Blog > Archive by category 'Fashion'
Stainless Steel Earrings for Fashion and Durability

Stainless Steel EarringsWomen love stylish earring just like they love fashionable rings. Earrings are popular; they can be worn by teenagers, adult, women and even men. If you wore stainless steel jewelry earrings, it can make a statement on what you wear all day. It is trendy and most of all its inexpensive.

Here are the benefits if you want to buy and own a stainless steel earring:

  • First is it is highly versatile. It has the shine and luster just like the silver earrings, wearing it will not make you look cheap. It carries the luminosity, and it’s a good alternative for sterling silver. Usually, gold earrings are only worn for showy purposes, but this stainless steel earring can be worn on any occasion, for comfort, style and fashion.
  • If you’re worried every time you wear your usual gold or silver jewelry for a wear and tear and not comfortable with it. You can replace it with stainless steel jewelry, this kind of jewelry contains alloy, which makes it more durable. You’ll not worry every time you wear it in places you want to go and display your earring.
  • It is easier to maintain. You won’t have to clean it always unlike the gold and silver ones. You’ll just need to be careful not to scratch it with stronger stainless steel.
  • It is more way cheaper then gold or silver. You’re in fashion just spending a small amount of your money and you can always buy new ones. If you want it to be cheaper, you can buy it in stainless steel jewelry wholesale earring. In wholesale, you can display different earrings on your different outfits.

Stainless steel can be bought online like in lynnsfashion.com, they have lots of affordable earring for your fashion and style needs.

All about Tattoos

tattooTattoos are a hot topic today. people get tattoos for umpteen motives. A tattoo is a permanent marking made by inserting ink into the layers of skin to change the pigment for decorative or other reasons. Tattoos on humans are a type of decorative body modification, while tattoos on animals are most commonly used for identification or branding.

No one can really convey when the evidence of tattoos began. The oldest known tattoo was identified in 1991. It was located on a mummy known as Oetzi, an Iceman dated to be at least 5300 years old. His tattoos consist of horizontal and vertical lines. There is some debate as to why the tattoos are there.

Prior to finding Oetzi, the Russians excavated bodies that were demonstrated to be over 2400 years of age. These mummies were located in the Altai Mountains of Siberia. Instead of lines, their tattoos are in the category of animals both real and imaginary. various of these tattoos are thought to be decorative only while others appear to be a sign of status rank.

Chinese logo tattoos are rapidly growing in popularity all about the world. In fact, more than six thousand individuals forage for the contend “Chinese Tattoos” on the internet every single day.
But that’s not surprising as Chinese motif tattoos are extremely beautiful and mysterious. Thanks to the movies and eminent culture, most individuals in the west can recognise these Chinese symbols but can’t understand them. So that makes these tattoos a rather exotic form of self expression.
But beyond that, there are other more gender specific reasons for the popularity of these tattoo designs.
Women are attracted to the various subtle meanings and over-arching themes that the Chinese symbols can express, such as hope, freedom and love. Men, on the other hand, are drawn to Chinese emblem tattoos on the grounds that in western populace they’re strongly pertinent with martial arts movies.
The system of Chinese writing began more than 4000 years ago and doesn’t have an alphabet. This is perhaps the biggest difference for non Chinese people to understand. Instead, Chinese writing relies Once a large number of symbols that portray spoken ideas or concepts. Each emblem represents a different spoken word.
In 1710 AD the Kangxi Dictionary was created by imperial decree and contained more than 47,000 symbols. However, since then that number has risen to more than 70,000 symbols to portray the growing number of nuances and meanings in the modern language. But having remarked that, the respectable Chinese person only needs to know around 5,000 of these Chinese symbols to be able to riff through and understand anything that’s written in Chinese.
Can anything be written in Chinese symbols?

Thanks to the sheer number of symbols available, anything can be translated into Chinese. Even the many subtle meanings and nuances can be achieved using a combination of symbols.

