Saturday, July 31, 2010

Mad Men is Back!

WARNING: CONTAINS SPOILERS!Mad Men season 4 started in July 25th for all you lucky American viewers. Unfortunately us poor Aussies have to wait a little longer but luckily I managed to track down and view the first episode online. For anyone wanting a sneak preview of whats to come here's what you missed!

The episode is set in 1964 and starts with Don being interviewed for an article on him and the new Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce advertising agency. Don with his mentality that Midwesterners don't like to talk about themselves bungles the interview and ends up coming across as arrogant.He also fails to talk about the brands that the agency represent and as a result almost loses their contract with Glo-Coat. Bert Cooper and the other partners get sight of the article and call a meeting with Don whereby Don asks: "What am I supposed to say anyway? My work speaks for me." and is met firmly by Bert Cooper's "Turning creative success into business IS your work. And you failed."
With the agency struggling and almost no budget for media Pete and Peggy come up with a publicity stunt to get some free advertising for their client, Sugarberry Ham. They hire two 'actresses' to fight over a ham but this results in one of them pressing charges on the other for assault so Peggy has to go to Don for bail money. Don hands over the money but reprimands Peggy for not clearing the stunt with him first.

Once Don realises he can use the skills he possesses to turn the interview into a pitch for the company he sets up a second meeting this time with the Wall Street Journal and sells them the story of how the new agency came about.

On the personal front Don is living in a small apartment in Town while Betty and Henry are now married and living in the Draper house. Sally is having trouble adjusting to their new life and causes a stir at Henry's mothers house when the go for Thanks giving lunch. Betty's reprimand of Sally causes Henry's Mum to think that the children are frightened of Betty and she disapproves of Henry and Betty's marriage.

This was a great start to the new season and I can't wait to see the next episode!

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

An Easy Hairstyle and New Eyes!

I have been playing with some quick and easy hairstyles that I can do quickly before rushing out to work this week in an attempt to tame my out of control perm and came up with this. Unfortunately the style doesn't really show up in black hair on camera very well but its very easy to do and has a sort of vintagey feel to it.

It is a very easy style to achieve all you have to do is part the hair wherever you normally do. For me this is to one side. Then starting with the hair that is closest to the part at the front (in my case my bangs) twist the hair backwards and work down the head until you get to the nape of the neck then secure with a hair band. I put a hair comb in the top to secure it a bit more as my hair is quite thick and I had quite a few short ends from my bangs that I am trying to grow out.


You can do this style on both sides of the head or just one and secure the hair in any way you want be it a ponytail at the back or side, pigtails a bun or french pleat. The possibilities are limitless!


I've also been tyring out new eye shadow colours this week after picking up a cheap palette of 48 different colours on eBay. Normally I stick to just browns and greys but I've got a bit bored of the same old same old so Ive been looking for something a bit different. I love this cut girly pink. Its a kinda pinupy look! Please excuse my horrendous eyebrows they desperately need plucking but I'm a wuss when it comes to doing them so I'm psyching myself up for it!

Monday, July 26, 2010

Birthday Giveaway!

I seem to have sorted out my technical issues so without further ado in order to celebrate the 1st Birthday of Emma aime I have a fabulous giveaway to offer all my lovely readers who have been reading all my scribblings for the past year.

Dedicated readers may remember way back in January I posted this advertorial for Buyster.com.au well the item I am giving away is the fabulous Marylin Wall Clock that I reviewed.
You can enter the competition up to three times by doing the following:

For one entry: Leave a comment at the bottom of this post
For a second entry: Write a post about this competition on your blog linking to this post
For a third entry: Twitter or post about this competition on a social networking site

Please leave me comments letting me know how many of these things you have done and leaving links so I can check up on you!

The winner will be drawn at the end of August

This giveaway has been listed on Giveaway Scout so check out their website for more great giveaways here!

So get your entries in today dear readers ... x

Emma aime is 1 Today!

Due to technical difficulties I cannot post details of the giveaway I promised but I will try to do it tomorrow so keep your eye peeled dear readers!

