• Conversation with myself – David Copperfield

    In response to The Daily Post’s writing prompt: “Futures Past.”

    As a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up? How close or far are you from that vision? I wanted to be David Copperfield. Had I wanted to be like him – famous and commercially successful? Had I wanted to be a magician – performing tricks to enchant and thrill the audience? Had I not taken that path because performing magic was too mystical and I knew not where to learn? How far am I now, from that vision of being a world-class magician? A hundred miles? Thousand? Million? Am I as rich? Am I as famous? Maybe I am not that far from that vision as I think. The nature of my role now is oddly similar. I aim to entice. I seek to thrill. I am delighted when the audience is lured in. I am excited when the audience is bewildered. But unlike Copperfield, I find the most pleasure when the audience finds the truth. That last point sets us apart. Just one point. We are so similar, yet vastly different. One relishes in the suspense, the other in the light bulb moment. DSC00867This photo of a large ancient chandelier emitting dim lights is a symbol of the suspense, thrill, and mystery of the unknown, that I felt while watching David Copperfield in my childhood. Comment to share what you wanted to be when you grew up. Feel free to leave the link to your blog post. [Photo: Taken at Universal Studios Singapore, in 2011.]

  • In response to Cee’s Odd Ball Challenge 2015 Week 28.

    Every now and then, I find myself i strange positions, trying to take photo in a weird position, and the object of focus is inevitably out of the ordinary.

    Some years back, I took a picture of the rusty metal hinge that had held the KTM railway track (historical train track linking two countries, Malaysia and Singapore) together for the longest time. The image of this hinge is imprinted in my mind because it was so strange! I was wondering how the hinge was being manufactured, how it was being locked into place, why it had stayed perfectly functional for so long, how heavy it might weigh, would it ever rust away… You might be able to answer my questions. This is what the hinge looks like:

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    In fact, I was so fascinated, or perhaps mystified by the hinge that I took another photo of it some distance down the track.

    DSC00435I was likely thinking, “I have photographed the one on the left. Something feels amiss. I need to photograph the one on the right.” And that might have been how I ended up with two photographs.

    Even I, myself, only just realised that I have two photos of the same object. If I had not looked through my photos for this challenge, I would have carried on living without knowing how bizarre I thought those hinges were back then.

    How do you find it?

    Click on the banner below to find out more about Cee’s Odd Ball Challenge.

    022714-odd-ballFeel free to leave the link to your response in my comments.

    Enjoy!

  • A Photo a Week Challenge: Favorite Color in Nature

    In response to Nancy Merrill Photography A Photo A Week Challenge: Favourite Colour in Nature.

    I love this theme! I like chatting about colours. What is your favourite colour? What does the colour say about you? How does the tone make you feel? What is your most memorable moment with the colour? I have been asked countless times what my favourite colour is, especially when I am wearing white, or first yellow. Yes, my favourite colour in nature is WHITE!

    ***

    The photo below is of Willy’s Rock at White Beach, Boracay, Philippines. White Beach is indeed white and stretches an incredibly long way, and how gentle and far it runs out into the sea. I could walk some 50 metres into the sea, and still find myself only knee-deep. I felt like it was a huge bathtub, where I could sit down and play with my rubber ducklings while so far out into the sea. DSC00946 Liking white also means I adore wedding gowns like the one below, which I capture during a wedding show: IMG_2364And I cannot resist looking up at the clouds. DSC00245And the day cannot be complete without a white flower, caught at Gardens by the Bay, Singapore.

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    On the flag of Singapore, white represents pervading and everlasting purity and virtue. This meaning cannot be truer of the colour.

    Isn’t white lovely?

    Comment to share your favourite colour in nature with me. If you have your response on your blog, feel free to leave a link to your response to this challenge in my comments.

    Read also, Cee’s response to this challenge here.

    Enjoy the pure white Tuesday!

  • Flower of the Day – July 14, 2015 – Sunflower | cocoaevenings

    The flower today is dedicated to Cee of Cee’s Photography. I thought I would give her a sunflower from my country because her flower for today, July 14, 2015, Tuesday, is a sunflower.

