Warung Bebas

Senin, 07 Februari 2011

Final Fantasy Giveaways

Hi guys! Apologies for the lack of updates recently, been really busy stuffing my face with CNY goodies, watching old movies and Taiwan variety shows on fushion. It's such a legitimate reason I know. But hey, it was official holiday over here !

Anyway, I'm here to give away authentic Final Fantasy merchandise, available only at the Tokyo Game Show 2010 !!! You guys have to thank the uber sweet Reiko and Decadence for lugging them back for you guys!



Square Enix's Official Tokyo Game Show Line Up booklet for 2010

Its the official Square Enix Line Up booklet for TGS 2010. Matte, semi hard cover with glossy full colour prints inside. Scroll towards the end of the entry for a preview of the content. The graphics and colours are really awesome *_*


A Final Fantasy Legends plastic file


The rules this time will be a lil diff.

To win the merchandise, hop over to your favourite social networking (facebook/twitter/plurk etc) site now and start spreading love for TCC! Every single share or tweet is counted as one entry!

Then come back here to post a comment with a direct link to that share/tweet/blog entry etc. Make sure I am able to view your link if your account is private/protected. Alternatively, you can submit a screencap. Please make sure to leave either a working email or a blogger account for me to contact you if you win

Deadline for this giveaway is 14th February! I’ll sponsor up to SGD5 shipping fee but if shipping exceeds that, you'll have to top up the difference ^^. Winners will be selected via random.org so comment and spread more to increase your chances of winning! Good Luck!






P/s: I so hate blogging with Blogger's web interface. One of the biggest reason for the lack of updates is the fact that I can't get my Windows Live Writer to hook up with blogger T_T. I keep getting the error 500... sigh

Never too late to learn

The opportunity to challenge yourself to learn new and improve your skills endlessly is one reason why I cosplay. If I hadn’t plummeted to the wondrous world of costumes, I would not be as multi-skilled as I am now. Making and planning out costumes is Eureka after each other and I don’t know have I ever experienced such hunger for knowledge on my school years than I’ve had when I’ve willingly used hours or days to find the best way to build a certain prop or construct costume. Perhaps I might be little duller also. Objects would be just items. They would not raise ideas what they could be or how they could be used. Or I would not be able to startle the salesmen in hardware stores by starting a conversation about Dremel parts.

When I started making costumes for me and Yoki in 2006 I was first year student in bachelor degree of Arts and Crafts. Our studies were a combination of designing and executing, aka pattern making and sewing, so I had some base skills to start with. By the years I improved and finally I was at the point where sewing became a partial profession for me. That still doesn’t count out the fact that some of our costumes I’ve done only two, three years ago amuse me greatly. I think I would rather eat snails than display the way I made Jasdero’s and Debitto’s pants. The technical solutions and execution seems to take some time to get ripe. This applies in my case to lining clothes properly, making functioning and complicated attachments and for some reason button holes. They just need to be done repeatedly to create certainty.

Even if I studied in school where we handled fabrics daily, I learned to appreciate quality over… well, price only few years ago. But still, I lean towards making solutions that work best for the wished result. Sometimes flannel works as well as wool, only that it’s lot cheaper. Like fabrics, things should not be viewed only what it is said to be, but how it could be used; glue can be a stiffener or varnish, machine dye can work as fabric print, mosquito net transforms into a crinoline or skeleton for armor.

I have noticed that imagination improves with skills. My first Eureka occurred, when I figured to use methods I learned at school on book binding class to Matsumoto’s vice-captain badge. After that I started to combine different materials and methods experimentally with each other. Yoki’s grand idea I first suspected then awed. In 2007 we agonized how to create smooth fabric surface for Mauyri’s hat. The idea was the simplest; stretching white stockings on the crown part.

Our first weapon props we commissioned on our metal expert. When our ambition to be as self-sufficient as we could grew, we started to explore ways to do bigger props ourselves. Our first tryout with Finnfoam or insulation foam was a true learning process. The swords we did back in the day where far from perfect. My sword snapped in half, because there were no supporting structure inside. Yoki sanded her sword many days, because she didn’t realize that putty can be smoothed with water. After building few things with combination of insulation foam and putty, we tried to look up for things that could speed up the process up. We acquired power tools and learned to use them (safely). With our current Snowtrooper project we found ourselves vacuumforming. That is surely a thing we would have never tried if we hadn’t started to cosplay.