Sunday, July 25, 2010

What Emma Did - 25th July 2010

To be honest this week has been rather uneventful. What with the cold weather and very long hours worked and at college for the hubby we've both not felt up to doing much so the list this week will be rather short so I apologise now. Next week should look a little better especially since tomorrow is my blogs 1st Birthday so look out for a special giveaway coming your way.

This week I have been:

Becoming obsessed with Zynga's new game Frontierville (I know its sad!)
Shopping for wedding night lingerie with the Purple Fairy
Having more electrical issues with both our laptop and fridge freezer playing up!
Trying to tame my crazy perm and coming up with a quick new hairstyle
Playing with some new eyeshadow colours after getting bored of greys and browns
Staying in out of the cold and wet and watching Ross Noble DVDs with the hubby (we'd be fools to ourselves not to!)
Trying to find a new matte rose pink lipstick colour (any suggestions?)


and to be honest that's about it!

Friday, July 23, 2010

Emma aime in the Kitchen: Stir Fried Chicken with Cashew Nuts

I realise it has been almost a week since I last posted anything which is very lax of me but to be honest I haven't really done a lot this week! Having said that yesterday I was lacking inspiration for what to cook for dinner so I pulled out the new Gordon Ramsay book entitled World Kitchen and found this delicious recipe for Stir Fried Chicken with Cashew Nuts.

Ingredients:
2-3 boneless, skinless chicken breasts - about 400g
sea salt and black pepper
2 tbsp of ground nut or vegetable oil
50g cashews
1 small onion peeled and sliced
3 cloves garlic peeled and chopped
1 dried chili cut into 1cm pieces
3 spring onions trimmed and cut into diagonal pieces
1 1/2 tbsp fish sauce
1 tbsp dark soy sauce
pinch caster sugar
1 red chili deseeded and sliced on the diagonal

Method:
Cut the chicken breasts into small bite size pieces and mix with a pinch of salt and pepper. Set aside.

Heat the oil in a wok. Add the cashew nuts and stir over a medium heat until toasted and lightly golden brown. Remove from the wok and set aside.

Add the onion and the garlic to the wok and stir-fry for 3-4 minutes. Tip in the dried chili, then add the chicken pieces. Stir fry for 2 minutes until the chicken is opaque. Add the spring onions, fish sauce, soy sauce and pinch of sugar and stir fry for another minute. Finally tip in the sliced red chill and cashew nuts. Stir well and turn of the heat.

Spoon the mixture onto a warm platter or divide between warm bowls and serve immediately.

Notes:
I found that you couldn't really taste the soy sauce or fish sauce so doubled the amounts to add more flavour to the dish. I also bulked it out with noodle and fresh veggies to make it more healthy. I added bok choi, broccoli, red capsicum and carrot but you can add pretty much whatever veggies takes your fancy

Monday, July 19, 2010

What Emma Did - 18th July 2010

OK so its late. Please excuse my tardiness. This week I have been:

Going to the Good Food Show and tasting all the goodies
Having my two nephews to stay for a few days as its school holidays
Meeting up with my pregnant niece and planning the baby clothes I'm going to make
Receiving heaps of parcels as all the items I ordered for my birthday have started to arrive
Being treated to lunch by my Sis-in-Law, the purple fairy
Trying to track down a pair of white ribbed wool tights and failing!
Picking baby names with the hubby (I'm not pregnant before you ask!)

Making my own wedding avatar on the Knot website
Planning what wedding night lingerie I'm going to buy at Bras and Things next week when I go with the UN girlies to spend the voucher they gave me for my birthday. So far I'm going for this.

Planning days out with my sister for when she comes over in 6 weeks

Friday, July 16, 2010

Filofax Fun

As you may know I am a bit of an organisation freak. I love making lists and have lists for everything from everyday menial tasks like shopping and errands to lists of books to read and lists of my future plans for where I imagine myself 5 years from now! I was using my phone to log all the lists and future appointments but I have been finding it hard to keep track of my various appointments, work shifts and matching my schedule to my hubby's to try and find out when we have free time to spend together.

