Thursday, April 11, 2013

What’s in a Name?

by Rie Sheridan Rose

“Tyrone, Tyrone…wherefore art thou, Tyrone?”

Doesn’t have the same ring, does it? Of course, in the 1560’s in England, Tyrone wouldn’t have been a very likely name any way, but suppose Shakespeare had gone with something more recognizable to his audience—like William, or Henry, or Robert. These names still wouldn’t have conveyed the sense of place and status that naming his hero “Romeo” presented.

When creating your characters, their names are going to be the easiest, most convenient way for the reader to remember them. This is your chance to give your audience a cheat code, as it were, to have an instant recognition of who that person is and their place in the story.

Therefore, it is vital that you make sure your choice conveys the information you want to make sure is given. While it may be fine to give the characters in a short story the first name that comes to mind—after all, the reader won’t be spending too much time with them—when it comes to a longer work, like a novel or series, there needs to be something about that name that will help the reader remember who it belongs to.

For example, in Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women, Jo (short for Josephine) is the tomboy. Her name is mannish by her own choice. She is a writer, who wants to succeed in a world where her sex is a limitation, and she does what she can to negate it by the nickname. Meg (short for Margaret) is practical, conforming, not a risk-taker. Her name reflects the practical, sensible side of her nature. Beth (short for Elizabeth) is the dreamy, musical child with a heart two sizes too big and a desire to help those in need. Her name reflects the softness of her character. Amy is the baby, the pretty one, the snob. She wants to be a painter, so she is also artistic, and her name is the most reflective of this, sounding almost exotic compared to the other girls.

Perhaps Louisa May didn’t put this much analysis into her name choices—but I wouldn’t bet on that.

In fact, when naming the characters for my new Steampunk series debuting in July, I downright stole Jo(sephine) as the name for my heroine because she shares characteristics with Jo March. The same reasoning went into her best friend Winifred, who goes by Fred because she wants to fit into a man’s world as a scientist.

There are certain other aspects to bear in mind when choosing a name that fits your character:

1) What is their location? Country of origin? (The characters in Romeo and Juliet were Italian, despite their English playwright, and needed Italian names.)

2) What is their profession? Many last names reflect the profession of the bearer or his ancestor.

3) What is their genre? Names like Stan and Pete may not adequately reflect your fantasy setting. Perhaps Bertram or Florescue are more appropriate.

4) Are they pronounceable? If you want to name your character Eeonathor, for example, provide an alternative, like Ravenwing, that he goes by so that the reader won’t just skip over it in their head…

These are some basic things to bear in mind as you write. Remember, however, that nothing about our profession is carved in stone. If they don’t work for you, feel free to ignore them. But you might find that “A rose by any other name” doesn’t smell as sweet.

Rie Sheridan Rose has pursued the dream of being a professional writer for the last ten years. She has had five novels, three short story collections, five poetry collections, and several stand-alone pieces published by over a dozen small presses in that decade.

Learn more about Rie Sheridan Rose on her website and blog. Stay connected with Facebook and Twitter.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

The classic french manicure with a twist


heart on thumb - see how to make hearts on nails here
metallic french manicure by Paula Shoe-fiend

Maybe you've noticed how much I like metallic nails. We talked about how to get chrome nails and then I used aluminum  foil to make a gold dipped manicure. Some metallic nail polish are nice as well to get the look, they might be not really metal looking, but we can emphasize the effect pairing the metallic nail polish with a solid color. I really liked the blue and silver french mani that Paula of Shoe-fiend put together. I think this metallic french manicure is a nice twist to everyday manicure and can be also a quick fix for a chipped manicure. I added a little heart just on the thumb since they're so easy to do

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

A Moment with Brian Griggs

If you could go back and redo any one thing in your life, what would it be?

Trust me: time travel is tricky. Go too far in any one direction and you could end up with a Tyrannosaur and a Terminator at a tea party. While the potential for awesomeness is great, it will more times than not end in a loss of life and/or fine china. So even though there are words of mine that I wish were unsaid, fights not picked, one-pound cheeseburgers left uneaten, I realize that we are all part of a bigger story and the best character change can only come through conflict.

Professionally, there are works and submissions that I have sent off too quickly that I wish I could do over. I have revised and revised and yet forgotten to read the thing aloud - a task that I have made years of students do - before sending it off as a finished product. Physician, heal thyself! My own impatience has been my worst nemesis as I watch those ships of opportunity set sail with me still on the shore. And yet these lessons, too, are an integral part of character growth.

