Thursday, March 19, 2015

Posted by beni in , , | March 19, 2015
Now, that I have learned different techniques I am going to include them into my drawings. Some subjects might be easier than others. For example, I can be better at drawing faces but I cant draw nature, and most of the time I try to avoid it. This section of the book helped me see different objects that I couldnt draw before.
The first object that I couldnt draw before are clouds. When I was drawing clouds, Willenbrink suggested to "use subtle value changes to show the shape and depth of their forms" (55). To achieve value changes I had to vary the type of pressure of my pencil strokes. It is also important to know the location of light source. I drew clouds in the sunlight, and sunlight is coming from the top so the clouds from the top appear lighter while the underside appear darker and showed. If it is hard for you to draw the clouds at first, take simple cotton balls and practice drawing cotton balls first.


Then, I was learning how to draw leafy tree. Willenbrink says that "trees may be the center of interest in a scene or just a background element" (56). When I was drawing the tree had to use variety of back-and-forth lines to suggests the leaves. To make shadows I did some lines darker some lighter.
Last, I tried to draw evergreen trees. To draw evergreen tree you apply same basic steps. To draw needles I had to use variety of back-and-forth staggered lines and some lines had to be darker than another to create shading and depth.
 
What are your favorite object/subjects to draw?
Posted by beni in , , , , , | March 19, 2015
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Posted by beni in , , | March 19, 2015
Dear friends,