So when I came across Gala's post A Filofax Love Affair! a light bulb flicked in my brain and I quickly dug out my old Breast Cancer Campaign Pink Pocket Filofax. These retail relatively cheaply for just £23.00 and the good news is this money is helping a worthwhile charity!
I then set about organising my Filofax but I found when it came to buying inserts some were a little pricey and didn't really cover what I needed so I set about making my own. Filofax Pocket paper size is 8.26cm wide by 12.07cm height. You need to insure you leave a 1cm border on the left hand side to account for the holes and a 0.5cm border around the rest of the page. After I had made my pages and printed them out I cut them to size and using the Filofax hole punch I bought from eBay I punched them and now I have pages for anything I can possibly conceive needing. All my lists and information is safely stored in one place and its easily portable. It also means that I can just look at my diary pages at a quick glance and see what free time I have!

David Mckay on his Organised Life site talks about the benefits of shunning technology and going back to a paper organiser system and I have to say so far mine is working out a treat!

So don't delay dear readers go back to paper today ... x

Thursday, July 15, 2010

The Bookworm Presents: The Forties Good Times Just Around the Corner

I received this book as part of my birthday present from my lovely Mummy and Stepdad and was so excited I immediately curled up with a cup of tea and read it cover to cover.

The book has sections covering The Forties Family, Food of the Forties, Fashions on Rations, Movies of the Forties, Staying In, Hits of the Forties, Going Out, The Theatre, Bestsellers of the Forties and Sports and Hobbies.

The book is told largely in the words of people that lived through this decade and is a vivid account of Britain at the time when air raids, food shortages and rationing of almost every essential item dominated everyday life. Yet this was also a time of hope for the future.

A Blog Facelift

The more eagle eye readers among you may notice that I have given the blog a bit of a facelift in celebration of its up and coming first birthday. In celebration of my blogs first birthday I will be hosting my first giveaway so keep you eyes peeled over the next few weeks for details!

Sunday, July 11, 2010

What Emma Did - 11th July 2010

This week I have been:

♥ Celebrating my 26th birthday
♥ Going to see Westside Story with the Hubby as a birthday treat
♥ Enjoying birthday drinks with the UN girlies
♥ Reading this fab book about the 1940s (a birthday pressie from my Mum and Stepdad)
♥ Reading the new Stephanie Meyers Eclipse novella entitled
'The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner'
♥ Watching Dick Tracey (having never seen it) and loving it!
♥ Digging out my old Breast Cancer Awareness Filofax and giving it a new lease of life after being inspired by Gala Darlings post - A Filofax Love Affair! Having decided that Filofax refills are too expensive I've made my own! (I will post more about this in the week!)

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

My Perm

Having poker straight hair is a bit of a hassle when it comes to trying to create vintage styles. If I tried to put a pin curl or barrel roll in my hair would literally flick out of the roll! So I decided to get a perm in order to create a bit more body in my hair and so it will actually hold curls.

