Thursday, November 29, 2012

Thoughts on Writing

by Barry Rosenberg

In the beginning was the Word. For many, perhaps, but not for me. In the beginning was the Number. As a young person, I was pretty much inarticulate but from school I won a place to study maths at university. Though I wasn’t a diligent student, I did go on to do a PhD in Artificial Intelligence.


At the time, my unconscious assumption was that the brain/mind was to be understood as information processing. This was in the late-60s, the early days of computing. In the mid-70s, however, I became involved with meditation and tai chi. Re-thinking mind, I became convinced that little bits did not add up to make a whole. In other words, data did not add up to make the mind. Atoms and molecules did not add up to make objects. Becoming a 70s dropout, I spent hours in meditation and tai chi.

Until this time, I’d never taken much note of poetry. Yet in meditation, whole poems would appear in my mind. And they would stay as an uncomfortable itch until I wrote them down. For quite a few years, I was highly itinerant while scraping a living from teaching tai chi and relaxation classes. With me went an increasing paper burden of “spiritual” poems.

Later on and married, my wife was part of an exhibition called, Hebraic Connections. I put in a self-published book of my poetry with the same name. It has since become a collectable and sells for slightly more than the original price!

Over those years, I saw a fair number of gurus - either in Australia or in India. Quite a few were pretty shonky, reflecting what is known as the left-hand path. This means that as meditation deepens, psychic abilities may (seem to) appear and the searcher concentrates on them rather than on the inner search. It is these characters who provide tension in a narrative.

So when I became more settled (conventionally employed), my writing focussed more on guru-types who follow the left-hand path. Initially, this led to a gentle quirkiness. For example, in one little story a teenager exudes wax from his ears while he sleeps. So he sticks a string in his ear and concentrates on making candles that he can sell at the market. During this quirky period, the main influence on me was Terry Pratchett and his Discworld.

So my writing was quirky, but not horrorble. Now, I hadn’t seen the film based on Stephen King’s book, The Green Mile. Nor did I have a particular interest in horror. But one day, I picked up the novel and began to read it. I became an immediate convert to Stephen King - and to horror.

Horror comes in many forms. The worst kind can be read in the newspapers. Just as children like to be chased, adults enjoy the more controllable horror that appears in books. In fact, writers derive an unholy glee in describing destructive zombie hordes or plagues of biting vampires. The problem, and the fun, with these and other eldritch creatures is to find new ways of presenting them.

Which brings me, in a rather convoluted way, to my story. Penumbra wanted stories of exploration in a speculative fiction setting. My story could never have been written by one whose beginning was the Number. Nor even by one whose middling was the Word. Dare I say it? It required someone willing to explore the darker shades of fantasy.

So, from the humorous fantasy of Terry Pratchett and the scarifying horror of Stephen King, Ladies and Gentlemen, I present to you ArachnidMan - a humorous yet scarifying slant on first encounter.

Barry Rosenberg was born in London, then moved to Australia after completing his PhD. Since 1997, Rosenberg has lived on the Sunshine Coast with his artist wife, Judith.

He started to write poetry in 1974 and moved onto short stories and plays. Most of his stories are quirky or speculative fiction. It is only in the past few years that he has been active in submitting his work. His short stories are available on Amazon. The Buddha Leaves, Rosenberg's paranormal e-novel is available at jaffa BOOKS.


Barry invites you all to join his Yahoo group.


Wednesday, November 28, 2012

What to Wear Wednesday: fancy hats

hats, fall 2012, burberry hat
pic via modella  black beret - check beret
Fierce and military, I love this hat.
hats, two tones
two tones hats pic via Elle - brown hat - yellow hat
Two tones: a pop of color.
sequin beret, turban beanie, studded cap
sequin beret - turban hat - spiked hats
The sequin beret can take you from day to night. The turban is a nice alternative to the classic beanie.
If you still didn't have enough of studs this studded cap is your cup of tea (DIY it?).

Now that temperatures go low it's time to get a nice hat for the city. Stylish and wearable.

DIY event! Free shoe customisation masterclass tomorrow in London

click to zoom

Save the date! Tomorrow Underground shop in London will host a a series of Masterclass to inspire people to customize their Wulfrun creepers. The event is organized in collaboration with Rachel Matthews knitting and crochet expert and owner of the shop "Prick your finger".
During the evening you can join a competion to win a pair of Wulfrun creepers and a wool kit.