I do not know if you have a movie that got stuck to your brain the moment you first saw it when you were a wee child, but I have that! I have Robin Hood: Men In Tights! I still have no ideea how come my parents let me watch this as it has light nudity and violence + references to female/male body parts, but I guess children back then were not like nowadays, so very aware of their sexuality, as I remember none of those parts bothering me or me asking anyone about it. I just enjoyed the singing and the comedy itself. Funny part is that each time I find something new about this movie when I watch it :) and as one grows, one sees different things and starts to understand more.
Mel Brooks - if you know him not, I have no ideea in what hole you have been living in! - is a brilliant actor/writer/producer/director. Melvin James Kaminsky was born on June 28th, 1926 in Brooklyn, New York, to Russian Jewish immigrants. His father died when Mel was twelve years old, and he has said that his angry humor stems from that event. As a young boy, he learned how to play the drums. After brief education, he served in WWII, and afterwards got a job playing the drums at nightclubs in the Catskills. Brooks eventually started a comedy act and also worked in radio and as Master Entertainer at Grossingers Resort before going to television. He frequently likes to cast himself in his movies - Robin Hood: Men In Tights is no exception as he plays Rabbi Tuckman. Loves the line: "we have much to do and less time to do it in" - which appears in RH also ;)  His films usually contain many Jewish references and jokes.
Oh! Now, Cary Elwes... I had a crush with him when I was small! The man had the most amazing perfect blue eyes combined with golden hair. It was like instant meltdown! As Robin Hood he was more than fitting and I bet every girl was wishing she would be Maid Marian. Born and raised in London he has an amazing British accent which he does not fail to mention during the movie:
Prince John: And why should the people listen to you?
Robin Hood: Because, unlike some other Robin Hoods, I can speak with an English accent.
[referring to the then recent blockbuster Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, in which Kevin Costner played the role with an American accent
***
Which brings me to a lovely piece of TRIVIA: The gag about Robin being able to speak with an English accent is a reference to Kevin Costners performance in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991). Unfortunately viewers who saw both movies in a dubbed version couldnt get this gag. For the German dubbed version the gag was changed to: "because I - unlike some other Robin Hood - do not cost the producers 5 million". The German word "kosten" (cost) was also pronounced to sound a little bit like Costner. In the French (France) and Italian (Italy) dubbed versions, it is translated as, "Because unlike other Robin Hoods, I do not dance with the wolves", referring to another Kevin Costner movie Dances with Wolves (1990). In Quebec, the translation becomes "Because unlike other Robin Hoods, I accept to wear tights," which refers to the fact that Costner didnt wear tights in the 1991 movie. In the Hungarian version, he says "Because unlike Kevin Costner, I have a shapely bottom," a reference to the infamous fact that Costner used a body double in the nude scene. 
Patrick Stewart plays King Richard talking in a thick Scottish accent, a reference to Sean Connerys performance in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991). Some critics found Connerys accent inappropriate for the role, since King Richard would not have spoken with a Scottish burr (thus providing comedic fodder for Mel Brooks). Technically, an English accent would have been no more appropriate than Sean Connerys Scottish accent and a French accent would have been best for Richard (and any other nobles of the time, possibly including Robin), as "English" did not yet exist as a language and English nobles spoke Anglo-Norman, a dialect of Old French, while the common folk spoke Old-English, an Anglo-Frisian tongue that has more in common with Old Norse than with Modern English.
Now about the movie... well... it is basically a mockup of all the previous Robin Hood movies / TV shows and series, but most of all of  Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, in which Kevin Costner played the main part.
The cast of the movie is brilliantly selected and they play their parts as if their own life would depend on it! Cary Elwes - who, when he was young, was the spitting image of Errol Flynn - plays a dashing and very getleman-like Robin Hood. His facial expressions are brilliant and help underline Mel Brooks lines. Amy Yasbeck, who plays Marian, is a perfect mate for this Robin. Shes beautiful and sincere, though there is absolutely nothing in the upstairs of her pretty little head... She manages though, by chance, to overhear the conversation between the Sheriff of Rottingham (not Nottingham!) and the hires killers - hence saving later on her love... She must be one of the most proactive Maid Marians on screen as she decides to give herself to Sheriff of Rottingham in order to save Robin from hanging.
