Wednesday, October 5, 2011

31 Days of Halloween: DollHouse

Day 5...



Welcome to the Doll House!
Going as a "Doll" for a Halloween costume is great because the creative interpretations are endless!
Just some of the ideas include...
Barbie
Victorian
Gothic
Evil
Sexy
Rag doll
And those are just to name a few.
What I used:
L'oreal True Match in Neutral
Too Faced Naked Eye palatte in "Pink Cheeks" & "In the Buff"
Sephora Eyeliner Creme
Rimmel Soft Khol eye pencil in "Pure White"
Maybelline Lash Stiletto: Voluptuous
False eye lashes for both the top and bottom
Rimmel Powder Blush in "Pink Rose"

The four different lip colors I played with were:
Revlon "Wild Orchid"
Milani "Berry Rich"
Avon "Merlot"
NYC "Cafe"

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

31 Days of Halloween: Jack & Sally

Day 4 of "31 Days of Halloween" is...



What I used:
Professional Make-up Cream in "Black" & "White"
Sephora Eyeliner Creme in "Must Have"
CoverGirl Eye Enhancers in "Blazing Blues"
Red lip pencil


*I have never been able to find a cream foundation for "Sally" that closely resembles the shade of blue from the movie. (The same problem when I recreate the Corpse Bride)
So...using the white cream and the lightest blue powder from the Eye Enhancers, I mixed a combination that gets a lot closer to what I want.
However, there is a trade-off. After you've been wearing the foundation for a while, it becomes crumbly.
And that's only when mixed with another component. But, in a pinch, this will work.




Monday, October 3, 2011

31 DoH Day 3: Severus Snape

Day 3 of 31 Days of Halloween...



What I used:
Foundation: L'oreal True Match in "Neutral"
Eyes: Stila Kajal Eye Liner in "Onyx"
Brows, contouring & shading: Sephora Brow Pencil in "Dark Brown"
*For the look of greasy hair, I spritzed hair spray all over and let it set without styling.


Sunday, October 2, 2011

31 DoH Day 2: Rainbow Brite

Day 2 of 31 Days of Halloween...

RAINBOW BRITE

And here's what I used:



Face:L'oreal True Match in "Nude Beige W3"
Rimmel Lasting Finish Powder Blush in "Pink Rose"

Eyes:Nicka K HD Eye Shadow #3039
ARITAUM eye shadow BL102
Hard Candy Glitter Eyeshadows in "Algae", "Sequin" and "Sprinkles"
Stila Kajal Eye Liner in "Onyx"
Maybelline Lash Stiletto Voluptuous in "Brown-Black"
 I also used a no-name palatte using the highlighted colors:
Lips: Maybelline Forever Metallics Lip Color in "Rock out Red"

And even without the wig, I think I can rock this as a brunette!! Lol!

Saturday, October 1, 2011

31 Days of Halloween

Every day for the entire month of October I will create a make-up look inspired by classic and popular Halloween costumes. I'll also share my favorite Halloween books, movies, music and other goodies. The look to kick off the month is inspired by "Jane" from Twilight: New Moon.




I will admit that red colored contacts would truly complete this look, however, those with brown eyes have a fun advantage.
When it comes to makeup, brown-eyed girls have a lot of freedom. Since brown is a fusion of primary colors blue, red and yellow. When wearing black shadow/liner you may notice that your eyes appear more a deep red than brown.
While out running errands today, I was asked a number of times where I got my 'contacts'. People were genuinely surprised when I told them I wasn't wearing any.

What I used:
Foundation: CoverGirl Clean in "Creamy Natural"
and NYC Smooth Skin Loose Powder in "Translucent"
Eyeshadow: Too Faced Naked Palatte in "Unmentionables" and "Stiletto"
Eyeliner: Stila Kajal eye liner in "Onyx"
Mascara: Maybelline Lash Stiletto
Lips: Avon in "Rosiest"

For my 'bloody nails', I followed the simple instructions from this video:



 

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Halloween Garland

My lastest Halloween inspired craft!
I needed something fun to hang on my front door but I couldn't find anything I liked. So, I decided to make my own Halloween garland! I don't think it came out too shabby either. :)

Monday, September 26, 2011

Weekend in New England

Back home, these are some of my favorite places to visit during the fall season.