My friend Lisa who is a hairdresser permed it for me. We did it on large sized perming rods so it is just wavy without being tiny granny curls although to be honest I would have preferred it more curly and next time I have it done I will probably get smaller rods so it is a curl rather than just wavy. I will have to wait until this perm fully grows out though as having a perm on top of a perm causes seriously bad frizz!
Please excuse this awful picture of me I took it just to show what my hair looks like once it has been washed and left to air dry. For anyone thinking of getting a perm I will tell you that it dries your hair out ALOT! I've never needed to use conditioner on my hair before but now I need to use it with every wash and Ive also been using a deep conditioning treatment once a week to try to get my hair back in good condition. On the plus side though I find my hair is not getting greasy as quickly as it used to so I don't have to wash it as often.
Another point I will make is that having a perm does not mean that you no longer have to set and style your hair. Its not a matter of wash, dry and voila Marilyn Monroe style curls. In fact you cant just quick dry your hair without a diffuser for your hairdryer. Otherwise you turn into a frizzball!! I have found that the curls in my fringe (that I am trying to grow out) have turned a little frizzy but I'm hopping with regular conditioning and once it grows out a bit this will die down. And speaking of die/dye my roots need retouching again although unfortunately I will have to leave them for a couple of weeks as have treatments too close together can seriously wreck your hair.
This is the first perm I've ever had so I'm still getting used to handling it but I have found that my curls definitely seem to stay in longer and as I don't have to wash my hair as regularly they also last more days so this means less time styling for me which is a plus as I don't have much time in the mornings! I will bring you more pics of the hair over the next few weeks so you can see how the perms doing!! The picture at the top of this post is the finished result. I did however do this in a bit of a rush and my hair was still a little damp when i took my curlers out so it didn't last as long as it should have but the curls still stayed in all night which is a result in my hair as normally they drop out in 10 minutes!!

Sunday, July 4, 2010

What Emma Did - 4th July 2010

This week I have been:
♥ Getting my hair permed thanks to the lovely Lisa. Now my curls actually stay in! (I will do a hair post!)
♥ Surprised by a gorgeous roast lamb diner when I got in from work on Wednesday by my hero of a hubby

♥ Sipping mulled wine at the Sydney Winter Festival
♥ Checking out Engadine as a potential suburb to move to
♥ Watching Alice in Wonderland with the hubby
Buy a gorgeous floral dress on eBay for a steal. It says its 1950s but I'm not so sure!
♥ Looking forward to my birthday on Wednesday!!
Being insanely jealous of you Melbonians who get to see the Tim Burton exhibition and hoping it will come to Sydney

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Monthly Muse: Clara Bow

Its the beginning of July and that means its time for a new monthly muse. This months muse is 1920s actress and iconic flapper Clara Bow.

Clara Bow was born in Brooklyn, New York on 29th July 1905, she was the third child (the first two girls died in infancy) to Sarah and Robert Bow. Sarah was told by a doctor that another pregnancy could kill her by a doctor but she still fell pregnant with Clara. According to Bow her mother became "almost mad with apprehension and fear". The delivery proved to be as difficult as feared; "At first, they thought I was dead... I don't suppose two people ever looked death in the face more clearly than my mother and I the morning I was born. We were both given up, but somehow we struggled back to life."

At sixteen, Sarah fell from a second-story window and suffered a severe head injury. Later she was diagnosed with "psychosis due to epilepsy", which apart from the seizures can cause disordered thoughts, delusional ideas, paranoia and aggressive behavior. From a young age Clara learnt to care for her mother during her seizures and how to deal with the psychotic and malicious episodes. Sarah worsened gradually, and when she realized her daughter was set for a movie career, she told her she "would be much better off dead". One night in February 1922, Bow awoke with a butcher knife against her throat; when her mother hesitated, Bow fended her off and locked her up. In the morning, Sarah had no recollection of the episode and was later committed to a charity hospital

Robert, Clara's father never really made anything of himself and couldn't hold down a job. The families income varied dramatically. From 1905 to 1923 the family lived at 14 different addresses. Robert with often leave the family for long periods leaving them very little to survive on.

Clara was often teased growing up for her worn out clothes and carrot top hair. As a result of this she became somewhat of a tomboy and became famed among peers for her strong right arm. Clara would often attend the movies in her teenage years and sought it as a refuge from he difficult home life. It was here that she fell in love with the movies.

Every year Brewster publications Motion Picture Classic and Shadowland, held a nationwide acting contest, Fame and Fortune and several of its former winners had found work in the pictures afterwords. With her father's support but against her mother's wishes, she competed and won. In the final screen test Bow was up against an already scene-experienced woman, who went first and did "a beautiful piece of acting", but when Bow did the scene she actually became her character and "lived it". In the January issues 1922 of Motion Picture Classics the jury concluded:

“ "She is very young, only 16. But she is full of confidence, determination and ambition. She is endowed with a mentality far beyond her years. She has a genuine spark of divine fire. The five different screen tests she had, showed this very plainly, her emotional range of expression provoking a fine enthusiasm from every contest judge who saw the tests. She screens perfectly. Her personal appearance is almost enough to carry her to success without the aid of the brains she indubitably possesses".