DIY PUBLIC EVENT
what: free shoe customisation lessons
where: Underground shop Berwick street, London
when: 29th November 2012   4pm-8pm
more info here

Vi trovate a Londra? Allora partecipate domani alle lezioni gratuite organizzate dal negozio di scarpe Underground in Berwick street in cui potrete apprendere come personalizzare le iconiche creepers
All'evento parteciperà Rachel Matthews, esperta di maglia e uncinetto e proprietaria del negozio Prick your fingers, il paradiso degli amanti della lana e della maglia.
Durante la serata sarà possibile concorrere alla vincita di un paio di Wulfrun Creepers e un kit lana.
L'evento è aperto al pubblico.

DIY event

cosa: laboratorio creativo per personalizzare le scarpe creepers
dove: Underground shop Berwick street, Londra
quando: 29 Novembre 2012   4pm-8pm
per saperne di più cliccate qui

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

DIY 5 Christmas chic gifts for your friends and coworkers

bag diy, fashion diy, bag accessory, free pattern


Less than a month to Christmas. It's time to find the perfect gift for anyone! Are you looking for the surprise effect? It will be easier to make unique gifts if you take the time to DIY them.

Today we'll make a gift for your friends and coworkers. Don't give the same gift to all of them, their tastes are different. This is a fun accessory to decorate your bag. Each friend has his own personality but all women love shoes just find the one that better suit them.

You can download the free pattern for all these small shoes  and join the fun!



Your fashionista friend is the one that wears the latest trends and shares style advices with the group. She'll love the iconic Armadillo shoe.

 The mommy in your work group is always busy with home, kids, work and still finds the time to make biscuits at home. How can she do it? Nobody knows. Her perfect shoe is the Zanotti heeless wedge, magically balanced.

Your youngest workmate is an enthusiastic but it's also inexperienced, she still walks the office in her sporty shoes. She'll learn from you how to be professional at work.

The reliable is your favorite coworker. If you give her a job she'll do it on time. You can count on her just like you can count on your classic pumps, they can save any look! We'll do a mary jane for her.

Each office has one, the coworker with the spirit of a leader. She can be aggressive sometimes but she's determined to do well her job, maybe her ideas will take the team to the next level. Her shoe is high and studded.

Natale è alle porte, pronte per la corsa ai regali?
Può essere molto stressante correre da un negozio all'altro tentando di accontentare tutti. Siete alla ricerca del fattore sorpresa? Fare un regalo unico sarà più facile se sarete voi a confezionarlo.  
Oggi realizziamo un regalo per le amiche colleghe che sono con noi tutta la giornata.
Guai a fare a tutte lo stesso regalo, sono tutte diverse ma ognuna di loro porta sempre con sé la sua borsa; oggi la decoreremo con degli accessori a forma di scarpa, una diversa per ognuna di loro.
Scaricate il modello gratuito delle scarpe  e 

On November, Nanowrimo, and Exploration

by Dianna L. Gunn

In spite of the rain and cold keeping me indoors, when I heard that November's Penumbra issue was going to have an exploration theme, I thought it was perfect. Not because American Thanksgiving celebrates taking land from the natives or because of any historical feat, but because November is the month of Nanowrimo.

For those of you who don't know, Nanowrimo is an annual challenge to write 50, 000 words of fiction in a month. The motto of quantity over quality along with the large community and tight deadline forces you to just write, without holding anything back. It's a great way to discover whether or not you actually have a novel in you. Along the way you'll learn more about yourself and about writing than you thought possible, even though you probably won't want to look at the draft when you're done with it.

Even after eight years, I consider every Nanowrimo an exploration. Each year I start with a story—usually the bare bones of one—and explore all its avenues. I travel through the world I've created for this year's novel, learning everything there is to know. I discover my character's darkest secrets and their greatest joys.

Year after year, I also discover things about myself. I've discovered that, if left alone for a month with no ability to go outside and only a computer to keep me company, I can write 300, 000 words in 30 days. I've discovered that this behaviour leads to tendonitis, which I still struggle with. I've also discovered that if I'm actually trying to do well in school, I can't accomplish anywhere near that word count.

Similarly, in one year of working at Penumbra I've learned a lot. I've learned what it takes to build a successful magazine, how difficult it is to manage a blog when you're relying primarily on other people, and how awesome it feels to see the slow but steady climb of readers. I've also learned that even I have a burn out point, and that as much as I want to be superwoman, sometimes I have to take a step back and refuse extra duties.