    Sunflowers are one of the brightest and most beautiful flowers of all, which is just like how Cee’s Photography is for me. Every time I read a Flower of the Day post, I feel positive and inspired, so this is a thank you to Cee:

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    This is a wild sunflower that is about 1.6 metres in height. She is growing in a patch besides an old railway track, together with many of her siblings and cousins.

    The sunflower patch absolutely delighted me, insofar, I still smile when I look at this photo and recall discovering that wild patch. This is because wild flowers that grow up healthy and in big quantities are few and far between in the urban area where I live.

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    Once again, I dedicate this sunflower which holds a very meaningful memory in my heart, to Cee. Thank you for the beautiful daily posts!

  • Cee’s Which Way Challenge: 2015 Week #27 – Invitation from the Pink Clouds

    In response to Cee’s Photography Which Way Challenge tag.

    I have realised that I am not the only one in this world who loves taking photos of paths after browsing through some of the other entries for Cee’s Which Way Challenge.

    The fact that one will never find out what is up the path, unless one walks the path, makes the path interesting and full of wonderment. Here is one such path, which I title:

    Invitation from the Pink Clouds

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    I took this photo to capture the reddish pink clouds that were glowing from the sun that just set. Little did I know that the resultant image is so inviting as if asking me to turn that way for more adventures. I did not explore that way in the end as I was rushing home for dinner.

    This image has stayed in my mind and still calling, “come on here another day!”

    So another day it would be!

    Click the banner below to participate and read more of Which Way Challenge Tag.

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    You may also find Cee’s response for this week here.

    Enjoy!

  • Flowers are one of my favourite subject to photograph because they are usually colourful and symmetrical. Flowers are also found easily by the roads in this garden city known as Singapore.

    Here is one that I captured on the way back from work.

    imageEnjoy!

  • Share Your World – 2015 Week #27

    In response to Cee’s Photography Share Your World tag.

    I love reading other people’s responses to such questions and understanding their lives more. Of course, I also like answering such questions. Don’t you?

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    What is your favorite month of the year?

    June, because it is my birthday month, and it is during the summer holidays, so there are a lot of fun and enjoyable activities lined up specially for the month.

    Do you drink coffee at all?

    Yes, at least twice a week. I like black coffee a.k.a Americano at Starbucks, or kopi-o-kosong where I live. I seldom buy ready made coffee. I buy powder and brew my coffee mostly by filtering, and sometimes pressing. I do not own a coffee-maker.

    Comment if you would like me to share more on coffee, what I use to brew, and what powders I have, etc.

    What was one of your first moneymaking jobs (other than babysitting or newspaper delivery)?

    I would assume internship is not counted here, so my answer is that I did administrative work for a small enterprise. My roles included picking up calls, helping to arrange appointments with clients, preparing cheques, preparing letters, filing, chasing debts, photocopying, making tea for clients, ordering a service or goods, and other non-specialised tasks which can be learned quickly.

    List: If you play video/computer games list 5 games you like?

    Counterstrike (first person online-shooter)
    Mario (on Nintendo)
    Pharaoh (civilisation-building by Sierra)
    Pinball (Minesweeper, Solitaire, etc that were on Windows were fun too)
    Pokemon (Yellow, Silver, Sapphire, and Diamond)

    Bonus question: What are you grateful for from last week, and what are you looking forward to in the week coming up?

    I am grateful for what little time I had to chat and eat with friends at work and outside. I got to know some acquaintances better through a photography session and a course. I also attended an alumni dinner at which I caught up with ex-classmates, and teachers from long ago. On top of that, I managed to squeeze in bowling with another group of friends!

    I look forward to meet-ups with friends that have been scheduled for the week ahead!

    Click on the banner below to participate and/or read more of Share Your World Tag.
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    You may also find Cee’s responses to these questions here.

    Enjoy!

  • I do not know the name of this flower, but it looks so perfect and unique that I took a photo.
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    Enjoy!
    [Photo: Taken at Gardens by the Bay, Singapore, in 2012.]

  • Beauty 100 – Hygiene and Grooming | Mother’s Ways

    In response to The Daily Post’s weekly photo challenge: “Habit.”

    Habit. The stuff of the everyday — places we go, things we do, people we see. We don’t often think of…

    Habit includes the things I do that I do not often think of… Until now.