Bolton Spring Farm
You can pick apples, have some hot cider, take a hayride, select a pumpkin, eat an apple dumpling, buy molasses cookies and stock up on J. Crows Mulling Spices. I prefer to go on a day that's sunny but a little chilly, that way you can truly enjoy your hot cider.
http://www.boltonspringfarm.com/index.html

Idylwilde Farm
My grandparents have been taking me here for years! This is where we stock up on candies, deli meats and cheeses, buy mums and other flowers for the yard. Plus, the drive there is usually very pretty with lots of tree lined roads.
http://idylwildefarm.com/
King Richards Faire
This place can get pricey but it's SO worth it! You can watch jousting, dress up in medieval garb, meet the King and Queen, buy herbs, candles, costumes, giant turkey legs and fairy wings! Again, the ride can be half the fun, Carver, MA is absolutely beautiful in the fall.
http://kingrichardsfaire.net/

Topsfield Fair
This one, for me, tops them all! This is an all-day affair. You have to be up and on the road no later than 6am. You'll get there before most of the vendors have finished setting up but this is how it's done. If not, you will be waiting in traffic for hours, eventually give up and go home, having missed all the fun. Once you're there and all the booths are opened, you'll realize that you're early rising was worth it. There's a petting zoo, a giant pumpkin contest, carnival rides, horse shows, the Beekeeping & Honey show, vendors selling everything from clothes, jewelry, novelty photos, fudge, candies, funnel cake, arts & crafts, doll houses, flowers and more. If you still can't picture it, try this...remember the fair from Charlotte's Web? It's pretty much like that, except more fun!
http://www.topsfieldfair.org/

If you plan on visiting the Massachusetts area, remember...
~Fall is the best season to vacation in!
~ It can get pricey so make sure to plan accordingly.
~Salem, MA IS a lot of fun but even residents are wary during the week OF Halloween. However, if you are planning on going into Salem on Halloween night, I suggest you leave the kids at home.
~If you go to King Richards Faire, you HAVE to buy and devour a turkey leg...it IS the reason to go! :)
~If someone tries to convince you that Witch's Woods (a ScreamPark in Westford, MA) is totally cool for little kids, THEY ARE LYING! Do not take kids under 12, they will be terrified and cry and your evening & money will be wasted.
~When you run into someone with a heavy Boston accent, don't instantly resort to the phrase "Oh you're gonna pak the cah in Hah-vad yad?" Because it's SOOO old AND untrue. Harvard Yard is the center of Harvard campus. I don't think they would appreciate you parking there.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

The Dumb Supper

Halloween is known as a time when the veil between our world and the afterlife is the thinnest. It is the night when spirits and ancestors return to our world and sometimes speak to us. The idea of a 'dumb' supper is to be silent so that we may hear these messages.

There are variations of dumb suppers as well. Some choose to make it a part of the regular evening meal, while others plan a more elaborate occasion. Traditionally a place is set at the table for someone who has passed. Sometimes, if there is more than once ancestor being honored, an entire seperate table is laid out altogether. The meal itself is also a matter of taste. In my experience dishes are served that the departed once enjoyed. Of course, during the actual meal the idea is to remain silent, so that we may recieve any messages of wisdom or comfort being sent to us by those that have passed. Once the meal is finished any plates laid out for the departed are left out overnight, preferably outside.










The Festival of the Dead Salem, MA
http://www.festivalofthedead.com/dumbsupper.html


A traditional treat you can make for your own dumb supper are soul cakes. There are a variety of recipes but here are a few simple ones you can try for yourself:

Quickie Shortbread Soul Cakes1 stick of butter, softened
4 TBSP sugar
1 1/2 cups flour

Cream together the butter and sugar. Use a flour sifter to add the flour to the bowl, and mix until smooth. Divide the dough into two parts, and shape each half into a flat circle about half an inch thick. Put them on an ungreased baking sheet and poke lines with the tines of a fork, making eight seperate wedges in each cake. Bake for 25 minutes or until light brown at 350 degrees.

Buttery Soul Cakes2 sticks of butter, softened
3 1/2 cups flour, sifted
1 cup of sugar
1/2 tsp. nutmeg
1/2 tsp. saffron
1 tsp. cinnamon
1 tsp. allspice
2 eggs
2 tsp. malt vinegar
Powdered  sugar

Cut the butter into the flour with a large fork. Mix in the sugar, nutmeg, saffron, cinnamon and allspice. Lightly beat eggs, and add to flour mixture. Add malt vinegar. Mix until you have a stiff dough. Knead for a while then roll out until 1/4" thick. Use a floured glass to cut out 3 circles. Place on greased baking sheet and bake for 25 minutes at 350 degrees. Sprinkle with powdered sugar while cakes are still warm.