This November, I planned to discover a whole new world with my writing. I'm also hoping to find new ways to make Penumbra shine and to bring our blog—and the eMagazine itself—to new audiences all over the world.

What did you hope to discover this November?

Dianna L. Gunn is a young Canadian fiction writer who specializes in dark fantasy. She also writes poetry, generally dark, which is her way of dealing with life. This insightful author hosts a website covering every aspect of fiction writing and interviews with noted guest authors.

Learn more about Dianna L. Gunn on her website and follow her on Twitter.

Sunday, November 25, 2012

4 handmade Christmas gift ideas

custom camera strap, camera strap diy
clockwise: Romantic camera strap - ruched strap - bohemian strap
 I know most of you are bloggers themselves and or keen on photography. Unfortunately the fashion world isn't making many fancy camera accessories yet but don't worry, crafters already filled the gap.
Here's a gift that a photography addicted may like: a custom camera strap. You can buy one or DIY your own. There are an infinite variety of trims on the market that can give a different appeal to a camera strap.

So di parlare a molte bloggers che raccontano il loro mondo attraverso l'obiettivo di una macchina fotografica.  Gli accessori per la nostra amata reflex non sono ancora così diffusi ma non disperate:  gli appassionati di fai da te hanno già riempito il vuoto. 
Ecco un regalo che un appassionato di fotografia amerà: la tracolla personalizzata. Potete acquistarne una o realizzarla voi, ci sono moltissime trine in merceria da cui partire.

handpaintend silk ties
hand painted silk ties : purple - blue
Ties happens to be a common gift for a man just like silk scarves for a woman but they can be very special if they are handmade. These are handpainted on silk Silk painting is something I would like to try one day, see how many beautiful color effects can be obtained? In occasion of its first birthday, Dreammor shop is offering a 10% off discount until the 15th of December with the code FIRSTYEAR.

Cravatte per gli uomini e foulard per le donne, a volte diventano il regalo dell'ultimo minutoma possono diventare un regalo particolarmente aprezzato se sono fatte a mano. Queste sono dipinte a mano su seta. La pittura su seta ci permette di ottenere delle bellissime sfumature. In occasione del suo primo compleanno il negozio Dreammor offre il 10% di sconto fino al 15 Dicembre con il codice FIRSTYEAR.

animal gloves, crochet, knitted
funny gloves - fox - bear - ladybug
These gloves are adorable, don't you agree?
L'effetto tenerezza è assicurato con questi guanti a musetto di animale.
phone cover diy
iphone case: jewel - make up case
There's a competion between fashion week attenders: they all try to wear the quirkiest iphone cover. You can dress your phone according to your taste gluing an earring to its back or make it look like something else for example a make up palette.

Durante la fashion week gli invitati alle sfilate di moda fanno gara a mostrare a sfoggiare le cover per iphone più originali. Le possibilità di personalizzazione sono infinite; potete impreziosire il telefono con una spilla o un orecchino o persino ingannare l'occhio e travestirlo da un altro oggetto per esempio una trousse da trucco.

Friday, November 23, 2012

The cape coat DIY reloaded: Finishing

cape coat sew along, cape coat diy,cape diy
The cape coat diy

cape coat sewalongCape coats are trending right now but you already know it!
A lot of you are making the DIY cape coat  I shared with you last winter season!
Since I received many questions about the finishing of the coat today we talk deeper about it.
These details are up to you. The coat can be done with one seam and will work without the collar but you can choose the level of customization you want based on your skills and taste.

This is what I did to finish my coat.


There is also another freebie for you, it's the corean collar free pattern I added to the coat.

I see dogtooth paired with brights in a lot of shops lately so I guess my cape will still be trendy this year! :D


For those of you that don't know anything about this cape coat you can download the free pattern here then follow the step by step tutorial to make it.



Le mantelle sono tornate di moda ma voi lo sapete già! Molte di voi infatti ne stanno realizzando una con il modello che ho condiviso con voi l'anno scorso. Avendo ricevuto molte domande sulle rifiniture oggi torniamo a parlarne.
La mantella può essere finita cucendo solo le spalle senza dover aggiungere colli o bottoni, le rifiniture poi dipenderanno dai vostri gusti.
Alla lista dei modelli scaricabili gratuitamente oggi si aggiunge anche il colletto alla coreana che ho realizzato per la mantella.
Se non avete mai sentito parlare di questa mantella potete scaricare qui il modello gratuito e poi seguire le spiegazioni per realizzarla.