I always loved the sountrack of the movie and the combination of dancing + singing. From the beginning we are introduced into the scene by a merry band of hip-hop singers telling us about the Sherwood forest, Robin Hood and the Sheriff of Rottingham. Even the name makes me laugh... Sheriff of Rottingham is an insane image of a verbaly disabled dark haired lad who is madly in love with Maid Marian, even though he is never able to express himself. He is quite a turn off, considering the true Sheriff of Nottingham from the Prince of Thieves - we are talking about Alan Rickman there! You cant make fun of Alan Rickman! He is the most adorable villain that you love to hate :) Oh! But Sheriff of Rottingham is not able to say a full sentence without twisting and turning the words making the phrase sound completely Riddiculous! (see what I did there?! ;) )
Prince John: Save me, save me! Hurt them, hurt them!
Sheriff of Rottingham: Right! Save them, save them, hurt you, hurt you! Ive got it! 
The end of the movie completes the circle by having another part of hip-hop dance + singing, making funny refferences to a Robin Hood 2 movie - as the trend back then, a trend that started growing, was to have sequels to each movie. 
The movie itself is colorful and vivid with a lot of refferences to other movies before it + Mel Brooks movies, of course! After watching it so many times, I could do the voice-overs as I remember 99.99% of it, even though that was never my wish. It just sticks to your brain... the songs, the lyrics, the images... and then you end up using them and singing along. There are refferences including to the Mary Poppins with Julie Andrews as Maid Marian, after having a bathtub moment, takes a blue bird on her finger while she is singing. There are also moments in which you cannot but help to laugh out loud, like when Prince John asks Latrine why she changed her name into that and what was before - just so you know, before she was named Shit Hole + when King Richard comes back and states that from that moment, in England, all latrines will be named Johns ;))) (which is actually a true fact, as they are indeed called Johns, or you might as well just say that you wish to go to the loo).
For me it is a brilliant parody - no matter what the other people say! - and it will always get a thumbs up from me. It you did not watch it when you were small and you are not the same generation as I am - and maybe even older - you might not get all the jokes. What do kids nowadays know about Home Alone or about Reebok Pumps?! Do they even know of Monty Python?! If it would be released today it may even be offensive for some people... just think about it... men dressing in women clothing for the full length of the movie - dont tell me that tights/pantyhose are manly!
The main point of the movie though, I think, is to make fun of the Robin Hood movie released just a few years before: Prince of Thieves - Kevin Costner being very young and handsome there, but not the exact version of a British Robin Hood that we would like. Some points of the movie actually stab the previous RH version - where in Prince of Thieves Little John almost drowned in a foot of water, by panicking and not putting his legs straight to reach the bottom of the river, in Man in Tights Little John is faking to drown in an inch of water... a small string of water that you can just walk over! As much as Kevin Costner deserves the blame for making Prince of Thieves terrible, Cary Elwes deserves that much credit for making Men in Tights great.
***
I simply loved the end fighting scene between the Sheriff of Rottingham and Robin Hood! It was the most perfect fencing class ever, and I dare to believe that the 2 of them even took fencing lessons for the part. I surely loved it more than the fighting scene from Prince of Thieves where the protagonists just destroy the entire room - throwing benches, chairs and whatever prop that was near them at eachother. Not to mention the bow shooting skills! Oh... they are brilliant! In the Prince of Thieves you can see Kevin Costner sending 2 arrows at once. Well, in Man in Tights Robin managed to send 6 arrows at once ;)
Totally worth mentioning in Man in Tights is the awesome Will Scarlett O’Hara (“We’re from Georgia”) that is extremely handy with the knives. He is able to completely destroy the arrow that Robin shoots straight through his heart just by the speed of his hands completed with knives ;) Obvious name connection with Gone With The Wind - and Will here really pretty but not a bit red haired. Extremely adorable and handy in hard moment, so as Little John is.
Now the crusades somehow are also shown in the movie, as the action begins in Jerusalem, with Robin escaping the prison with the help of the Painted Man, and end up with the reappearence of King Richard - played by awesome Patrick Steward. He has a cameo scene at Robin and Marians wedding, just as Sean Connery had one in Prince of Thieves. Not a lot of picking on that, escept the fact that instead of having a kiss in the style of "Peck on the cheeck" the King actually provides Marian a huuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuge kiss on the mouth.
***
Overall this is a movie that I will always love with all my heart - maybe it is because it is a movie of my childhood, maybe it is because it make me laugh so much... who can tell?! I really and sincerely reccomend it - especially if you are my age or older. It is worth having a bit of fun ;) And you may want to try The Princess Bride also - I may even do a review on it as well, would you like that? :)