With cosplay, the development on the skill side is connected to displaying the costume as a full set. The longer I have done costumes, the more important it has become to be to make the cosplay look clean-cut. I like neat costumes, groomed wigs and nice make-up. If a costume fits well and looks like it have got some attention, all is good even if it’s not exactly like the reference. I personally think that I need to step up a little with different kinds of make-up and wig styling. I also have sometimes habit of over-doing, especially with Photoshop.

Photoshopping and editing live footage at the current level is also something that I think I would have passed, if it wasn’t for cosplay. I love storytelling and with cosplay it’s possible to make it as a visual experience. With photographing I’m just a newbie, but I’m eager to learn more. Other things I still would like to learn or in which I would like to get better are mold making, working with latex, wig dyeing and styling, sword construction, and body painting. Also I could improve my posing, acting in-character and socializing.

Lastly I must admit that I shamelessly stole the topic of improving in cosplay from Wepi, hostess of Kukkii se perunakin- cosplay blog. She went through her cosplay history and what she had learned after each year in the most enjoyable and inspiring way.

Selasa, 01 Februari 2011

WWCPJ Country Spotlight: Peru !!!

Sorry for the way guys, Worldwide Cosplayer Photo Journey's 4th participant(Rita-Chan) country entry is finally up! Intensive entry up ahead!

Peru (pronounced /pəˈruː/ ( listen) officially the Republic of Peru), is a country in western South America. It is bordered on the north by Ecuador and Colombia, on the east by Brazil, on the southeast by Bolivia, on the south by Chile, and on the west by the Pacific Ocean. It is a multiethnic country formed by the combination of different groups over five centuries.

 

Peruvian territory was home to the Norte Chico civilization, one of the oldest in the world, and to the Inca Empire, the largest state in Pre-Columbian America. The Spanish Empire conquered the region in the 16th century and established a Viceroyalty, which included most of its South American colonies. Peru finally achieved independence in 1821.

Peru is a representative democratic republic divided into 25 regions. Its geography varies from the arid plains of the Pacific coast to the peaks of the Andes mountains and the tropical forests of the Amazon Basin.


The Peruvian population, estimated at 29.5 million, is multiethnic, including Amerindians, Europeans, Africans, and Asians. The main spoken language is Spanish, although a significant number of Peruvians speak Quechua or other native languages. This mixture of cultural traditions has resulted in a wide diversity of expressions in fields such as art, cuisine, literature, and music.


Watch this documentary series (5 part) to explore Peru from the inside out with the 2001 -2006 president of Peru; Alejandro Toledo! 










Terrain & Climate

Peru covers 1,285,216 km2 (496,225 sq mi). Peru occupies 13% of the Amazonian forest!



The climate of Peru is very diverse, with a large variety of climates and microclimates. Such a diversity is due to the presence of the Andes mountains and the cold Humboldt Current. The Andes mountains run parallel to the Pacific Ocean, dividing the country into three geographic regions.

In general, the climate on the coast is subtropical with very little rainfall. The Andes mountains observe a cool-to-cold climate with rainy summers and very dry winters (Köppen climate classification). The eastern lowlands present an Equatorial climate with hot weather and rain distributed all year long. Almost 60% of the country's area is located within this region.

Because of its varied geography and climate, Peru has a high biodiversity with 21,462 species of plants and animals reported as of 2003; 5,855 of them endemic. The Peruvian government has established several protected areas for their preservation






Volcanoes in Sajama National Park (Parinacota and Pomerape)


The Bolivian Altiplano at approximately 14,000 feet. In the background rise the snow covered peaks of the Cordillera Real




Manú National Park, a biosphere reserve, depicts the Peruvian rainforest.




Alpamayo, a mountain peak in the Huascarán National Park.


Lake Titicaca, the highest commercially navigable lake in the world!