 What I used:

  • 2,5 meters  of knitted dogtooth wool for the coat
  • same amount of torquoise taffeta lining
  • torquoise pannolenci for details 
  • 3 black buttons

 
After sewing the shoulders here's how to refine
  • The arm slashes
  • The collar
  • The lining
  • the buttons

Avrete bisogno di:
  •  2,5 metri di stoffa (la mia è di lana)
  • stesso metraggio di fodera
  • pannolence turchese per le rifiniture
  • 3 bottoni neri
Dopo aver cucito le spalle della mantella ecco come rifinire 
  •  le aperture per le braccia
  • il colletto alla coreana
  • la fodera
  • i bottoni

Refining the arm slashes


Cut the arm slashes
Tagliate le aperture per le maniche


Cut this triangle at the top of the slash

Tagliate un triangolo alla sommità del taglio come in figura

Fold the edges on the back

Ripiegate sul rovescio i bordi


It will look like this on the right side

Ecco come apparirà l'apertura a dritto


Cut two strips of torquoise pannolenci  (slightly longer than the slash) and put them close to each other on the inside of the slash. Let them touch so the slash will appear closed untill you put your arms into it.

Tagliate due striscie di pannolence poco più lunghe dell'apertura e posizionatele l'una affianco all'altra sul rovescio. Si devono toccare così l'apertura appare chiusa.


This is like it will look on the back
Ecco come appaiono sul rovescio

Finishing the collar

 
I put a adhesive facing behind the pannolenci - Ho stirato una teletta dietro al pannolence


Fold the wool fabric in half and cut one collar shape 
Cut from the collar pattern the 1 cm edge

Usate il modello una volta  sulla stoffa uguale alla mantella, il modello è metà colletto.
Ritagliate il bordo di un centimetro dal modello (segnato sul disegno) e ritagliatene la sagoma sulla stoffa.
La sagoma più grande tagliatela in pannolence.




Cut the big shape from pannolenci
Cut the 1 cm strip from wool
Sew the two pieces together 
Put the two collars one onto the other with the right sides together and sew the outer edge.
You get a pocket with one side open.

Where to sew the collar

As you can see from the finished cape pics the collar remains open at the center, it doesn't go over the row of buttons.

Cucite i due pezzi insieme. Mettete dritto contro dritto i due colletti e cuciteli insieme. Otterrete una tasca aperta in fondo. 

Dove cucire il colletto?
Come potete vedere dalle immagini della mantella finita, il colletto rimane aperto al centro cioè non si sovrappone alla striscia centrale in cui sono alloggiati i bottoni.  Questa striscia è indicata sul modello al centro davanti.

Adding the lining


Use again the pattern to cut another cape, just like you did with the coat

Usate il modello della mantella nuovamente sulla fodera.
Ritagliate un'altra mantella e cucitela.


Put the wrong sides of the fabrics together and stitch the lining on the edges of the coat, all around the hem and along the shoulder seam so the lining won't move.

Ora fate combaciare le due mantelle in modo che i due lati dritti rimangano visibili e cucite la fodera lungo tutto il bordo della mantella.
Cucite anche le spalle cosi la fodera non si muoverà.


Add the buttons


On the pattern there is a vertical line at the center front, that is the where you place the buttons.
 Try the coat on and use pins to decide where to place buttons
Place one just below the neck
Place the other two at a distance of 18 cm each.
Buttons go on the left side of the coat and the button holes on the right side.
Make button holes with your sewing machine or by hand (see how here) .

Sul modello c'è una striscia verticale al centro davanti: è dove andremo a mettere i bottoni.
Indossate la mantella e con gli spilli decidete dove mettere i bottoni.
Mettetene uno appena sotto al collo e gli altri due a distanza di 18 cm l'uno dall'altro.
I bottoni vanno sul lato sinistro mentre le asole sul lato destro.
Potete realizzare le asole con la macchina da cucire (leggete il manuale di istruzioni della macchina) oppure a mano (guardate come fare qui)


Thursday, November 22, 2012

From All of Us at Penumbra eMag

We Wish You and Yours 

HEALTHY
and
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!




Wednesday, November 21, 2012

What to Wear Wednesday: Parkas

parka
sheep lined  parka - topshop parka - military coat
parka
Parka with flag - faux leather sleeves parka - burgundy parka

I've never worn olive green or sporty coats. Since I wasn't going hunting or fishing I felt like I didn't need any of those functional coats with a lot of pockets or camouflage patterns. Not that I'm changing my habits, I still don't need to disguise between the trees but I'm reconsidering army green. These coats look super comfortable and warm with synthetic fur lining.