Irish Soul Cakes
4 cups of flour
1 packet active dry yeast
1 cup of milk
2 TBSP butter
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 tsp. salt
3/4 cup of sugar
1/2 cup of lemon zest
1 1/4 cups of golden raisins

Cream yeast with 1 tsp. sugar and 1 tsp. milk, let it get frothy. Blend flour, spices and salt together, then cut in butter. Add the res of the sugar to the flour mix and blend. Add milk and beaten egg onto yeast mixture; combine with flour mixture. Beat until stiff. Fold in raisins and zest, cover with a damp cloth and let rise. Divide in two, place each half in greased 7" round pan. Cover, let rise again for 30 minutes. Bake 1 hour at 400 degrees.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Halloween Superstitions


Bad luck if a black cat crosses your path.

If you see 3 black cats in succession, you'll have good luck!
There is an American myth that states that children born on Halloween will be protected against evil spirits their entire life and will be given the gift of second sight.

People would become frightened when they heard an owl hooting because they believed it would swoop down and eat them or steal their soul away. To protect themselves, they would turn their pockets inside out and this would keep them safe.
On Halloween night, if you keep a rosemary herb and a silver sixpence under your pillow, supposedly you will dream about your future husband.
Ringing a bell will frighten away any lurking ghosts.
Keeping a picture of an animal near your doorway will protect you from evil spirits.
To get rid of all evil, it was said all you needed to do was to walk around your house three times backward, before the sun sets on Halloween night.

A "dumb supper" is an old term meaning that nobody talks while having supper. For those that WANT the spirits around, try this old folklore, as it is said it encourages the undead to come to the table.



If a bat flies into your house on Halloween, there’s a good chance a ghost or spirit let it in, and that they are near.

Don't turn around if you hear footsteps behind you on Halloween night, as it may be the dead following you. If you do happen to look back, you just may join them very quickly.

If you catch yourself watching a spider on Halloween, you may just be peering at the spirit of a deceased loved one who is watching over YOU.



Don’t blow out the candle in your jack o’ lantern. The light will protect you from evil. Let the candle burn out on its own.

It is believed that if a person lights a new orange colored candle at midnight on Halloween and lets it burn until sunrise, he or she will be the recipient of good luck. 

If you hold your breath as you pass by a cemetery evil spirits cannot enter your body.
Throw a pinch of salt over your shoulder to prevent bad luck.

*If you know of any Halloween superstitions that aren't listed here, please feel free to share them!

Monday, September 12, 2011

Halloween Haul September 2011

My collection of Halloween treasures grows a little more every year. Last years loot included 'bleeding' candles, mini pumpkins and decorative gourds.

All this for $15, found while yard saling this weekend. Granted I feel lucky to have found this stuff but at the same time I'm confused that so many peole were GETTING RID of their Halloween decorations. Then again, it IS Clarksville, TN. Halloween isn't as big a deal down here as it is up north.

$6.99 at Hobby Lobby


$6.99 at Marshall's


This was actually $25.00 at a local shop here in Clarksville. I normally wouldn't spend that much on holiday decor, but I thought it was perfect for keeping candies or goodies in. I also really love the topper.

 $9.99 at Marshall's

Bought for $10 at a yard sale this weekend! It also lights up & makes 'scary' noises. :)

Friday, September 9, 2011

May I Have the Envelope Please...


Wow! This has officially made my day! I was given a Liebster award for my blog Nowhere and Everywhere and now it seems I've been given one for this blog too! I feel so loved! Of course, I have Daphne to thank for that. Also, I'm very excited because this means I can pass the award on to 5 more deserving bloggers!






I'm subscribed to so many blogs now that this was actually harder the second time around. But I feel these writers are very deserving and unique in their own way. I hope you enjoy checking out/reading their blogs as much as I do.
Now, to those who have been given the Liebster Award, make sure you pass it on to 5 bloggers of your choice, bloggers with 200 or less followers and make sure they know who passed it to you. ;)

Hollywood Halloween

We all have our cinematic repertoire for different times of the year. Mostly these movies are played in the background while we go about our day, only stopping every once in a while to watch a memorable scene. But we play them anyway because they're familiar and favorited and because it's that time of year.
Below is a list of my own Fall favorites that will most likely be on repeat until October 31st.

"There wolf! There castle!""Why are you talking like that?"
"I thought you wanted to!"

"My my...what big eyes you have."


"Did you do that? Do it again."
"In time."
"No, now."
"In time!"

"You don't know because you were not there! It's all true!"

"Jelly donut, whipped cream!"
"I said, honey, jelly's not a cream. So the kid laughed, I laughed and then he punched me."


"Thou wouldst hate me in the morning."
"No I wouldnst!"
"Oh believe me, thou wouldst!"

"The children of the night, what sweet music they make."

**Yes, The Nightmare Before Christmas IS missing from this list. That's because I watch it ALL year long and mostly around Christmastime. So I didn't think it was fair to the other movies. Lol

Ok, now it is YOUR turn to share with us your favorite Fall/Halloween movies!!
Either in a seperate blog of your own or in the comment section below.


Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Trick & Treating in America

September has hardly begun, yet your little one insists on telling you exactly what he would like to be for Halloween this year. You would stop to listen except the costume idea changes from minute to minute and you just won’t bother to keep up. But one thought quickly passes through your mind, “Please pick a costume that is either easy to make or cheap to buy!” As much fun as Halloween is, it does become less fun when you’re spending the better part of your evenings creating octopus legs from papier-mâché or wiring a cardboard box with lights that ‘really work’ for a robot.
Especially on the off-chance your little one decides to change his mind again. (I distinctly remember a neighborhood girl sobbing as she went from house to house because she did NOT want to be kangaroo anymore. Her mother’s only response was “It took me two weeks, you’re wearing it!”)
Taking a child Trick or Treating can be an enjoyable tradition or exhausting hard work. I guess it all depends on the child really. But once upon a time, during Halloween’s humble beginnings here in America, it was actually quite necessary.
In the 1910’s, American children amused themselves during Halloween by pranking their neighbors. Tipping over outhouses, soaping windows, egging houses and all other forms of ‘harmless’ vandalism. However, many towns and cities were tired of putting up with these tricks and some actually banned Trick or treating altogether.
Anoka, Minnesota, now known to be the Halloween Capital of the World, devised a clever way to keep the Treating tradition without the Tricks:

"In September of 1920, the Anoka Commercial Club and Anoka Kiwanis Club organized its first Halloween committee. For weeks they planned a children’s’ costume parade and bonfire. Participants included local and neighboring bands, drum corps, the Anoka police and fire departments, the Kiwanis club, the Commercial Club, and the Anoka National Guard; all working together to make the evening a success. Afterward, hundreds of bags of popcorn, candy, peanuts and other treats were given away to the children who marched in the parade.
By the 1930s, the festivities had expanded as had the attendance at the parades. There were over 2,000 costumed children marching down Main Street. It was estimated that 20,000 spectators lined the streets to watch this night-time spectacle. In 1937, 12-year-old, Harold Blair, donning a sweater embellished with a Halloween Capital insignia, carried with him to Washington, D.C. a proclamation naming Anoka the Halloween Capital of the World."
This tradition still stands today and the festivities have grown considerably. Even now if you visit their website, Anoka has activities and events already planned for Halloween of 2011.
It goes to show that when faced with a problem, you don’t need to cut the fun for everyone.  All you need to do is throw a parade and bonfire kick-ass enough to distract the local hoodlums.
But in all seriousness I applaud Anoka, Minnesota for not letting a few pranks ruin the awesome fun that is Halloween.
If you’re interested in joining Anoka for the 2011 Halloween Festival, here are some of the activities/events you can expect:
The Orange Tie Ball
Pumpkin Carving Contest
Halloween Capital of the World Open House

Halloween House Decorating Contest
Halloween Wine Tasting & Rib Contest
Spooktacular Carnival
For a complete list of events see the link below. (Honestly I got pretty excited about the Wine Tasting & Rib Contest.)**
Anoka Halloween Parade & Festival http://anokahalloween.com/events.php
**For my wine drinking readers, could you even tell me what kind of wine you would serve with ribs?
Or is it just my pre-conceived southern notion that ribs should be consumed with beer? Lol.
All information and credit: “Anoka: Halloween Capital of the World”, The History of Anoka Halloween, 2011
http://anokahalloween.com/history.php

Welcome, Dear Reader

What is it about Halloween?
Is it the idea of playing pretend, hiding behind paint or a mask and letting your cares slip away? Is it the haunting suspense? Is someone lying in wait to jump out and frighten me to humiliation? Is it the comfort of tradition? Seeing the little ghouls, superheroes and witches parade through the neighborhoods with their open bags like greedy little mouths. Is it the gothic romance? Ravens and black lace, silver candleabras and lovable villains. Or maybe the stories? Legends of headless horsemen, eerie warnings from beyond the grave, the cautionary tales of local abandoned houses and hospitals.

Whatever the fascination or reason, Halloween touches us in one way or another. We have our customs, our favorite treats and concoctions we reserve for this time of year. A box or two, or three, of decorations and knick-knacks kept safe until we feel that first real September chill. We have our annual gatherings that we attend or throw, whether it's for the entire family, or the kind that calls for a babysitter.

In this blog I hope to bring a little something for every kind of Halloween lover. Stories, history, recipes, creative ideas, as well as share my own traditions and customs. I also encourage you, the reader, to do the same.

Halloween is for everyone and so is this blog.