Yours truly,
A LadyBug Who Loves Robin Hoods Story :)
Posted by beni in , , , , , , | March 19, 2015
Dear friends,

If you stuck with me for quite a while or if you browsed the Books and/or Movies section of this site, you might have figured out I am quite a sucker when it comes to Period related drama. So due to that I will show you some of my personal fav dresses/outfits. They come in no order due to the fact that I love them all and it is quite hard to do a top. Hey! I would not even do a top for books/movies/music. I place them all equally in my heart - ok, there might be a tiny exception where Freddie & Queen are number one, but hey! I am entitled to that :)  
 ***
So here they are:
* Audrey Hepburn as Holly Golightly in Breakfast at Tiffanys - black dress + long black gloves + the rows of pearls + the mini-tiara = perfect princessy outfit :) Who said every lady should have a little black dress was totally right. Not to mention that the accessories are perfect and even though I do not agree with smoking, that long one looks very snazzy ;)
* Kate Winslet as Rose DeWitt in Titanic - oh, well... actually I want ALL her outfits from that movie, starting with that huge hat and the attire that looks very much like the "My Fair Lady" dress Audrey wore as Eliza Doolittle to the dark dress with orange underskirt that Rose wears as she does some bit of irish dancing.
* Nicole Kidman as Satine in Moulin Rouge - ok, I know she is dresses up very kinky and very provocative, with a lot of red and similar tones, but the lady/lad who did her outifts was amazing! It all inspires love and lust. I would probably not wear it but I would surely save a special place in the closet to watch it from time to time, just as I would watch a painting :)
* Vivien Leigh as Scarlett OHara in Gone With The Wind - he he he! Well you had me talking of her before ;) So to keep it short: I want all her wardrobe from the movie! and I would even wear it out, just to make a fuss ;) Scarlett is very glamourous and the red velvet robe and the green dress are one of my personal favourites ;) 
 