Parkas along with checked shirts and ripped jeans are having a moment. The deliberately messy style  that Grunge promoted is back on the streets even if maybe without the rebellion against the pop culture that it represented in the 90s.

How will you wear parkas? With a polished look or with messy hair like a 90's girl?


Per me le giacche verdi e piene di tasche erano relegate al guardaroba maschile per attività quali la caccia e la pesca. Francamente non ho mai considerato di indossare il verde bottiglia. Non mi dedicherò certo a nessuna di queste attività ma potrei riconsiderare le mie posizioni e fare un'eccezione per questi parka dall'aspetto caldo e confortevole. 
Parka e giacche militari indossati con camicie a scacchi e jeans strappati sono capi simbolo dello stile deliberatamente trasandato del grunge anni 90. Uno stile che oggi viene riscoperto e diventa trend di stagione (anche se forse svuotato del suo significato di ribellione contro la cultura pop).

E voi come indosserete i parka? Con capi bon ton o con i capelli spettinati proprio come una ragazza degli anni 90?

kate moss, parka


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Where Is the Humour?

by Edoardo Albert

The future, it appears, has no jokes. Nor, for that matter, does the urban present, even if it is filled with glittery vampires. For some reason, speculative fiction appears to be almost completely humourless – think of the number of magazines, ezines, fanzines and geezines that advertise themselves as ‘dark’, ‘darker’ or ‘so bloody morbid we’re invisible at night’. Why is this? True, the old grandmasters of speculative fiction that I grew up reading, men like Robert Heinlein, Arthur Clarke and Isaac Asimov, were more concerned with imagining and, dare I say, propagandising the future than populating it with jokes (although anyone reading ‘The Number of the Beast’ would have to assume that Heinlein, at least, had a sense of humour since the alternative, that he seriously means this, is just too awful to contemplate). But surely now – when we live in a world with all the trappings of the wildest science fiction future in an everyday iPhone – it’s time to admit that the future is here and it’s completely and utterly ridiculous. I mean, what would the Futurians have made of a future that achieved technological miracles and used them to turn Paris Hilton into the most famous person on the planet?

In fact, all the prophets and soothsayers were wrong. Take George Orwell for example. Although he was correct in much, he saw the future as a boot stamping on a human face forever. Well, the future turned out to be a human face gurning forever. As such, maybe the reason there’s so few jokes in speculative fiction is because it’s pretty well impossible to top what’s actually out there. Imagine the most extreme ad absurdum you can, and someone will be offering it on eBay. After all, one young woman just auctioned her virginity for $780,000 and justifies it as a career move. You really couldn’t make it up.

Then why should you? The world is the most wonderful resource for the writer of the absurd and it’s there to be mined: after all, what could be sillier than sex, money and politics?

The temptation, of course, is to conclude that because we are absurd, as a species and a civilisation, then everything is. But that, it turns out, is a conclusion too far – there is nothing absurd in nature although there is much that is strange and grotesque. Absurdity is a human specific attribute, and one that grows more pronounced the greater our powers become. “Ye shall be as gods,” was the promise, and we are, wielding powers undreamed of, sufficient to make a paradise on earth. But, instead, we have the Shopping Channel. It’s an object lesson in unintended consequences. We could imagine Jehovah, standing by the gates of Eden, asking, “So how’s that god business shaping up for you?” It’s the job of the writer to answer, “Er, not so well.”

Edorado Albert's story Time Hoppers is featured in the November issue of Penumbra EMag.

The responses to Edoardo Albert’s work rather prove what he argues above. The stories, the books, the articles, have drawn some compliments, but the best response ever, which saw a friend rolling on the ground, helpless with laughter, was a lonely-hearts ad. It was probably the bit about tickling the belly of a wolf that did it.

Find Edoardo Albert’s books (he’s particularly proud of Northumbria: The Lost Kingdom which has just been published) and stories via his website although the lonely-hearts ad will not be making an appearance in the foreseeable future). Connect with him through his blog, Twitter or Facebook.

Monday, November 19, 2012

Old coat to new coat using leather

via Outsapop
via Outsapop

Leather is a wonderful material to work with for a variety of reasons, one of these is that it does not fray so you can cut it, slash it,pierce it and always obtain a refined look. Today I would like to share with you this beautiful refashioned coat made by the DIY Queen of Outsapop. In my opinion the leather applications give a whole new life to it The dogtooth pattern she chose is classical but made new by leather. I also like black on dark grey, it's sophisticated and wearable. I absolutely love it!


