wrote his classic early song Your Song here. Later, the Sex Pistols lived above number 6, and recorded their first demos there. The street contains London's largest cluster of music shops. It was also the original home of London's biggest science fiction and comic store, Forbidden Planet." (Wikipedia)

Dan had great fun taking pictures of amps, guitars, talking to the music people...I nodded along & pretended to know what they were talking about.


From there, it was off to Harrods!


We saw lots of things that everyone needs...





We then went on to see my Gran, eat too much dinner & try not to fall asleep on the train!

Tomorrow, I'll do a post about my couple of days in Devon, with the lovely Lyzz -
(a picture from Amsterdam last year - a little random, but I do love the pic!)

xo

Friday 19 March 2010

The Fun Theory

Whilst browsing blogs (as you do), I came across an amazing ad for Volkswagen.
The website it's come from is www.thefuntheory.com - it's an ad by advertising agency DDB (where I did some work experience a couple of years ago...but that's a different story).

I really like this advert - it's not trying to sell the audience anything specifically, but it's building a great brand profile - making it seem 'fun'. As well as generating awareness & recognition.

Plus, it's just a lovely idea which makes it a really fun video to watch!

"VW calls this project the Fun Theory, and its aim is to show that people will be happier to do life's chores if they aren't so dull. The German automaker found that 66% more people took the stairs when they could tickle the ivories with their toes, and now it knows that the same sort of success can be achieved with trash.

In the next Fun Theory project, a standard outdoor garbage can was retrofitted with motion sensors linked to a pair of hidden speakers to give the illusion of a very, very deep trash receptacle. On a typical day, the garbage can eats up 41 kg (90.2 lbs) worth of garbage. Add a sound effect that makes your trash sound like it's going into a 2,000 foot deep well and a graphic that says Worldens Djupaste Soptunna; Swedish for "World's biggest dustbin," and the trash load climbs to 72 kg (158.4 lbs)
." - www.autoblog.com



This is the one from the same campaign:




I love the people describing it using sign-language!

xo

La Cantina

Earlier today, The Boy & I went for for an impromptu lunch at a local Mexican restaurant called La Cantina.

It wasn't quite how we had planned to spend the day though...
At around midday, I received a message on facebook from Vodka Revs:

However, when we (Sj, Jd, Dan & myself) got there at ten past three, we were told that too many people had come & they weren't giving any more out!
At the time, I wasn't sure what to be more offended about - the fact we looked like we'd just come for the free lunch, or that they hadn't stated anything about availability on the email! Tsk.

So after that Sj & Jd went for a wander in the rain & me & Dan were planning on going to Asda (to stock up on essentials like doughnuts).

But then! We walked past La Cantina & it happened that the 'A-board' outside was advertising their weekday lunch offer, which is amazing!

I didn't happen to take a picture, but luckily they have one on their website;
I had the quesadilla with 'yucatan'(pork) & fajita spiced fries, Dan had quesadilla with fajita chicken & fries too. We also got some chilli popcorn to share as a starter.
It was Amazing! Really, really good food, service & atmosphere!
Or, as Dan puts it "the food was sooo good!".
Will definitely be going back soon!

(A small grab from the website)



Outside;
Inside;

I really like the little touches such as the real chillies hanging from the ceiling. & the music was pretty good too - I can't remember any specific songs that were played (useless), but it was a good mixture & pretty daytime appropriate.

(If you happen to be in Southampton & want the address, it's 
2a - 3a Bedford Place
Southampton
Hampshire
SO15 2B)

xo 

Wednesday 17 March 2010

Browsing

While browsing other blogs this evening, I came across a beautiful set of pictures from a past issue of W Magazine.

They're of Brad Pitt & Angelina Jolie taken in 2005 - I absolutely love everything about these photos - the styling as a start. It totally makes me want to live a glamorous life in the 50's/60's.
I also really like the irony of the whole shoot, showing Brad & Angelina in a very strange staged domestic setup...








 But when the pictures are this good, who cares?!

(Photos found via: www.cocosteaparty.com/) (Click photographs to enlarge - totally worth it!)