Source: Internet

View more pictures of Tattoos at Photo Gallery

Painting nude Carnival models is the best job in Brazil?

brazil_carnivalRIO DE JANEIRO – Betto Almeida is the Mr. Lucky of Rio’s Carnival. The 36-year-old artist awakes at 8 a.m. Has a little breakfast. Survives a commute through the city’s tough traffic. Arrives at the office by 11.
Then he spends hours painting the bodies of gorgeous women — and earning as much as $2,000 a day.

“You wouldn’t believe how many applications I get for an assistant,” Almeida deadpanned, never taking his eyes from his work as he brushed bright orange paint on the stomach of a model in his glass-enclosed studio under the grandstands at the Sambadrome, where Rio’s Carnival parades ended Tuesday at dawn.

“But it’s hard work, man. I take my job seriously.” Slight, soft-spoken and unassuming, Almeida devotes his art to a sideshow of the samba parades: models who earn about $250 a night to mingle, clad only in paint, with high-rollers in the luxury boxes. Wearing plaid pants, a green shirt with a red phoenix on it and a denim-and-camouflage hat, Almeida goes about his work with a nonchalant air as the party-crazed hordes outside press their noses to the glass and snap photos.

His day job is art director on television soap operas, but for the past 12 years he has been brushing, dripping and spraying paint on some of the most beautiful bodies Brazil’s Carnival has to display. Michele Peres, a 28-year-old model wearing tiny black shorts, snakeskin stilettos and a watch, said the quality of Almeida’s work was vital to her professional success.

“I’ve been doing this for nine years, for Carnival and other events,” she said as Almeida painted a jaguar on her breasts. “He is the best body painter I’ve come across and his work draws more attention to me. It is good for him, it is good for me.” A gentleman tapped on the studio window and, as gingerly as a drunk Carnival reveler could, requested that Peres turn toward the growing crowd. With a barely perceptible sigh, she complied, not hesitating to light up a smile once the cameras started popping.

Luana Minini, a 22-year-old actress, was making her first appearance as a Carnival body paint model and she took a slightly more timid stance: She had Almeida paint critical areas of her body in a back room before agreeing to have a red parrot with green wings covering her chest completed under the public’s gaze. “I’ve always worked in theater and dance. This is a bit more free- spirited. But I’ve learned to control my nervousness. The paint acts as a cover, it makes me feel protected,” she said, motioning toward the jungle foliage in which the parrot on her breast resided.

Both women said some men — mostly foreigners — get a little frisky in the box seats, where the models mingle for 15 minutes before taking a champagne break for 15 minutes in a glassed-front room next to Almeida’s work space.

“It gets a little rowdy. Not too many men grab us or anything, but there is always one or two who get a little confused,” Minini said. “Brazilians understand the ambiance of Carnival and they come here prepared to see this.”

As the models answered questions, Almeida kept working. On his knees behind Peres, he dipped his brush into one of a dozen plastic water bottles cut in half to hold his paint, carefully painting jaguar spots on the back of the model’s thighs.

Sweat on his brow, he said the hard work is worth it. A modeling agency that employs the women pays him $1,000 for the roughly two hours it takes to paint each model. During the samba parades, he paints two women a night. And in a typical year will paint a minimum of 50 women for various events.

“I started doing it for theater and one of the samba parade officials asked if I would do it for Carnival models. How could I say no?” he asked, diving into a cheeseburger after finishing up with Peres. “A lot of guys are jealous of my job.”

AP News

View more pictures of Brazil carnival at Photo Gallery
View more pictures of Body paints at Photo Gallery

Wearing rubbish has never been such a great idea!

ugly-betty-fashionWe all like to think we do our best for the environment; cans in one recycling bin, bottles in another, old clothes in - well, actually, I’ll keep the clothes thanks. However as far as I’m aware, those pesky juice cartons have nowhere to go, except for the back of beyond, in… the RUBBISH BIN. Or so I thought.

Enter Rebagz, a brand that produces all of their stock from recycled cartons and rice sacks. I know, it doesn’t sound very glamourous does it, but the stylists at Ugly Betty thought otherwise and I’m beginning to think they were on to something.

