Sunday, September 29, 2013

Easy snakeskin effect manicure DIY

diy snakeskin print manicure, diy nails, diy stencil, diy manicure

There are two main reasons why you can't take your eyes off these beautiful amazon shoes; the lace up design and the vibrant bright color that really draws attention. If you want to get your nails under the spotlight, take inspiration from the bold snakeskin print and make your diy manicure. It's surprisely easy and quick to do.






you'll need:

  • nail polish in two colors
  • mesh fabric scrap


If you don't have the exact shade mix nail polish as you would do with paint to get the desidered color.


Paint the mesh fabric with black nail polish.
Lift your stencil.


Put it on the nail, take it off and you've done.
You'll get different patterns any time making the snakeskin effect more realistic.

If you stain your fingers remove the excess nail polish with nail varnish remover or protect your fingers with paper scotch tape.


More DIY nails

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Shoes you can't ignore

aquazzura lace up shoes, snakeskin lace up
Aquazzura Amazon shoes  s/s 2013 pic via netrobe
You could go everywhere with a plain shirt, boyfriend jeans and a striking pair of shoes like these. Maybe there would be only  few sunny weeks left to wear them but I would wear them any single day. Shoes have the power to lift a casual outfit to show stopper and these are shoes you just cannot ignore. Below you'll see every color available with the snakeskin print because I couldn't decide which was the best and a few other beautiful shoes designed by Edgardo Osorio who worked for Salvatore Ferragamo, RenĂ© Caovilla and Roberto Cavalli.


sexy thing aquazzura shoes
"sexy thing" shoes pic via aquazzura.com





sexy thing aquazzura shoes
sweet like a candy Aquazzura "sexy thing" shoes pic via shoefessional

aquazzura snakeskin lace up  shoes
Blue Amazon shoes  pic via denoto

aquazzura snakeskin  lace up shoes
pic via netrobe
aquazzurra pina colada shoes
"Pina Colada" shoes pic via fashion based
pic via Shoerazzi

Nude and black are the colors chosen for fall.

Saturday, September 21, 2013

DIY painted plastic earrings inspired by Burberry

diy painted plastic earrings inspired by Burberry, diy jwelry

diy painted plastic earrings inspired by Burberry, diy jewelry, fashion diy

Being able to watch the fashion trends of next spring is inspiring and exciting. The only downside of fashion weeks is waiting six months to wear those clothes. Don't worry if you're impatient,  there's nothing you can't do with the help of your hands. Get inspiration from the runways, bring your personal touch to the design to get your own brand new accessory to wear.
Today I got inspiration from the Burberry Prorsum collection. Christopher Bailey makes modern, young clothes enriched with beautiful details that any girl just want to wear. Spring 2014 collection makes no exception. It's all played around pastel colors and big jewel decorations. It's girly and delicate as much as the fall collection is rock and strong.  Bags have a simple shape and some of them are embellished with tiny 3D plastic flowers, a detail that in my opinion can make beautiful earrings. I used a plastic bottle, nail polish and a blow dryer to make them. See how.

burberry prorsum spring 2014 bags
Burberry Prorsum spring 2014







You'll need:
  • a plastic bottle
  • a blow dryer
  • two half beads
  • nails and earrings backs
  • glue
  • transparent thread
  • nail polish


Fold in half a piece of paper and draw half of a flower on it.
Use the pattern to cut two flowers out of the plastic bottle.


Sew the half bead at the center of the flower with the transparent thread.
Hold the flower in your hand and shape the petals with the blow dryer. Heat the plastic and fold each petal with your fingers.


Glue the earring nails at the back.


Earrings are ready. You can leave them crystal clear or you can add a touch of colour with nail polish.



Mix clear nail polish with a drop of colored one and paint the petals with the brush.

Friday, September 20, 2013

Milano Fashion week juice!

milan fashion week spring 2014, dsquared2
Dsquared2 spring 2014


Looks on and off the catwalk,  funky accessories, the models, the shows, the fresh spring collections, the fun, have a look at condensed version of Milano fashion week in pictures, get inspired!