In my experience I have found that there are always more opportunities; I need to keep my eyes open no matter how many times failure tempts me to tuck in my head and curl up in a ball. Opportunity will show up again, but probably wearing different clothes.

This is true except in the case of old people.

I have missed a big chunk of the story by not talking with my grandparents when I had the chance. I was always too busy with basketball or band or anything that didn't involve sitting around listening to an old person talk about their life. Now that they're gone, those are opportunities that will never show up again.

When my last grandparent died, I remember driving up to my parents' house after the funeral and hallucinating that my grandma's van was parked in its usual spot for family gatherings. The van had been at her house the last time that she was alive. Had she driven it over after her funeral? I had one more chance to listen to her, to hear about what she had learned in eight decades of life, to tell her that I love her. But the van wasn't there and neither was my chance.

So, what do I do now? Could I redo those missed opportunities with my grandparents? Much like time-traveling Tyrannosaurs, messing with the fabric of life and death itself comes with its own inherent complications. Instead, I grieve and in that grief I am shaped as a character. I grieve and then I tell stories, stories to my daughters about the grandparents who took me camping or taught me how to repair furniture or would generously cook me fifteen pancakes every summer morning despite how crazy that is. As you read about Wendell, Custodian of the Galaxy, in the March issue of Penumbra, know that he is partly inspired by stories of my lovable grandparents - and, you know, a giant intergalactic war with killer robots, but let's not get bogged down with technicalities.

At 6' 9" Brian Griggs is unofficially the world's tallest librarian (the claim was submitted to Guinness in November and is currently being processed). He has also taught English at both the junior high and high school levels.

Brian would love to chat with you about intergalactic wars with killer robots and can be reached on Twitter or on his website.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Put 78 pearls in one bracelet if you dare

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Chanel inspired pearl bracelet tutorial on Style.it

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Chanel spring 2013 pic via Style.it
Big, many, luxe is back to ostentation. Those who believe in the discreet elegance of a single strand of pearls will faint watching Karl Lagerfeld's cascade of pearls in Chanel s/s 2013 collection.  If the basic rules of style tell to wear just one outrageously big bracelet, Karl doubles them and adds an even bigger necklace. And, you know what? The result is excessive, but still very elegant. Put 78 pearls in one bracelet if you're not afraid of showing off. You may use all the pearls in your stash to diy one of the most popular spring  must have, but you'll also make a necklace at the same time.

This bracelet is a smart one and can be converted into a necklace in a snap. Want to see how? Then,




For more diy bracelets go this way

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Quick and Easy ways to style long hair

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from left pic via allure - all women stalk-glamour
I tried to put together a few quick and easy, but not boring, ways to style long hair.  Fresh looks we can add to our well-tested ones. Fashionable but quick enough to be hair-dos for every day life, time-saving techniques to style our hair and get out in the morning and still easy to learn.

How do you style your hair? Do you have tips and techniques you would like to share?



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left pic via all women stalk - wrap around side braid tutorial via Linen lace&Love

Braids can be as easy as the school girl's one or incredibly complicated.
This wrapped around side braid is a good compromise. It's a nice twist of the classic version and it's also doable. Read the how to on Linen Lace&Love.
Isolate the section of the hair you're going to braid. It makes it all easier. Brush the front hair on one side, then braid.

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beachy waves by Allure - by Hair and beauty tips

 Wear hair down with natural looking waves. To get this look Allure suggests to spread a salt spray over wet hair with before blow-dry. On Hair and Beauty tips I found a tip to achieve beachy waves with an hair straightener. Divide hair into big sections, twist them and go over with the hair straightener a few times without pressing. It's much quicker than curl each wisp with the curling iron and the result is more natural.

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Elie Saab spring 2012


Wrapped ponytail.  Make a ponytail and leave a strand out. Wrap the loose wisp around the elastic band and secure its end on the head with a bobby pin. For a more visible effect wrap more than one strand.

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from left : bow bun tutorial by Running on happiness - half way up hair bow tutorial by Hair and make up by steph

Despite the complicated appearance these are very quick and easy tutorials to create an hair bow. Check them out. Bow bun tutorial by Running on happiness - half way up hair bow tutorial by Hair and make up by steph



how to make a knot bun,quick and easy ways to style long hair

A twist of the classical bun  read how to make a knot bun  on glamour.com


Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Lost In the Age of Technology

by Kristin Saunders

The luxuries of the twenty-first century are not to be laughed at. In one day it is possible to talk with someone for hours half-way across the world, cook a meal in minutes when it used to take hours, and travel a hundred miles in relative ease. We have created such glorious things for ourselves. The futures we can imagine are just as grand. It would be possible to travel from New York to Tokyo in a few hours by vacuum-sealed bullet train or even farther via instantaneous teleportation. It is easy to see sterile work environments that gleam without the aid of a dirty mop, and machines tending our every need. It is so easy to imagine the next step, and the step beyond that. Every convenience easily imagined, then the device eventually engineered.