Cuisine

Peruvian cuisine stems mainly from the combination of Spanish and Indigenous cuisines with traditional native Peruvian ingredients, and with later influences from the cuisines of China, Italy, West Africa and Japan, due to the arrival of immigrants from those locations.




 


Common dishes include anticuchos, ceviche


 
and pachamanca.

A Pisco Sour is a South American cocktail containing pisco, lemon or lime juice, egg whites, simple syrup, and bitters.




The three traditional staples of Peruvian cuisine are corn, potatoes and beans.

These ingredients have been combined with a number of staples brought by the Spanish, such as rice, wheat and meat (such as beef, pork and chicken). Many traditional foods, such as quinoa, kiwicha, chili peppers and several roots 

and tubers, which had been tossed aside for European products since Colonial times, have seen a resurgence in popularity in recent decades with a revival of interest in native Peruvian food crops and culinary techniques.

Because of the variety of climates within Peru, a wide range of plants and animals are available for cooking. Peruvian cuisine has recently received acclaim due to its diversity of ingredients and techniques.



Ancient Civilization

Peru also saw the existence of many amazing ancient civilization and tribes! The Norte Chico civilization (also Caral or Caral-Supe civilization) was a complex Pre-Columbian society that included as many as 30 major population centers in what is now the Norte Chico region of north-central coastal Peru. It is the oldest known civilization in the Americas and one of the six sites where archaeologist believed, civilization separately originated in the ancient world. Meaning to say, the Norte Chico Civilisation is an original ancient civilization (China is one of the 6 sites too so yays to be Chinese!)


Flourishing between the 30th century BC and the 18th century BC. The alternative name, Caral-Supe, is derived from the Sacred City of Caral[ in the Supe Valley, a large and well-studied Norte Chico site. Complex society in Norte Chico arose a millennium after Sumer in Mesopotamia, it was contemporaneous with the Egyptian pyramids, and it predated the Mesoamerican Olmec by nearly two millennia.







In archaeological nomenclature, Norte Chico is a Preceramic culture of the pre-Columbian Lat Archaic; it completely lacked ceramics and apparently had almost no art. The most impressive achievement of the civilization was its monumental architecture, including large earthwork platform mounds and sunken circular plazas. Archaeological evidence suggests use of textile technology and, possibly, the worship of common god symbols, both of which recur in pre-Columbian Andean cultures. Sophisticated government is assumed to have been required to manage the ancient Norte Chico. Questions remain over its organization, particularly the impact of food resources on politics.




The Inca Empire, or Inka Empire (Quechua: Tawantinsuyu), was the largest empire in pre-Columbian America. The Inkas came after the Norte Chico civilization but is more well known than Norte Chico. Inkas traditions and culture runs deep even in modern day peruvians. 

The administrative, political and military center of the empire was located in Cusco in modern-day Peru. The Inca civilization arose from the highlands of Peru sometime in the early 13th century. From 1438 to 1533, the Incas used a variety of methods, from conquest to peaceful assimilation, to incorporate a large portion of western South America, centered on the Andean mountain ranges, including large parts of modern Ecuador, Peru, western and south central Bolivia, northwest Argentina, north and north-central Chile, and southern Colombia into a state comparable to the historical empires of the Old World.

The official language of the empire was Quechua, although hundreds of local languages and dialects of Quechua were spoken. The Inca referred to their empire as Tawantinsuyu which can be translated as The Four Regions or The Four United Provinces.

There were many local forms of worship, most of them concerning local sacred "Huacas", but the Inca leadership encouraged the worship of Inti, the sun god. The Incas considered their King, the Sapa Inca, to be the "child of the sun."




Yes, shamefully, the above paragraphs are mostly copied off Wikipedia for I am unable to acquire and articulate such immaculate descriptions and information. But damn, those ancient people sure put us Facebook junkies to shame =\

Here we are I am, supposing to be the evolved, educated, high tech and intelligent generation with knowledge that transpired thousands of generations but is having trouble with Chess and remembering my Bus Numbers oTL . Yet those people back then, wow, they didn’t have any official mathematics class and they could build massive architectures like those!

I am also amazed by the display of obvious intelligence, political and manipulative abilities in a group of supposed ‘prehistoric’ people. I mean, they didn’t even have help books then D: !