Una delle ragioni che rendono la pelle un materiale molto interessante con cui lavorare è che non sfila: la potete tagliare, bucare ed ottenere sempre un lavoro rifinito. Oggi vi propongo un cappotto reso attuale da delle applicazioni in pelle realizzato dall'esperta di DIY di Outsapop. Penso che questo cappotto sia moderno e sofisticato sia per la scelta del motivo pied de poule sia per l'accostamento dei colori nero e grigio scuro.

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Gold dipped walnut bracelet tutorial

diy, fashion diy, walnut bracelet
gold foil walnut bracelet
diy, fashion diy, wlnut bracelet

Do you know how to open a walnut without smashing its shell? I didn't know that was possible untill I saw that my friend Pietro was capable to do it.
Last year I started collecting pieces of jewelry inspired by nature (do you remember the leaves necklace tutorial?) and once I had these beautiful walnut shells available it was easy to figure it out how to use them.
I dipped them in gold using gold aluminum foil to exalt their own beauty and then used them just like beads.
I still haven't told you how to not smash the shell (but maybe I'm the only one who didn't know it!). You have to insert the tip of a knife in a hole between the two shells, pivot the hand clockwise and *click* the walnut opens.
I used a driller to pierce these walnut. Please be careful when using these tools.
Curious enough to see the full tutorial?


Sapete aprire una noce senza schiacciarne il guscio? Beh io non sapevo fosse possibile fino a quando non ho visto farlo dal mio amico Pietro. E' quasi una magia, si inserisce la punta del coltello fra i due gusci, si ruota la mano e tac la noce scatta come una serratura e si apre.
E' circa un anno che colleziono gioielli ispirati alla natura (vi ricordate il tutorial per realizzare la collana con le foglie?) e quando ho scoperto come salvare i gusci di noce ho capito subito come li avrei utilizzati.
Dopo averli cosparsi d'oro di pellicola dorata li ho utilizzati come perline.
Se siete curiose di vedere come ho realizzato il braccialetto?

Thursday, November 15, 2012

The Future of Exploration

by Kristen Saunders


October 16, 2012 before he took the highest skydive in history, Felix Baumgartner said, “Sometimes you have to be up really high to know how small you are. I’m going home now.” A minute or so later he would be the first man to break the sound barrier with nothing but his body going 833.9 mph. Seven years were spent planning and engineering Red Bull Stratos; the project that gave Felix the chance to break three world records in one day. On top of sky diving from the highest point ever, 128,100 feet above the Earth’s surface, he also ballooned to the highest point in history and managed to stay alive. His special pressurized suit kept his blood from boiling in the stratosphere.

Red Bull Stratos was one of many historical explorations that have been done this year. Not only did we achieve our highest heights, we went deep under water, finally taking footage of the distinguished Challenger Deep. In March, James Cameron successfully culminated eight years of hard work. He traveled to the deepest known point on the Earth’s sea floor, Challenger Deep, which lies at the bottom of Mariana’s Trench. Cameron traveled 36,000 feet below the surface of the Pacific Ocean in a one man submarine called Deepsea Challenger to see what lay at the bottom of our oceans. He was the first to capture images of life from those depths, succeeding where the Trieste did not in 1960. The Trieste’s descent kicked up so much silt nothing was able to be captured on film.

These projects employed new technology to achieve some of the greatest moments of exploration in our life time. Mars Rover Curiosity also joined the news in August landing on Mars by way of a rocket propelled space crane. These feats of engineering are changing not only what we are able to see, but what we will be able to do in the future.

Writers will now be able to look on these markers of history and imagine what we may next encounter here on Earth or on other planets. The technology in the suit that Felix Baumgartner wore could easily be translated into a suit someone on Mars (or another planet) might wear. The next great sport could be strato-jumping and the wars of the future may well be fought by one-man-submarines at the depths of the oceans. Our history tends to shape our fiction and I am watching closely to see where our next “small steps” will take us.

I am curious to see the role of companies in these projects. NASA’s Curiosity was the only project the U.S. government fully owned. Rolex sponsored the Challenger Deep dive and Red Bull plastered its name into the Red Bull Stratos project. Companies are starting to make major investments in science as pet projects. This isn’t a rant; it is just what’s happening. Private firms are making the discoveries of tomorrow. This may change how exploration will be done. It could open doors of opportunity for some and also shut them for others.