* Carey Mulligan as Daisy Buchanan in The Great Gatsby (2013) - for all those adorable thin summer-loving dresses that go so smooth on the skin as they seem to be part of the body. It is as if you would feel the wind rushing through them, singing them a love song. I believe that when you would put those dresses on it would be as if you would wear nothing and you would be as light as a feather. Alright, there might be an issue with all those tiaras and Swarowski stones but hey! doesnt she look like a small fairy?
Now trust me, my list would be much bigger, but I try to limit myself :) And who knows?! Maybe I would even do a part 2 one day. Now do tell me, what costumes would you love to own - or at least try once, to see how it would fit you? I would love to hear from you :)

Yours truly,
A Huge Fan Of Period Drama = The LadyBug
Posted by beni in , , , , , | March 19, 2015
Dear friends,

** This is a review I did a long time ago, on the 28th of January 2011, and published in my previous blog "Paint The Sky". But as you did not read this before, I thought I may share my thoughts with you. Pay attention to spoilers, as I shall be telling you about Ella Enchanted **

… I won’t go breaking your heart! :)
If you want an easy and fun movie to watch on a Saturday/Sunday – or any moment and day in which you would be free ;)) – than I would sincerely recommend “Ella Enchanted” – the movie from 2004, with Anne Hathaway.
I know… I know… I am writing about another Cinderella story :) but trust me, this is a really good one: funny and somehow resembling with a musical… queer combination but most enchantingly made :) if I may say so myself :p
 ***
Based on Gail Carson Levine’s award winning novel, this is the story of Ella, a young woman who was given a “gift” of obedience by a fairy named Lucinda. Anything anyone tells her to do, she must obey. When her mother passes away, Ella is cared for by her thoughtless and greedy father who remarries a loathsome woman with two treacherous daughters. This modern-day, fantasy Cinderella features fairies, ogres and elves…as well as a hero in the guise of Prince Charmont, whom Ella falls in love with. Unlike Cinderella though, Ella must depend on herself and her intelligence to get her through her troubles and find Lucinda in order for her “curse” to be broken! Written by M. C. Gomez
Being a love story and a story for children differently told attracted me very much, but when all the modernist bits and pieces came tumbling in I was starting to reconsider… what made me love the movie was the scene in the middle of the movie, when Ella and Prince Charmont are at a giants wedding. Why? It is simple as 1-2-3 or A-B-C :) when Ella was ordered to play… and she did start playing… guess what song she did play? YES! A Queen song, and indeed one of my favs: “Somebody to love“… and to a great wonder, Anne played it quite nicely!!! :) To the same wedding I had another shock: one of the giants was portrait by Heidi Klum – that also sings at the end of the movie a bit :) I find her presence in this movie as a giant female quite refreshing and idea tumbling, as everyone states giants are awful :)
Another of my fav scenes is portrait in the still above: the moment where love conquers all and Ella disobeys her final command – not killing thus the prince – and breaks the spell of her “gift of obedience”.
The Hall of Mirrors somehow remembers me of the story of Snow White and the room her stepmother had… the room for The Mirror
A great and beautiful and appreciated surprise was Cary Elwes, as Edgar – the princes tutor and “good” uncle – and Minnie Driver, as Mandy – Ella’s house fairy :) Their appearance on the screen is always mostly refreshing and makes one smile, no matter what.
Of course you will recognize Edgar as the wonderfully dashing Robin Hood from the epic movie “Robin Hood – Man in Tights“. Here, Cary Elwes plays the bad guy – although he does it very very very good I cannot help myself seeing him as Robin ;)) I must admit!!!
Minnie Driver has very short “stage entrances” but she is sparkling each time :) just remember her in “The Phantom of the Opera” if you ever watched it, and you will truly know what I am talking about ;)
The visual part of this movie is beautiful! The scenery if pleasant to the eye of the beholder and the wardrobe of each and every character suits them. The soundtrack is indeed SMASHING!!! :) and it keeps the ones who watch the movie wide awake and wanting to jiggle and move around and sing and dance like the characters on the screen :)
The finale is simply adorable, when everyone sings and dances… Now don’t go breaking my heart
I shall have to think more over the acting that Mr. Hugh Dancy presents us… he is a British actor that promises much :) The first time I had seen him was several years ago… I do think that it was on Hallmark channel. But what I surely know is the fact that he was playing “David Copperfield”… and he played it very nicely… he would be truly fit for some more period movies :) I do have faith in him ;)