Stop. Think.

Is this the luxury you really want? I only ask because your microwave meal is currently lacking the flavor of the prepared food your mother made. That bullet train may get you where you are going, but you may miss the journey and the experiences a trip halfway around the world would give you now, or even one-hundred years ago when you would have had to cross the ocean by boat.

Face Time may try to replace face-to-face conversation, but you miss out on the small ticks like a person’s twitch or their general body language. Never mind glitch wireless or the overall warmth of a person’s actual presence. Nothing can replace that feeling of being in the moment with someone.

Technology has its place in our lives. It does afford us time, but it can also waste it both in quantity (Internet) and quality (traveling to the grocery store by bike versus driving a mile down the road.) If we really thought about every piece of technology we used, I’m certain many of us would go without some portion of it. I know given the chance I’d go without my cell phone and keep it to house service, because outside a car breakdown, I just don’t need or want that much connectivity in my life.

Recently, I’ve even taken yoga to tear myself away from the Internet and the television. The most relaxing moment being an instructed ujjayi breath or “yoga breath.” They are simple to do, draw a breath deep down into the core of your belly. While holding it, allow your mind to focus on your body. Exhale through your mouth and let the thoughts of the world fall away and exit with each breath.” This type of breathing requires focusing all your attention onto yourself. It is a meditative exercise and can bring a person to really respect the body they are using.

Technology is not an entirely bad thing, but I do think it comes with its demons. And expecting that we will have more technology in the near future I think it’s time we started asking questions like, “When was the last time I experienced the living world outside my door?” It may sound silly, but in an age where technology is carried with us in every moment of our lives it could be very easy to lose your sense of self. Something that should be precious. The future is waiting at our doorstep and I’m hoping we find a way to separate ourselves and know ourselves outside of the technologies and luxuries we create.

Kristen Saunders is an intern Penumbra EMag. She loves to write science fiction in her free time and recently started her own blog The Musings of a Growing Writer.

Friday, March 29, 2013

7 things you can do with your old denim


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Each of us has that pile of jeans in our wardrobe that we don't wear anymore. A pair was our favorite of a period and trying it on again now we cannot explain ourselves why. Another one never really fitted us, but we promised to lose weight so we bought it anyway. Nonetheless, it never happened and those jeans are still on the back of the closet. The third pair is not fashionable anymore. The other day I was reading about the Upcycling denim challenge on Outsapop and I was reflecting that denim fabric is almost indestrutible and can be used again and again before being trashed.  So take that pile of jeans, a pair of scissors and give a new life to that old denim. Recycle your jeans, they may become your new favorite spring must have. Get inspired by the ideas below and check out my diy trousers section with a lot of jeans re-styles.




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bag made of recycled denim strips pic via ecouterre - a quicker version  this shopper  by avec 10 doits

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jeans bag -the 5 pockets istantly become useful bag pockets - tutorial by Make Mine Silk
Three different bags made of recycled denim of increasing difficulty. The istant bag is the one above, you cut your jeans and sew them at the bottom, the tutorial is by Make Mine Silk.

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man shirt into skirt by madebylex

Man shirts are often "the chosen victims" of re-fashions. Made by Lex, transformed a man shirt into an easy skirt. Love it.
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Lanvin for Acne pic via StylebyKling
Now if we pick the skirt with elastic at the waist as a starting point we can create a lot more styles making little variations. This Lanvin for Acne collection from 2010  it's a great source of inspiration.  The skirt with the frill on one side is feminine and wearable while the dress is the middle has a draped top over the simple skirt.
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jeans boots  via inspirefusion
A creative way to reuse jeans? Boots with pockets!
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Chanel spring 2013
Girly short dress by Chanel clearly inspired to a pair of jeans; and that pair  could be used to make it!

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dip dye your jeans pic via fashionfifth
So you don't like your jeans anymore, why not dye them? The ones above are dip dyed jeans soaken up in a bleach solution.

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jeans leg into lunch tote bag via outsapop
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Denim shirt refashion by Inspiration&Realisation
The different fabrics sewn together create a new up-to-date look.