It will be interesting to see how these events will affect the writing done in the near future and also the years to come.

Kristen Saunders is a recent addition to Penumbra EMag, serving as an editorial intern. She loves to write science fiction in her free time and plans to take on NaNoWriMo this year.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

What to wear Wednesday:something blue

clockwise from up left: black jumper - Stella McCartney dress - Mietta blue top - blue clutch - bug necklace

Gucci velvet dress - Asos blue dress - Zanotti boots

Snake shoes - Stella McCartney jumper - Chloe bag - Wide leg trousers


I'm mad for the latest Stella McCartney collection. The fitted and flared dress is amazing. The colored panels are vaguely sporty while the frills make this dress feminine and chic. Browns are well blended together but it's blue that gives that energetic touch to the dress. This winter if you want to wear brights you can choose blue.  I spotted a couple of runway look-alike looks while shopping online. This intarsia sweater is a tribute to Stella McCartney rich embroidered top and this draped Asos dress is clearly inspired by another amazing fall dress: the Gucci velvet number.
Stella McCarney also shows us how well blue, black and white go along together.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Hacking the Writer Brain: The Stevenson Imperative

by Jude Griffin

It’s NaNoWriMo time again. National Novel Writing Month ( hundreds of thousands of people around the world dedicate themselves to writing fifty thousand words between 1 Nov. and 30 Nov.

As an enthusiastic but less than prolific participant, I'm fascinated by the people who manage to write fifty thousand words in a month. Once, when I was relating a glorious but short-lived period of writing 5000 words a week to my writing group, the whole room gasped. As a whole, writers love what they do while simulatenously struggling like hell to do it.

WTF, right?

Right.

So this time around, I'm making my writer brain the subject of an experiment. An experiment that will last til the next NaNo next year, and I will be documenting it in occasional posts here.

The first principle to be put into practice is what I'll call "The Stevenson Imperative" after the wonderful Jennifer Stevenson, author of the astonishing Trash Sex Magic (inter alia), who once sent me one of the finest pieces of writing advice ever:

"Write a page a day or burn in hell."

Genius.

Deceptively simple, but it strikes at the core of what underlies great productivity in writing: make it a habit.

What does it take to form a habit? Repetition+time=habit. But how much time and how much repetition is where it starts to get fuzzy. Maxwell Maltz published his book on cognitive behavioral therapy, Psycho-Cybernetics, in 1960 from which we seem to have gotten the very popular modern-day belief that it takes twenty-one days to form a habit.

While there is no scientific proof that three weeks has magical habit-forming power, we do know that repetition over time creates physical changes in the brain--less the subject of conscious decision-making and focus and more the output of a brain trained to perform.

In The War of Art, a book all about our resistance to writing (or, more generally, behavior chance), Stephen Pressfield writes:

“There’s a secret that real writers know that wannabe writers don’t, and the secret is this: It’s not the writing part that’s hard. What’s hard is sitting down to write."

I used to thrash about in avoidance. I'd do the dishes, clean the utensil drawer, check all the batteries in the flashlights, organize the medicine cabinet, remind myself of how to use our fire extinguishers--until I applied the same tactic that I used to get myself out of bed at 4:15 am for crew: no thought permitted. Just action.

If I treated getting up and getting ready as non-negotiable, if I did not allow myself even one moment of lying back to think about how I felt, how I tired I was, how cold out it must be, could I sleep a little longer, then it was much easier for me every morning to get out of bed. It sounds simple, but changing where you let your brain go takes constant reinforcement.

But now the challenge for me is the writing. I can open the document, read my notes, even envision a scene. But then: nothing. I am frozen. My brain feels weird. I can't write anything good. I don't know how to open the scene.

Ugh.

This is my challenge. To move forward when even the next step is unclear and feels shaky and wrong. This is where I want to teach myself to have faith in the transcendental nature of writing, as so memorably described by Joyce Carol Oates in The Paris Review's "The Art of Fiction No. 72":

"One must be pitiless about this matter of “mood.” In a sense, the writing will create the mood. If art is, as I believe it to be, a genuinely transcendental function—a means by which we rise out of limited, parochial states of mind—then it should not matter very much what states of mind or emotion we are in. Generally I've found this to be true: I have forced myself to begin writing when I've been utterly exhausted, when I've felt my soul as thin as a playing card, when nothing has seemed worth enduring for another five minutes . . . and somehow the activity of writing changes everything."