Bow won an evening gown and a silver trophy and the publisher committed to help her "gain a role in films". But nothing happened. Bow's father told her to "haunt" Brewster's office (located in Brooklyn) until they came up with something. Clara was eventually cast in Beyond the Rainbow but in the end her five scenes were cut from the film.

This did not deter Clara and encouraged by her father she ran around all the studios in town looking for parts but she was often told she was too ugly or too fat. Eventually director Elmer Clifton needed a tomboy for his movie Down to the Sea in Ships, saw Bow in Motion Picture Classic magazine and sent for her. She got the part and when the movie was released the critics sang her praises. Due to her merits in the movie she was elected one of the 1924 WAMPAS baby stars.

Three months before Down to the Sea in Ships was released, while her mother was dying at home, Bow danced half nude, on a table, unaccredited in Enemies of woman. In spring she got a part in The Daring Years and in the summer, she got a "tomboy" part in Grit, a story, which dealt with juvenile crime and was written by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Bow met her first boyfriend, cameraman Arthur Jacobson, and she got to know director Frank Tuttle, with whom she worked in five later productions.

While shooting Grit bow was approached by Jack Bachman of Preferred Pictures in Hollywood who offered her a three month trial. Bow was hesitant but spurred on by her father she made the move.

Bows first Hollywood movie was an adaptation of the operetta Maytime. Before Maytime was finished Schulberg announced that Bow was given the lead in the studio's biggest seasonal assessment, Poisoned Paradise, but first she was lent to First National Pictures to co-star in the adaption of Gertrude Atherton's 1923 bestseller Black Oxen, shot in October, and to co-star Colleen Moore in Painted People, shot in November.

In 1925, Schulberg cast Bow in The Plastic Age. The movie was a huge hit, and Bow was suddenly the studio's most popular star. She also began to date her co-star Gilbert Roland, who would become the first of many fiancees. Bow followed her first big success with Mantrap (1926), directed by Victor Fleming. Though he was twice her age, Bow quickly fell in love with her director. She began seeing both Roland and Fleming at the same time.

In 1927 Clara reached the height of her fame with the movie It. She became known as The It Girl.

Many Hollywood insiders considered her socially undesirable. Bow was not liked by other women in Hollywood, and her presence at social functions was taboo, including her own premieres. Bow's bohemian lifestyle, thick Brooklyn accent and "dreadful" manners were considered reminders of the Hollywood Elite's uneasy position in high society, and they shunned her for it. Budd Schulberg, wrote in his memoir, Moving Pictures, "Hollywood was a cultural schizophrene: The anti-movie Old Guard with their chamber music and their religious pageants fighting a losing battle against the more dynamic culture of the Ad Schulbergs who flaunted the bohemianism of Edna St. Vincent Millay and the socialism of Upton Sinclair. But there was one subject on which the staid old Hollywood establishment and the members of the new culture circle would agree: Clara Bow, no matter how great her popularity, was a low life and a disgrace to the community."

However, Bow was praised by critics for her beauty, vitality and enthusiasm — Adolph Zukor, head of Paramount, said that "She danced even when her feet weren't moving. Some part of her was always in motion, if only her great, rolling eyes. It was an elemental magnetism, an animal vitality, that made her the center of attraction in any company."

In 1927, Bow starred in Wings, a war picture largely rewritten to accommodate her, as she was Paramount's biggest star at the time. The film went on to win the first Academy Award for Best Picture. In 1928, Bow wrote the foreword for a novelization of her film The Fleet's In. Between 1927 and 1930, Bow was one of Hollywood's top five box office attractions.