    Now, I become aware of what I automatically do, such as brushing my teeth every morning and night, cleaning my tongue and ears regularly, trimming nasal hair, and cutting my nails. I do them not because I want to do them, but because they have long become a habit. I have picked up the habit to maintain hygiene from my mother, and I have unconsciously brought these habits over to my life in my new house. I perform these habits as though I were still living with my mother, living my life the way she taught me to. I think of my mother every time I catch in these habits that she inculcated in me.

    ***

    At this point, I have come to realise that the key to beauty starts from maintaining hygiene, whether you are 5 years’ old, 12 years’ old and going through puberty, sweet 18, or adult over 21. If you are a parent, inculcate the habit of maintaining hygiene in your child.

    From left, toothpaste, toothbrush, tongue cleaner, nasal hair trimmer, ear digger, and on top right, nail clipper.

    Here is how to maintain hygiene, and why.

    1. Brush teeth at least twice a day, once in the day and once at night. Brush after food.

    Parents could try setting the water mug (with water) and toothbrush (with toothpaste on) for your child. Brush with your child to role model for them that this is important, and also to ensure that they carry out the act at the appropriate time of the day.

    Why: Brushing teeth helps remove food and plaque – a sticky film that forms on teeth and contains bacteria. The bacteria could release acids that attack tooth enamel, in the presence of sugar which is present in most foods. After repeated attacks, cavities will form. (Source: http://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/adult-health/expert-answers/brushing-your-teeth/faq-20058193)

    Why, according to my mother: Many elderly had lost their teeth in early adulthood. One elderly she knew had gold teeth on his dentures, and another brushes his teeth with charcoal.

    2. Clean the tongue with a tongue-cleaner (third item from the left in photo) every other day.

    Parents could try role-modelling in front of the child and monitor the child when introducing this act.

    The tongue cleaner can be bought from beauty or personal daily supplies store. In Singapore, it is usually also sold at the personal supplies booth at a Pasar Malam. These stores usually also sell combs, nail clippers, and the likes.

    Also, there is the plastic one and the metal one. I prefer the plastic one, which you see in the photo.

    Why: Cleaning the tongue helps remove the white “stains” on the tongue. The white “stains” have to be removed to prevent bad breath. Bad breath occurs when foul smells are produced during decomposition – bacteria breaking down the white “stains” of food into simpler substances.

    The next time you meet someone with bad breath, try to sneak a peak at their tongues and spot the white “stains” that cover the entire tongue.

    Why, according to my mother: White “stains” look dirty, so clean it.

    3. Trim nasal hair using a small trimmer with blunt ends (fourth from the left in photo) when they grow out of the nose.

    Trimmers for nasal hair can be bought from beauty or personal daily supplies store. The one in the photo is from Daiso (a Japanese store selling all sorts of items for a flat price of SGD 2).

    Plucking is also possible, but will be painful.

    Parents need not introduce this procedure as it is purely aesthetic, and nasal hair is seldom noticed when in school.

    How: For those starting out, ensure that you already know how to control a pair of scissors properly and have good hand-eye coordination. Face a mirror straight, put the blades of the trimmer into the nose vertically, open and close the trimmer without touching the walls of the nose. There should be zero pain. Remove the trimmer after a few trims and check. If there are no more hair sticking out, it is done. There is no need to look upwards or use a touch and try to see the hairs while trimming. It is more dangerous that way.

    Why: Purely aesthetic, as nasal hair functions to filter out foreign particles during breathing, so do not trim to much.

    Nasal hair can be quite distracting if they stick out from the nose as they can be seen by people who stand right in front of you.

    4. Clean ears using an ear-digger (last from the left in photo) once a week or by ear candling once a month.

    Parents could try digging ears for your child, by having your child lie sideways on your lap, in between your legs. Sit on the floor, and lean against something for support. This way, you could bend over and look into your child’s ear. Have the child turn over on the other side when you have finished digging one ear. Also, allow your child to feedback if it is painful, and adjust your depth of digging and strength accordingly.

    Ear diggers can be bought from beauty or personal daily supplies stores.