Yours truly,
A LadyBug In Love :)
Posted by beni in , , , , , | March 19, 2015
Dear friends,

I know not if you ever been to Bonn but if you ever plan to get there or if you manage to book your trip to Koln/Cologne, then I suggest from the bottom of my heart to make a short one-day-city-break to this lovely place. There are many things to see there, like I tried to present to you the other week, but what shocked me the most was how much I grew to like the German National Museum Of Contemporary History.
Haus der Geschichte (officially Haus der Geschichte der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, i. e. "House of the History of the Federal Republic of Germany") is a museum of contemporary history in Bonn, Germany. With around one million visitors every year, it is one of the most popular German museums. The Haus der Geschichte is, as well as the "Zeitgeschichtliches Forum Leipzig", the "Tränenpalast" am Bahnhof Friedrichstraße and the Kulturbrauerei with the collection of industrial design ("Sammlung Industrielle Gestaltung") part of the Haus der Geschichte der Bundesrepublik Deutschland Foundation. The foundations place of business is Bonn.
In its permanent exhibition, the Haus der Geschichte presents German history from 1945 until the present. Numerous temporary exhibitions emphasize different features. The Haus der Geschichte also organizes guided tours of the Palais Schaumburg (has been closed since August 2013 because of building restoration for estimated three years), the Chancellors bungalow and the former place of the Federal Assembly. Moreover, the museum maintains a cartoon gallery with over 75,000 political cartoons and caricatures.
The Haus der Geschichte is located on Bundesstraße 9 and is part of the Museumsmeile (Museum Mile) in Bonn, which is part of the former West German government district. It is located north of the Kunstmuseum Bonn and the Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, which are also part of the Museumsmeile. The Haus der Geschichte can be directly accessed from the subway station (Heusallee/Museumsmeile).
In his government statement of October 13, 1982, right after taking office, Chancellor of Germany Helmut Kohl called for a collection of German history and the German division after 1945. He presented plans to establish a museum of German history in West Berlin, to be complemented by a House of History of the Federal Republic of Germany in Bonn dedicated specifically to the West German state. While some feared that a national museum would be viewed as an attempt to kindle a new nationalism, others argued that it was precisely because Germanys past was so complex and wrenching that Germans needed to understand their history.The German Bundestag confirmed the institution in 1989. Helmut Kohl opened the permanent exhibition on June 14, 1994. The first president of the foundation was Hermann Schäfer. In June 2007, Hans Walter Hütter, his long-term representative, was appointed as his successor.
The building was designed in 1985 by the architects Ingeborg and Hartmut Rüdiger from Braunschweig. Construction works began in September 1989. The building has a total floor space of around 22,000 square meters, 4,000 square meters for the permanent exhibition, and over 650 square meters for temporary exhibitions.
The museum puts special emphasis on the orientation of visitors and a vivid presentation of historical events. Under the slogan “Experience History”, the concept is to draw attention to historical objects and make them come alive for visitors. This happens also through the use of historical film and sound records.
While the political history of the Federal Republic of Germany and the former East Germany (GDR) is the common thread of the permanent exhibition, the presentation of everyday and cultural history also offers visitors an opportunity to deal with their own past and encourages an intergenerational dialogue.
Aside from exhibitions, numerous scientific conventions and events take place at the Haus der Geschichte. An information center with a reference library affords the opportunity to enlarge upon historical subjects individually.
I really should have went into politics, I look adorable up there, dont I?!
It is a very interesting museum in which you can get lost for at least 3 hours... We were almost to the end wher the sound system let us know that the museum was closing soon. But I must admit I did not feel the time fly so fast! There were so many things to see and to experience...
It tested my limts a bit as the signs and notes and comments were in German and even though there were some in English language they did not say the whole story so I struggled through by basic German knowlegde from High School + my more extensive Second World War history knowledge + my husbands knowledge that was way greater than mine and I must admit we had a blast! :)
Politics, Culture, Economy - its all covered. The museum is for free at any time and any day and you have the option to leave your bag and coats and umbrellas at the entrance. The bathrooms are clean and spacious and there are elevators and stairs so you can choose the means to go through the expo.
If you need the exact address here it is:
Willy-Brandt-Allee 14, Bonn, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.
If you know German better than me, than I suggest checking their website as well ;)  
They also have a wide range of bikes / motorcycles / cars & minivans and it was a pleasure to look at them even with my limited knowledge about autovehicles.
Fooling around, pretending I was shooting something...
When I saw this Globe in the Museum I just knew I had to have a picture with it as for me it is the symbol of my love for travel and for exploring. One day I wish to conquer every piece of land... working on it ;)
The Berlin Wall
The Berlin Wall and families split...
I just loved this cover of the Time Magazine!
Who doesnt love Jukeboxes?!
Me and Dana fooling around ;))
Would you just look at those boots! These boots are made for walking...
Did you know about the story of the hippies caught in the apartment all naked - including the kid?! :)
We couldnt miss the flower power times, could we?!
A bit of fooling around with the flower power mini van :) Me and Dana had fun while taking puictures of eachother... Too bad I was not wearing one of my colored and flowery dresses, they would have blended in perfectly... But the moustache blouse works as well, right?! :p
The Mini Van & Apollo Landing On The Moon
Could I have them, please? Pretty please :)
Yep! You see right! There is Dacia - Romanian car - there ;)
Lovely Wedding Picture, dont ya think?!
Look at that gorgeous blue baby :)
Dont you think the Teddy Bear is quite freaky?!
Now I really really really recommend it and I hope that you lads/lasses will get to see this museum one day. So if you are ever in Koln/Cologne have a short trip to Bonn. Also these posts might come in handy:
    • What Would You Visit In Koln - thoughts upon what one could see in Koln, ideeas at the beginning of the journey
    • Germany, Ich Liebe Dich - Koln/Cologne & Bonn through BB pictures + 2 dear pictures that my best friend Dana took :) - a short intro to our trip in Germany
    • The Flight Travel Bug - or how I love to fly and I am glad my husband choose Lufthansa for our trip to Koln/Cologne 
    • Krakow-Cologne. How do I get there? - on how we managed to get from Poland to Germany: flight + ICE Train, and a little extra on the side: chinese food for dinner :) 
    • A Dark And Gloomy Cathedral - a very extensive post on the awesomeness of the Cologne/Koln Cathedral. I fell in love with her at the first sight!
    • You Love Me. Real Or Not Real? - the wonderful Hohenzollern Bridge with its love locks, right next to the Koln Cathedral was a wonderful stop :) A Walk Along The Rhein - a short stroll from the Hohenzollern Bridge to the Chocolate Museum, close to the  Severinsbrucke
    • 3D Golf - Now Thats Something New! - a little bit of our 3D party + a short detour at  Metzgerei & Salon Schmitz
    • Sweet And Quiet Bonn - more about our travels in Germany and the wonderful little town called Bonn, where the yumyum Haribo gummy bears come from :)
    Yours truly,
    The LadyBug Who Fell In Love With The Bonn History Museum

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