viernes, 23 de julio de 2010

Take Ivy Book

Habitually Chic Blog:

Take Ivy was shot on the campuses of eight Ivy League universities and was originally published in Japan in 1965. The book has quite a cult following among the preppy bloggers and fashion designers. The Trad was even nice enough to scan his vintage copy and share it with his readers. But now, Powerhouse Books has translated the original Japanese text and is reissuing this aesthetic overload of prep style. The photos also illustrate how classic well made clothing never goes out of style. Take Ivy is definitely the BMOC of books!

{las fotografías del libro Take Ivy fueron tomadas en los campus de ocho universidades Ivy League y fue originariamente publicado en Japón en 1965. Este libro es bastante seguido por blogeros y diseñadores. Ahora la editorial Powerhouse ha traducido el texto original en japones y lo ha convertido en una fuente de inspiración para el "estilo preppy". Además las fotos ilustran como la ropa clasica bien hecha nunca pasa de moda. Tener "Take Ivy" es definitivamente de BOMOC de los libros}

Avaiable in Amazon.com





Credits to http://habituallychic.blogspot.com/

See also:

What´s the Ivy League?



sábado, 6 de febrero de 2010

Carnival I love you







Under the theme of "Seven Dreams, 7 sins" is to develop one of the most exclusive and elegant dances of the world. Scored within the top ten of the International Classification of the list of "a hundred things to do in life", this event has become a meeting place for the most important people on the planet. High society moves to seventeenth-century Venice, with costumes made by the best designers and their jewel-encrusted masks. They can only go to this event four guests, who enjoy a hundred candles and dressed in costumes of Venice Atelier: compositions of feathers, sequins, tulle, velvet and rich fabrics. One of the most glamorous events on the planet that you can not miss ... What are you waiting to buy your ticket?

{Bajo la temática de “Siete sueños, 7 pecados” se va a desarrollar uno de los bailes más exclusivos y elegantes del mundo. Calificado dentro de los diez primeros puestos de la clasificación internacional de la lista de “cien cosas para ver en la vida”, este evento se ha convertido en centro de reunión de los personajes más importantes del planeta. La alta sociedad se traslada a la Venecia del siglo XVII, con sus trajes de época confeccionados por los mejores diseñadores y sus máscaras con joyas incrustadas. Sólo pueden acudir a este evento cuatrocientos invitados, que disfrutarán de un centenar de velas, de vestidos con disfraces de Venecia Atelier: con composiciones de plumas, lentejuelas, tules, terciopelos y telas muy ricas. Una de las fiestas más glamourosas del planeta que no te puedes perder... ¿a qué esperas para comprar tu entrada?}

jueves, 14 de enero de 2010

The Sweetwater Farm Bed & Breakfast.

Are you thinking about where to spend next holidays? Are you still looking for a special place where go with you boyfriend? Do you need time for thinking about your life way?

I have your solution: THE SWEETWATER FARM HOUSE near Philadelphia, in PA. It´s a lovely and elegant place in the heart of the forrest with all the services that a special lady could need.

It´s propiety of Le Vine- Kelly family, the Grace Kelly american family (now is mannaging by the last Princess Grace´s niece). It also was founded by Grace Levine who died in 1990.

Take a look, isn´t it adorable?



If you need futher information go to their website in sweetwaterfarmbb.com or explore their group in facebook. I hope you spend a lovely days there.

martes, 12 de enero de 2010

New Season 2010 Best Premieres in Cinema.

Leap Year



The Backup Plan



Up in the Air



The Loss of a Treaped Diamond



Sex and the City 2

viernes, 25 de diciembre de 2009

Something´s gotta give

ERIKA: It has been a great night for me.
HARRY: It has been a great night for me too, even I thought we were soul mates.




domingo, 20 de diciembre de 2009

The Spirit of Christmas Time







{wehearit.com}

viernes, 11 de diciembre de 2009

Sylvia Plath, one of my favourites XX Poet.

Born to middle class parents in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, Sylvia Plath published her first poem when she was eight. Sensitive, intelligent, compelled toward perfection in everything she attempted, she was, on the surface, a model daughter, popular in school, earning straight A's, winning the best prizes. By the time she entered Smith College on a scholarship in 1950 she already had an impressive list of publications, and while at Smith she wrote over four hundred poems.






"Kiss me and you will see the important I am".


Sylvia's surface perfection was however underlain by grave personal discontinuities, some of which doubtless had their origin in the death of her father (he was a college professor and an expert on bees) when she was eight. During the summer following her junior year at Smith, having returned from a stay in New York City where she had been a student ``guest editor'' at Mademoiselle Magazine, Sylvia nearly succeeded in killing herself by swallowing sleeping pills. She later described this experience in an autobiographical novel, The Bell Jar, published in 1963. After a period of recovery involving electroshock and psychotherapy Sylvia resumed her pursuit of academic and literary success, graduating from Smith summa cum laude in 1955 and winning a Fulbright scholarship to study at Cambridge, England.

In 1956 she married the English poet Ted Hughes , and in 1960, when she was 28, her first book, The Colossus, was published in England. The poems in this book---formally precise, well wrought---show clearly the dedication with which Sylvia had served her apprenticeship; yet they give only glimpses of what was to come in the poems she would begin writing early in 1961. She and Ted Hughes settled for a while in an English country village in Devon, but less than two years after the birth of their first child the marriage broke apart.



The winter of 1962-63, one of the coldest in centuries, found Sylvia living in a small London flat, now with two children, ill with flu and low on money. The hardness of her life seemed to increase her need to write, and she often worked between four and eight in the morning, before the children woke, sometimes finishing a poem a day. In these last poems it is as if some deeper, powerful self has grabbed control; death is given a cruel physical allure and psychic pain becomes almost tactile.

On February 11, 1963, Sylvia Plath killed herself with cooking gas at the age of 30. Two years later Ariel, a collection of some of her last poems, was published; this was followed by Crossing the Water and Winter Trees in 1971, and, in 1981, The Collected Poems appeared, edited by Ted Hughes.


-I recommend you this amazing book about Sylvia Poems analysis.

"Ariel´s Gift" by S. Plath. Paperbacks Editorial. Buy it in Amazon using this link.








April 18

The slime of all my yesterdays
rots in the hollow of my skull

and if my stomach would contract
because of some explicable phenomenon
such as pregnancy or constipation

I would not remember you

or that because of sleep
infrequent as a moon of greencheese
that because of food
nourishing as violet leaves
that because of these

and in a few fatal yards of grass
in a few spaces of sky and treetops

a future was lost yesterday
as easily and irretrievably
as a tennis ball at twilight



(See more here)











{Sylvia Plath Official Web and Angelifre/SylviaPlath.com }