    Why: Cleaning ears helps remove biological wastes that is naturally produced. Removal of ear wastes is important because the accumulation of waste could hinder hearing.

    The next time you meet someone young who is hard of hearing, try to find out if they dig/candle their ears regularly.

    Why, according to my mother: The wastes are dirty, so clean it.

    5. Trim nails using a pair of small scissors for nails or a nail clipper (top right in photo) once a week.

    Parents could try trimming nails for your child regularly, as it could be dangerous and daunting for the young ones who have less developed motor skills and hand-eye coordination. Parents could also try getting a smaller nail clipper when teaching the child to trim nails independently so that it is not as scary.

    Why: Trimming nails helps removes dirt that accumulates under the nails, and could help prevent acne as dirty nails sometimes cause pimples to grow when the fingers touch the face. Besides, clean and short nails are desired in many professions, such as mothers who prepare food, kitchen staffs, makeup artists, beauticians, masseuse, and more.

    In addition, short nails makes typing on a touchscreen mobile phone so much easier!

    Why, according to my mother: Long nails are dirty and not allowed in school.

    These are the very basics of beauty that is usually unspoken because these are assumed to be habits that most urbanites would have learned from parent(s)/guardians, or friends, long before adulthood.

    Thank you, Mother!

    What are some habits in your beauty routine? Comment and share!

  • Top 3 Makeup Tips from Meet-up with Roseanne Tang and Bioderma

    On 10 July 2015, Friday, 7.30pm in the evening, I attended the meet-up with Roseanne Tang and Bioderma at Robinsons, Raffles City Shopping Centre. I found out about this event through Roseanne, on her YouTube channel.

    Roseanne explains makeup techniques clearly and has a good number of tutorials for makeup that is clean-cut, simple, and just enhances features rather than make them jump out. She empathises with Asian Chinese’s biggest concerns when applying makeup, such as double eyelids (hooded eyes) with no clear crease structure, and flatter noses.

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    I picked up a handful of tips from Roseanne as she did a makeover for pretty Christabel Chua at bellywellyjelly.com.

    Here are the Top 3 I found:

    1. When using a Q-tip to clean off smudges using Bioderma Sensible H2O Micellar Cleansing Water, roll the Q-tip with light pressure over the smudge, and not drag or pull it. With the roll and hold, roll and hold motion, the smudge will stick to the clean part of the cotton on the Q-tip as all 360 degrees of the cotton bud will be used. But with the drag or pull motion, the smudge will stick to dirty part of the cotton that has already been used, only one side of the cotton bud will be used.

    Remember to roll the Q-tip that is dipped in Bioderma water!

    2. When applying eyeshadow for colour all over the eyelids with a firm shading brush (I like using M.A.C 239), push/pat the flat side of the brush head on the moving part of your eyelids. This way, the colour pigments will transfer onto the skin and stick. If a windshield wiper motion or dragging/pulling motion is used, the colour pigments will get swept and dusted off the eyelids. And this could explain why some eyeshadows seem to yield very low pigmentation.

    Use the windshield wiper motion with a fluffy dome blending brush for blending out the colours only after the colours have been added and pigmented enough.

    3. When applying contour colour, be it cream or powder, use a continuous pulling back-and-forth motion. Start from the face line at the ear down to the hollow of the cheek (that should be right under the outer end of the eye), and go back up towards the ear, then down again and up, and so on and so forth until the contour colour is deep and blended enough. The face should be just warmed up and slightly slimmer when seen straight from the front.

    Roseanne was using brushes from 13rushes, a Singapore makeup startup. (On a side note, I think the 13 means ‘B’ for ‘Brushes’.)

    The photo below shows the gifts from Bioderma for attendees that day.

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    Disclaimer:

    I am not affiliated with Roseanne Tang, Bioderma, or 13rushes. I enjoy Roseanne’s YouTube channel. I have been using Bioderma cleansing water since end 2012, when it just arrived on the shelves of Watsons in Singapore. I like the hot pink ferrel of the 13rushes brushes.

    [Photo:

    1. Taken by myself, showing Roseanne on left putting on makeup for model Christabel on right.

    2. Featured Image was taken by myself, showing gifts from Bioderma – an umbrella, a case of cotton pads, and some Bioderma product samples.]