Half the Sky Designs launched it’s Rebagz handbag line in July 2007 after company founder Marty Stevens-Heebner was searching for materials in the Phillipines for her handbag designs. When Stevens-Heebner found somewhere that was weaving leftover juice cartons, she was immediately inspired and felt it was the perfect fabric to create colourful and beautiful designs.

The Rebagz brand has grown tremendously over the passed year and now sells over 25 categories of bags, from the rice sack laptop carriers and the cozy coin purses, to the cosmetics bags and the business card holders. The wonder of the Rebagz brand does not stop there either, Half the Sky Designs have even gone ethical in their manufacturing; Rebagz designs are produced by a fair-trade certified women’s cooperative in the Phillipines.

So, who’s been spotted wearing these pretties? Brangelina (probably clutching the Bringing up Baby bag - they might have to buy another one if they have any more); Serena Williams (perhaps with the Sports pouch) and of course, Ugly Betty!

Unfortunately Rebagz do not currently ship from their website outside of the US, but you can get a few similar designs here from Rubbish Bags, available at Viva La Diva. I’m on to it already.

Nicky Branagh, Source: www.myfashionlife.com

Diamonds - The way people make them

idiamondp-main_fullDiamonds - one of the most precious and glittering things that are generally used as ornaments by women, are not easily found as the form of use. There is a long and hard process to make the usable.Diamonds are useful and beautiful stones that undergo a complicated process before being used in a variety of applications, most commonly known would that of the jewelry-making business.

While there are now laboratories that create synthetic diamonds in a span of a few days, it is the formation and production of natural diamonds that require very specific conditions. Diamonds formed through natural circumstances are exposed to extremes in high pressure of about 45 to 60 kilobars and to comparatively low temperatures of about 900 to 1900 °C. These rough stones are mined or recovered through either pipe or alluvial mining.

Pipe mining refers to the extraction process found in volcanic pipes. In most locations, a pipe mine is composed of kimberlite, which is dug from the surface of pipes in rough opencast mining. Once these are exhausted, the diamond miners start digging tunnels into the deeper parts of the pipes. The rocks recovered, which contain rough diamonds, are then moved to a screening plant where the rock bits are separated from the diamond bits.

It typically takes an average of 250 tons of pipes to produce a one-carat gem quality polished gem.

Allluvial mining, on the other hand, is located on riverbeds or ocean beaches. When diamonds were formed in pipes deep inside the earth millions of years ago, some of these separated and was carried out along the rivers and oceans. In order to mine these diamonds, a wall is built to hold back the surf or water. Up to 25 meters of sand and rock can be bulldozed to reach the diamond-bearing level. Once these are recovered or mined, the diamond-bearing earth is transported to the screening plants.

Of all the diamonds mined in the world each year, less than half are gem quality, which are used in jewelry making and display a high standard of excellence, usually with a clarity grading of flawless to near invisible inclusions. The rest that are recovered are either near-gem quality or industrial quality diamonds. Near-gem quality diamonds can either be used to jewelry or industrial applications, depending on the actual stone.

As for industrial quality diamonds, these are usually of low quality or have a lot of blemishes and inclusions, and are usually used as drill bits and for cutting purposes. All the diamonds recovered from mining will undergo a cutting and polishing process to obtain their final form, as we know it.

Although technology has played an important role in perfecting these techniques, cutting and polishing diamonds has its origins in India, where it was discovered by Indian lapidaries that a diamond can be made to sparkle and be smooth simply by grinding it against another diamond. Nowadays, even with the use of machinery, diamond cutting and polishing can take anywhere from several hours to several months to complete. Some diamonds, especially gem-quality stones, are studied for months, even years, before the cutting and polishing process begins.

Each stone is different, and must be carefully studied and marked for cutting. That is why only experts commit to this process, as a diamond’s ultimate price and value may plummet due to a poor cut.

A diamond can usually stand to lose half of its original weight after this final process.

Paul Easton