 Hourglass corsets, saturated colors, Dsquared2 collection for the next spring is inspired to the fifthies.

milan fashion week spring 2014 backstage
Joan Smalls at MFW pic via Grazia




milan fashion week spring 2014 backstage
pic via Grazia.it

Street style shoe-watching

milan fashion week spring 2014 street style
Kimono sleeves for this floaty dress via Fab sugar
fendi spring 2014
pic via Fab sugar

Bowl cut for Fendi models...fashion forward or just too rough?

fendi spring 2014 shoes
Fendi fab architectural shoes via Vogue.it

fendi spring 2014
Fendi original patterns via Vogue.it


diy belt, full skirt  dsquared2 spring 2014

 Runway DIY : belt into bow, an instant transformation at Dsquared2 s/s 2014 via fashionologie

gladiator shoes, street style milan fashion week spring 2014
pic via fab sugar

Street style shoe show off. Gladiators shoes, it's good to see you back!

street style milan fashion week spring 2014


Lippy print pic via fab sugar

street style milan fashion week spring 2014
Loewe fringe shoes pic via fashionologie


Just like YSL shoes with the fringe multiplied by 3. Can a shoe embellishment be too much?
Guess who's wearing them...

street style milan fashion week spring 2014

Anna Dello Russo of course. Pic via Grazia


antonio marras spring 2014
Models backstage at Marras spring 2014 via Anna Corraini

prada spring 2014

Prada spring 2014 collection pic via Grazia Daily UK

diesel black gold backstage
Nice braid at Diesel Black Gold ss14 via Diesel

Emporio Armani spring 2014
Emporio Armani spring 2014
milan fashion week spring 2014 backstage
Alberta Ferretti pic via Vogue.it

milan fashion week spring 2014 backstage
Les Copain backstage via Vogue.it
milan fashion week spring 2014 backstage
Gucci Backstage via Vogue.it

Thursday, September 19, 2013

One Great way to use grosgrain

 grosgrain graffiti lela rose dress
grosgrain graffiti lela rose dress
Lela rose dress - Pics by The Glamourai
Just for pretty edges? No way. Like this dress shows, grosgrain ribbon can become a fabulous decorative element. Get several meters, pin it randomly on a dress or on a plain tee to get unexpected graffiti effects. Sew and wear it. Quick, chic and different!

Roger Rabbit: A Cultural Impact

Part 1 by Andrea Blundell

In 1988, a little-known cartoon character got his big break. He wasn’t new to the world—after all, he’d been created by author Gary K. Wolf in the 1981 novel Who Censored Roger Rabbit?—but he'd finally “made it” with a starring role in the Disney movie Who Framed Roger Rabbit.

And now, twenty-five years after the release of the movie that made Roger Rabbit a household name, we can definitively look back and see the true cultural impact this irritatingly loveable rabbit has had on us. Part I of this article will look at the impact on the film industry, while Part II will examine the social impact of the film.

The most obvious and immediate impact was in the world of animation and film making. Who Framed Roger Rabbit was heralded as a groundbreaking film because of the unique combinations it presented—traditional animation and live action, Toons and humans, Disney, and Warner Brothers.

Mixing animation and live action had been around for decades before Who Framed Roger Rabbit. In 1919, Max Fleischer began producing Out of the Inkwell, a series of shorts in which he interacted with the animated characters. Then there were Disney’s Alice Comedies, shorts which featured a live action girl and an animated cat in a cartoon world. There was Song of the South in 1946. Mary Poppins in 1964. And the list goes on.

So why the big fuss over Who Framed Roger Rabbit?

In the 1970s and 80s, Disney appeared to have lost its edge in animation, and animation in general had slowly degraded to cheap and rushed television cartoons with a primary audience of children. Animation studios, including Disney, were experiencing disappointing box office sales on their animated films and downsizing as a result.

But Who Framed Roger Rabbit changed all of that. Never before had there been a film that so seamlessly blended hand-drawn animation and live action.

Roger Ebert, in his 4-star review of the film in 1988, credits the film’s success to a ‘breakthrough in craftsmanship,’ calling it “the first film to convincingly combine real actors and animated cartoon characters in the same space in the same time and make it look real.”

Cartoons had shadows. They shook hands with real actors. They walked from cartoon sets into the real world. These combinations no doubt led to the numerous awards the film received, which included four prestigious Oscars in sound effects, visual effects, film editing, and animation direction.

The film also proved that animation could sell to adults as well as children. Whereas television cartoons were geared only toward children, Who Framed Roger Rabbit combined cartoons, humor, and mystery into one show that was able to engage and entertain the whole family. As proof of this, the film was also awarded the less prestigious but still impressive Kids’ Choice Award for Favorite Movie. The film was clearly a success, both behind the scenes and in front of them.

Because of its success at the box office, Who Framed Roger Rabbit is largely credited with the resurgence of animation. Films like Toy Story and Avatar, which are now seen as the pinnacle of animation and CGI, may never have existed without the technology that resulted from making the film, and the renewed interest in animation that followed.