When I was looking for more information about the shoot/photographer, I found some interesting background about the theme/mood of the shoot from the W Magazine archives;

" [Brad Pitt] was in Los Angeles filming Mr. and Mrs. Smith, Doug Liman’s thriller about a glamorous husband and wife who are secretly hired to assassinate each other. While the movie uses domestic ennui as a backdrop for a series of high-style action sequences, Pitt wanted to tell a darker, truer tale, one that explored the “unidentifiable malaise” that so often haunts a seemingly happy couple. “You don't know what’s wrong,” he says, “because the marriage is everything you signed up for.”
That was the inspiration for this photo shoot, which Pitt created with photographer Steven Klein. Tired of celebrity portraiture and always up for an artistic “jam sesh,” as he calls it, Pitt (who’d teamed with Klein and W in 1998 for an equally risqué layout, inspired by the film Fight Club) essentially codirected the photo series, while starring in it alongside his Mr. and Mrs. Smith costar and purported new love, Angelina Jolie. He opted to set it in 1963 (the year he was born), a time when the last traces of the squeaky-clean Fifties were giving way to something more complicated. “The facade was still being maintained,” he says, “but things were starting to crumble underneath.”"
 - Christopher Bagley.



(& apologies- I know this photo shoot is like, five years old now, but having just come across it, I'm still pretty interested!)

I also had a brief look at the photographer Steven Klien's website & think he's a pretty interesting choice...might have to look properly at his work tomorrow!

xo


Monday 15 March 2010

Today

No real words for today.

Just pictures, I think.



&


The fact it's been two years is surreal unbelievable.
You're still greatly missed.

But I have a feeling tomorrow will be more of a celebration...which I guess it should be...I dunno.
Silly northener ;]

xo

Wednesday 10 March 2010

Swift

Just a swift picture of the day, while I'm thinking about it:




This is Bracey & myself, entitled "Jem, do this, it makes it look like we don't have necks"...


& this was Easter last year...obviously...Can you guess what Bracey was dressed as?

& a couple more, just because when I was looking through pictures of Bracey & I to put up here, I noticed just how many there are of us with face paints:

This was for no apparent reason, one night at home...


This was for my 20th birthday - I was a pink tiger & Bracey was a stained-glass window!

I can't wait 'till we live (practically) in the same city at the same time! ♥

xo

Monday 8 March 2010

Currently Listening to

Eminem.

I was just reading his bio' on Spotify, thought it was pretty interesting & worth sharing:


"To call Eminem hip-hop’s Elvis is correct to a degree, but it’s largely inaccurate.
Certainly, Eminem was the first white rapper since the Beastie Boys to garner both sales and critical respect, but his impact exceeded this confining distinction. On sheer verbal skills, Eminem was one of the greatest MCs of his generation -- rapid, fluid, dexterous, and unpredictable, as capable of pulling off long-form narrative as he is delivering a withering aside -- and thanks to his mentor Dr. Dre, he had music to match: thick, muscular loops that evoked the terror and paranoia Em’s music conjured. And, to be certain, a great deal of the controversy Eminem courted -- and during the turn of the millennium, there was no greater pop cultural bogeyman than Marshall Mathers -- came through in how his violent fantasias, often directed at his mother or his wife, intertwined with flights of absurdity that appealed to listeners too young to absorb the psychodramas Eminem explored on his hit albums, The Slim Shady LP and The Marshall Mathers LP. 
  With hits “My Name Is” and “The Slim Shady,” he ruled the airwaves, but it wasn’t long before some detractors acknowledged his depth, helped in part by singles like the mournful “Stan,” written from the perspective of an obsessed fan. Eminem capitalized on this forward momentum by crossing over into the big screen with 8 Mile, earning acclaim for his performance and an Oscar for the film’s anthem “Lose Yourself,” but a number of demons led him to shut down for the second half of the decade, an absence that proved life is indeed empty without Em, before he returned in 2009 with Relapse."
 - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide.

Aaaand picture of the day:

(There's gonna be a few today, because it's so nice outside it reminds me of summer, when Helen, Sj, Jake, Ryan & I went on a boat to the Isle of White for the day - now know forever as "Boat Day"!)

Helen on the boat (sitting up front).


Me & Sj in the back!

Ryan & Jake, driving.


Ahh, I miss summer!

xo

Sunday 7 March 2010

A clever advert

An advert I've heard recently & thought was especially clever, is the one for TalkTalk on Spotify. The website that you get directed to is here.
  The concept for the advertising campaign is simple - people who listen to Spotify for free (& therefore have to put up with the sponsored adverts between songs) can win a years worth of ad-free listening, by visiting the website & entering their favorite song into the TalkTalk play list...& that's it!



I like this concept for a couple of reasons. The first is because of the media being used; with Spotify, TalkTalk can target fairly specific (if a somewhat stereotypical) audience based on what music they're listening to.
The second reason I like the ad, is that it really encourages the target audience to not only visit the TalkTalk website, but to interact with the brand (by uploading their favorite track), & at the same time giving TalkTalk their email address for free, for future promotions.