Bow's career continued into the early sound film era. Legend contends that her first talkie, The Wild Party, directed by Dorothy Arzner, was a disaster, but audiences crammed into theatres to see it, and the reviews, though they gave the film itself poor marks, commented that her voice suited her screen image well. However, Bow began experiencing microphone fright on the sets of her sound films. A visibly nervous Bow had to do a number of retakes in The Wild Party because her eyes kept wandering up to the microphone overhead; Arzner took credit for being the first director to hang the microphone from overhead. However, her performances in her sound films improved rapidly, and she continued to be a box office success.

While MGM had given their biggest star, Greta Garbo, two years to prepare for her first sound film, Paramount gave Bow two weeks. Paramount began canceling her films, docking her pay, charging her for unreturned costumes, and insisting that she pay for her publicity photographs. As she slipped closer and closer to a major breakdown, her manager B.P. Schulberg began referring to her as "Crisis-A-Day-Clara"

The pressures of fame, public scandals, overwork and a damaging court trial involving former assistant Daisy DeVoe took their toll on Bow's already fragile emotional health. She ended up in a sanatorium in April 1931 with a case of shattered nerves. Paramount released her from her contract a short while later. Following a brief period away from Hollywood to recover, Bow signed a two-picture deal with Fox Film Corporation and returned to the screen in the early talkie Call Her Savage (1932). Although the film was a success, Bow opted for marriage and motherhood, and ended her film career after the release of Hoop-La the following year.

Bow and cowboy actor Rex Bell (actually George F. Beldam), later a Lieutenant Governor of Nevada, married in 1932 and had two sons, Tony Beldam (born 1934, changed name to Rex Anthony Bell, Jr.) and George Beldam, Jr. (born 1938). Bow retired from acting in 1933. Her last public exposure, albeit fleeting, was a guest appearance on the radio show Truth or Consequences in 1947; Bow provided the voice of "Mrs. Hush".

In 1944, while Bell was running for the U.S. House of Representatives, Bow tried to commit suicide. In 1949 she checked into The Institute of Living to be treated for her chronic insomnia. Shock treatment was tried and numerous psychological tests performed. Bow's IQ was measured "bright normal" (pp. 111-119), while others claimed she was unable to reason, had poor judgment and displayed inappropriate or even bizarre behavior. Bow was diagnosed with schizophrenia, despite experiencing no hallucinations or psychosis. Her insomnia was a result of childhood trauma, the analysts said, but Bow rejected psychological explanations for both her sleep disorder and her physical pains

Bow spent her last years in a modest house in Los Angeles under the constant care of a nurse, living off an estate worth about $500,000 at the time of her death. She died on September 27, 1965, aged 60, of a heart attack while watching a Gary Cooper movie. The autopsy revealed that Bow suffered from atherosclerosis (death certificate), a heart disease established in early adolescence. Bow's heart bore scars from an earlier undiagnosed heart attack.She was interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.

Clara is an inspiration that proves that with persistence we can make our dreams a reality. Clara was have been panned by Hollywood insiders but she always stayed true to herself and her roots and did not bow down to public pressures. Bow was the epitome of a flapper and her inspiration can still be seen today in the cartoon character Betty Boop.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Sydney Winter Festival

The hubby and I unintentionally gatecrashed (we didn't see the entrance with security guards and entry fees honest!) the Winter Festival at the forecourt of St Marys Cathedral last night. It was a beautiful night and thankfully after playing around with my camera a bit Ive worked out how to get decent night shots so I've got the pics to prove it!
The Festival is on until 4th July and includes a fab ice skating rink (we didn't have a spin on as I am an awful skater and didn't want to do myself or other people damage!), a traditional alpine food market with food from Austria, Switzerland and Bavaria and fab rides including a zorb ball and syco swing board! Hubby and I warmed our cockles with some delicious mulled wine which was $10 including the mug. The hubby being the thrifty person he was noticed many people had abandoned their free mugs so he hastily gave 5 a new home!

Check out the festival for yourselves dear readers ... x