But let’s not forget that, while it was Disney and Steven Spielberg who created the box office hit, it was Gary K. Wolf who first imagined the idea of Roger Rabbit and Toontown, and who dreamed up a world where Toons and humans lived and worked side by side.

In the upcoming Part II, we will step away from the film industry and look at the cultural impact that Roger Rabbit had on society.

Stay ‘toon’ed!

Gary K. Wolf’s latest novel Who Wacked Roger Rabbit? will be available for pre-order from Musa Publishing on October 22, 2013, in digital-only format.

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Unexplained Science

Sci-Fi Deak Style by John Deakins

There’s another approach to Time Travel that creates space travel instead. Your Unexplained Science involves a device that moves in Time, separately from moving in Space. The Earth, however, is in constant high-velocity motion in Space. Thus, when you activate your machine, you’ll leave Earth behind and end up in the Great Vacuum . . . which is exactly what you want.

Once you get away from Earth’s gravity well, escape velocity drops off by the inverse square law. If you allow the Earth to move out from under you on its own journey by 50,000 km, its pull becomes negligible. You’ve just created cheap interplanetary flight. Instead of kinetic launching, which currently costs $2 million/kg, you’ll expend only the energy to run your time machine.

Stories in Martian or Asteroid conclaves have always depended on Ignore It or Unexplained Science. It’d destroy most economies to send out more than a handful of people. The enormous flight times are also a problem. We can’t sustain a closed ecosystem for the time required. A conservative guess for Mars is two years, one way. You’ve just created a way to cut travel time to months instead.

Good news: The Solar System as a whole, including you, has the same relative velocity in terms of the galaxy and the cosmos. Popping off Earth only enough to ignore its gravity won’t leave you hopelessly between stars, unless you try to go too far. All you wanted was off Earth, and you’re there!

Space is bigger than anyone really appreciates. You can send out repeated flights, and never have to worry about Flight 2 materializing inside Flight 1. By the time Flight 2 launches, the whole Solar System will have moved thousands kilometers in its orbit around the Milky Way center: You’ll be in pristine vacuum.

You’ll have to spend a lot of computer time calculating how “far” to move temporally, so that you take advantage of the sling-shot effects of the Earth’s rotation and revolution. You’ll want whatever help Conservation of Momentum can give. Space travel will still be expensive. Going to Mars? Let the Earth’s motions help throw you in the right direction, but leave its gravity behind.

We’ve solved all the problems: Right? The technology of move-in-Time/move-in-Space has to be kept Top, Top Secret. Sure, you’re going to launch your Mars expedition by popping your craft, say, five minutes backwards in Time and pushing off toward Mars, sans gravity. What happens if you only move, say, a tenth of a second?

Your device could end up inside the Earth’s crust. Its atoms and the crustal atoms would fuse; you’d generate a neat, homemade nuclear explosion. A terrorist could simply set up under New York, send a few pounds of rocks a fraction of a second in Time, and New York would rain down over the Eastern Seaboard. Retaliation could lead to Nuclear Winter and the extinction of Homo sapiens.

Children, be careful with your toys: more problems next time.

John Deakins, B.A., M.S.T. is a four-decade veteran of the science classroom now retired and author of his own fantasy series Barrow.

To read an excerpt from Barrow book one, please click HERE.

Monday, September 16, 2013

Best New York fashion week street style looks

new york fashion week streets style look, nyfw
pic via Caviar taste

Some show attendees in their pretty outfits, this is a selection of the best looks. What's your favorite? What would you wear?

This coat is beautiful. It catches attention with its bright color, but it's the cut that I appreciate more, boxy and not too close to the body. Look at the pink bag. Matched top and bottoms with coordinated accessories will be very popular in the coming season.





new york fashion week streets style look, nyfw
pic via Harper'sBazaar
This shirt dress is so chic and wearable! I love it!

new york fashion week streets style look, nyfw
pic via Mj Trim
I've never been a fan of the camouflage pattern, but this outfit is really good. It's the chic way to wear this pattern around the city. The match is sophisticated,  it may convince me to wear this military pattern.

new york fashion week streets style look, nyfw
pic via Harper'sBazaar

new york fashion week streets style look, nyfw
pic via Mj trim

new york fashion week streets style look, nyfw
pic via Caviar taste

new york fashion week streets style look, nyfw
pic via jak and jil

new york fashion week streets style look, nyfw
pic via Sidnestyle
Printed crochet on this Herve Leger ensamble.

tesler mendelovitch bag,wood leather
 Tesler Mendelovitch bag pic via Sidnestyle
This bag is so unique. It's made of wood and leather.