The final reason I like the advert - & the main reason it caught my attention - is the way in which it was made...By this I mean, when the voice of the ad starts talking, it's taking the piss out of 'normal' adverts you hear on the radio, & then seems to emphasize with the listener by explaining that they won't have to hear any more of these adverts if they win...Very clever!

I can't find the audio on a separate website, but I did find a quote from the TalkTalk blog;

"TalkTalk's commercial director Tristia Clarke said: ""We know you want to spend your time online doing what you love – and that doesn't mean listening to ads.

"We're offering you the chance to win a year's subscription to Spotify Premium every hour – so you can listen all day, without ads interrupting the tunes.""



In other news...
Tonight I'm off to The Hamptons with Sj (the bff) for a free gig that the boy is playing with his friend The Widowmaker! Should be fun :]

Hope y'all have delightful evenings doing whatever you get up to!

xo

Ps. In order to make sure I keep up-to-date with my blog, I've decided to have a 'picture of the day' - just a random picture from the millions I seem to take all the time, & a brief description of what/who/where/etc!
The first one is:

Sj & I on Halloween just gone. I love this picture (& the rest in the series we took that night) almost as much as I love her ♥

Thursday 4 March 2010

The Fountain


Last night, I re-watched The Fountain - a film that I hadn't seen in quite a while, but I was reminded of how amazing it is to look at!
  The story is also lovely (if a little sad), & I really love how, in certain parts, the director leaves you hints about what's going on, but lets you - the viewer - figure it out for yourself.



The writer/director Darren Aronofsky says the film is not meant to provide answers, but to raise the big questions: "trying to find out the reason of why we’re here and what is life and what is love. And what happens when you die. These are questions that people have been asking since the beginning of time,".



  I didn't realise 'till quite recently that Mr. Aronofsky also directed Requiem for a Dream - another amazing film. I especially like the title - Requiem is a Catholic mass for a funeral...so the way I interpret that in relation to the film is that it's about the death of the 'American dream'.

  Both The Fountain & Requiem for a Dream also have really lovely, and unusual soundtracks - they can both be bought online, but I would definitely recommend checking them out on Spotify!

The Fountain soundtrack was done by a guy called Clint Mansell.

 When I was looking for pictures of The Fountain I came across this blog entry. After reading it, I pretty much agree with his opinions on: The Fountain, Vanilla Sky (will prolly get round to blogging my love for that film soon ♥) & The Blair Witch Project. Moulin Rouge I thought was okay...I'm not usually one for musicals, so the fact I have seen it a few times & wouldn't mind watching it again is probably saying a lot.
  I've not seen Crash, Eyes Wide Shut, or A.I., but after reading that, Eyes... sounds like a film that I would enjoy, so might check that out sometime soon!

Thoughts/opinions about said films? Let me know!

xo

Tuesday 2 March 2010

Dogs > Cats.

This made me chuckle a lot...

 
 

xo

Recently...

Iiiya!

  So I was thinking today about the fact I haven't actually 'blogged' in ages (well - a week & a half, or so). Therefore, I thought it might be good to do a little "what I've been up to" post...

It's been hectic at work;

Thought I'd liven-up the glass bin...



Something a customer left on their table for us...



It's also been lovely weather the past couple of days, which has been funny when it comes to online networking - it would seem that everyone I know/follow has been either enjoying the sunshine, or wishing they could!
(well, a few anyways)

  The boy & I went shopping - long story short, he bought me shoes. Aka = the best thing ever! Lovelovelove them! 

 
(picture from www.polyvore.com)




I did see some other really cute shoeboots from River Island:


 - I may have to go back for them sometime soon! 

  We also had a swift trip to Ikea for meatballs. The boy had them with pasta & proclaimed them to be the best thing since sliced bread! (I tried some & can agree it is a pretty awesome meal!) I definitely recommend buying the meatballs & gravy in the food-shop-part & making it at home!
  What else did we do when we were there? Acted like children, of course; 




& took pictures in the mirrored cupboards:



Apart from that, not a lot's been going on! The only annoying thing is that I keep thinking of things to blog about, but then forgetting before I get to a computer...This is partly why I have started to use my phone as a notebook! 
It's a plan Stanley. 

The first (& only relevant) note was to look up the Amelie Soundtrack on Spotify - I did & it was amazing! Check it out if you fancy it! 

xo