This is parallel to something I have noticed with running, or, more precisely in my case, waddling. It takes about fifteen minutes before it starts to feel good, before it stops being an effort, before a thousand nose and ankle itches stop plaguing me. I've learned to have faith in the power of those fifteen minutes of slogging, before the endorphins release and the dopamine rewards me for sticking it out.

One part of me knows this is also true for writing, that it also takes me about fifteen minutes of sustained effort before the act of writing stops being so difficult and fraught and becomes pleasurable. But, like exercise, the gap between knowing and doing can be large. So my task this month is to have faith. To apply The Stevenson Imperative and have faith that, in the act of doing so, everything changes.

Jude Griffin is a writer, photographer, and an expert in learning and knowledge management. Inclined toward geekitude in all things, she loves to read about the neuroscience of creativity. She is a member of the rollicking NaNo Boston 2012 group, reads slush for Nightmare and Lightspeed magazines, and is working on a novel that might be sci fi, might be fantasy.

Stay connected with Jude on Facebook.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Gold dipped nails DIY tutorial

gold nails, gold manicure, diy, fashion diy,
gold nails
 Lately I've been having some fun with foil sheets. Get them if you haven't already because you can make some pretty cool accessories with it. You can make "gold brooches" out of plastic toys or put some "gold" on your nails. Isn't it nice? Even better this manicure only takes a few minutes to make it.
If you love shiny things, you'll love aluminum foil.

you'll need:
  •  colored nail polish
  • aluminum foil adhesive (foil glue)
  • gold aluminum foil

Vi piacciono gli accessori luccicanti? Allora amerete la foglia d'oro. La pellicola dorata vi permette di ricoprire "d'oro" qualunque cosa vi capiti a tiro. Potrete trasformare dei giocattoli in plastica in spille dorate o dorare le vostre unghie e in pochi minuti, giusto il tempo di fare asciugare lo smalto!

    Vi serviranno:
    • smalto
    • pellicola dorata per il foiling
    • colla per doratura


     Apply a coat of nail polish

    Applicate uno strato di smalto



    Apply foil glue on nails with a brush. You can apply it randomly.
    When glue becomes sticky and transparent (in a couple of minutes) cut tiny pieces of aluminum foil and stick them on nails.

    Applicate la colla per doratura sulle unghie con un pennello. Non è necessario essere precise, applicatela qui e là.
    Quando la colla diventa trasparente e appiccicosa tagliate dei piccoli pezzetti di alluminio dorato e applicateli sulle unghie.


    gold nails, gold manicure, diy, fashion diy,

     Press the foil on nails a little and then peel it off.

    Premete la pellicola sull'unghia e poi rimuovetela.




    That's it! You've done.
    You can use the foil again to add only a tiny bit of gold on nails.
    About top coat.  I applied a layer of top coat on one hand. The top coat makes the gold foil a little less shiny and mirrory but protects it .You can leave nails uncovered if the manicure is for one special evening only (avoiding the contact with water).

    P.S. We'll use the foil again in another DIY project the coming week. Stay tuned!


    Ecco fatto!
    Potete usare di nuovo la stessa pellicola sulle unghie quando vorrete aggiungere solo un tocco dorato qui e là.
    Se volete proteggere lo strato dorato dovette applicare un top coat sulle unghie però la doratura diventerà meno luminosa e riflettente. Se la manicure è per una serata speciale allora potete anche saltare il top coat evitando il contatto con l'acqua.

    Vi è piaciuto giocare ad essere re Mida? Allora rimanete sintonizzate, useremo di nuovo la foglia d'oro in un altro progetto fai da te la prossima settimana!

    Thursday, November 8, 2012

    3 ways to wear mustache with style

    mustache slippers
    via Carolines Mode
    similar mustache slippers can be found at Zara and Nordstrom

    mustache scarf
    Mustache neckwarmes : tweed and knitted one
    mustache ring, mustace bracelet
    mustache double ring - mustache bracelet


    Mustache made a funny appeareance in fashion a couple of years ago and never left the scene ever since!
    The hilarious trend is contagious. Mustache can be found on shoes, tees, scarfs, think something and you can find with mustache on it.
    Ever though mustache could look good on a girl? 
    Most of these mustache werables can be diy-ed, like the mustache neckwarmer for example sewing a piece of leather onto a scarf or even easier a piece of felt.
    You can paint on your flats a pair of mustache or if you're keen on wire jewerly you can make a mustache bracelet.