I find the Spanish conquerors part pretty frustrating though, no offence to any Spanish out there >w<




The world famous UNESCO Heritage Site, Machu Picchu

Probably the most famous architectural icon of Peru and the Incas, the grand and mysterious Machu Picchu.

Machu Picchu  "Old Mountain", is a pre-Columbian 15th-century Inca site located 2,430 metres (7,970 ft) above sea level. It is situated on a mountain ridge above the Urubamba Valley in Peru. Machu Picchu was built in the classical Inca style, with polished dry-stone walls.

There are many theories to the purpose and history of Machu Picchu, but none could be confirmed. Most archaeologists believe that Machu Picchu was built as an estate for the Inca emperor Pachacuti (1438–1472). It is also often referred to as "The Lost City of the Incas".




The Incas started building the estate around AD 1400 but abandoned it as an official site for the Inca rulers a century later at the time of the Spanish Conquest. Although known locally, it was unknown to the outside world before being brought to international attention in 1911 by the American historian Hiram Bingham. Since then, Machu Picchu has become an important tourist attraction.

Since the site was never known to the Spanish during their conquest, it is highly significant as a relatively intact cultural site. Machu Picchu was declared a Peruvian Historical Sanctuary in 1981 and a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1983. In 2007, Machu Picchu was voted one of the New Seven Wonders of the World in a worldwide Internet poll.


 Cosplay

I got Rita-Chan to help me on this part because all of the Peru Cosplay pages I found were in Spanish =(. Anyway, according to her, Cosplays in Peru started officially at around 2008.



Otakufest is one of the biggest convention in Peru and it first started in 2008. OtakuFest boost the usual Cosplay Competitions, Anime Karaokes Competition, Panels , Fan Merchandise and more! Seems like every year, they will invite a few big ass guest to join them. Last year they had Hironobu Kageyama and Masaaki Endou from JAM Project rocked them up!


Videos of Hironobu Kageyama and Masaaki Endoh at OtakuFest 2010!!




Below are some lovely event photos from Cosplay Peru! They are the Competitors for the Singles Competition at OtakuFest 2010.

  

 

 





They even had an event just for Death note xD! It’s the Death Note por Omochi Pro en el Cosplay Parade del APJ.

Check out their skit at Cosplay Peru’s Event photo page.






Atardecer. by ~xYuViXax





Hatsune Miku Cosplay 3 by *Mishi-ko



Matryoshka Vocaloid Cosplay by *Mishi-ko





Sunday Otakufest: Lima, Peru 4 by ~ChihiroMinamoto



Chii Cosplay 2 by *Mishi-ko






VOCALOID - Luka Cosplay by ~cosplayluvx3




VOCALOID - Revolutionary Twins by ~cosplayluvx3



Don't be afraid NaruSaku by ~Siashy



Sin X Katars by ~Tay-Yen



RYUK the Shinigami by ~O-MOCHI-PRO



Sweets and more Sweets by ~O-MOCHI-PRO


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*Phew* That was a long post! Sorry for the long wait guys, WWCPJ Country spotlight entries always take so much research time >w< But I had fun learning about Peru. And I must admit, it was one of those country that was almost invisible to me. Except their….





cutely dressed Guinea Pigs …. and how they eat it.


I once watched a documentary that talked a little about this special culture/livestock in Peru and it has stuck to my brain since then. Yes seriously, my knowledge of Peru ends at that *ashamed*.

But I’m glad WWCPJ has opened my eyes up to the South Americas and see the beauty of the many Countries within it. One day, I wish i would be able to travel to Machu Picchu, experience the grandness of the space and hear the echoes of the wind. Something tells me I’ll be just as dumbstruck as Anthony Bourdain when I get there.

The Spanish conquistador portion of the history makes my heart boils and freeze at the same time. But I guess that’s how histories are made, with blood and terror. Histories never fail to remind me to be thankful for our peaceful times and remember that we all have a part to play in building our world.

I hope you guys enjoyed reading and learning about Peru just as much as I have! Watch the travel videos I linked, they are darn interesting *_*! Please leave me a comment and let me know if you enjoyed this entry ^_^



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