Tuesday, 31 March 2015

Fashion and Style Lookbook: Change is Here: Nigeria Welcomes President Elect

Fashion and Style Lookbook: Change is Here: Nigeria Welcomes President Elect: Fellow Nigerians say hello to our new President elect.“Sai Baba Sai Buhari

Change is Here: Nigeria Welcomes President Elect



Fellow Nigerians say hello to our new President elect.“Sai Baba Sai Buhari

Bobby Brown Keeping the Faith at Bobbi Kristina's New Medical Facility


0327_bobby_brown_entering_medical_Center_INF_WM

Bobby Brown is in it for the long haul -- standing firm in his belief Bobbi Kristina can pull out of her coma ... now that she's getting treatment at a facility known for its long term care.
Bobby was walking outside DeKalb Medical this week. It's touted as the best Long Term Acute Care hospital in the Atlanta area ... partly because the facility has equipment to provide continuous monitoring of vital signs -- crucial in a case like Bobbi Kristina's.
As we reported ... doctors at Emory University Hospital tested her responsiveness last week before she was transferred to DeKalb. We're told there was no change.
Sources tell us Bobby is still leaning on the power of prayer to save his daughter ... who's remained unconscious since Feb 1.
Credit: TMZ 





Gorgeous Brides in Aso-Oke










Aso-Oke African traditional outfit symbolic to the Yoruba's, it's a short form of Aso Ilu Oke, also known as Aso-Ofi meaning clothes from the up-country. It is the traditional wear of the Yoruba's (the tribe of the southwest people in Nigeria, Africa). The Yoruba's are the second largest tribe in Nigeria after the Northerners. Aso-Oke is a cloth that is worn on special occasions by the Yoruba's usually for chieftancy, festivals, engagement, naming ceremony and other important events.

The beauty of Aso-Oke comes out more when it is taken as Aso-Ebi (group of people e.g. friends, families e.t.c). Cloth weaving (Aso-Oke) started centuries ago amongst the Yoruba's but predominantly amongst the Iseyin's (Oyo-State), Ede (Osun State) and Okene Kogi State. The fibres used for weaving are either locally sourced or brought from neighbouring states (northern parts of the country).
Aso-oke has been refined and modernised with time and has definitely come to stay.
Picture Credit: Atunbi Photography
                        Klaptography
                        BM Pro
                        Sitpretty makeover




Sunday, 29 March 2015

10 Minute Cardio Dance Abs Workout: Burn to the Beat





Wake up to this quick workout




Picture Credit: Be Fit.

HOW TO ROCK AND RE-ROCK YOUR OUTFITS

Ladies check out these amazing pictures of various ways you can combine your outfits. Be reasonable and don't over shoot your budget .
Please cut your coat according to your size or fabric.
Picture credit: Nkechi Harry Ngonadi






QUICK AND EASY STEPS FOR NATURAL LOOKING EYEBROWS.


Saturday, 28 March 2015

How To Tie Gele (Headtie).





Sit back and relax as you watch this talented artist teach you how to tie Gele.
Video Credit:Switch Cosmetics.

Friday, 27 March 2015

Nigeria's Golden Girl {Chimamanda Adichie }

Chimamanda's World

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie was 26 when she published her first novel, Purple Hibiscus, which was shortlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction and won the Commonwealth Writers' Prize. The books that followed, Half of a Yellow Sun - set during the Biafran conflict in Nigeria, a decade before she was born - and Americanah, a modern love story set between America and Nigeria, have also been garlanded with international prizes and critical praise. Salman Rushdie remembers meeting her at a PEN literary festival in New York, not long after Purple Hibiscus was published.
She is a renowned writer with diverse audience
her 2009 TED talk, "The Danger of a Single Story", has had - wait for  - more than eight million views; it is a sophisticated yet charming and accessible essay on how we might see the world through another's eyes. But that viral explosion is nothing compared with what happened to the talk Adichie gave in 2013 at TEDxEuston, a series of talks in London focusing on African affairs. Entitled "We Should All Be Feminists", the speech, which addressed a feminism beyond race or class, took on a very different life. Before she had realised the impact her words were having, she got a call from Beyoncé, who eventually sampled the talk in "Flawless", a song on the eponymous album she released, to the world's surprise, on iTunes that December: it reached the top of the iTunes charts in 104 countries and sold nearly 850,000 copies in three days. Beyoncé first discovered Chimamanda when she came across her talk online. "I was immediately drawn to her," says Beyoncé. "She was elegant and her words were powerful and honest. Her definition of a feminist described my own feeling: equality of the sexes as it pertains to human rights, equal pay and sexuality. She called the men in her family feminists, too, because they acknowledged the need for equality."






Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie speaking at the 2012 Hay Festival

Feminism - gender equality - is a cause she cares about passionately. You don't have to spend long in Nigeria to witness the deeply patriarchal nature of the culture, where men are always greeted as "sir" and women are lucky to be greeted at all. But Adichie was brought up in a progressive household. Born in 1977 in eastern Nigeria, she grew up in Nsukka, a university town.

The oppression of women, she says, "Makes me angry.  I can't not be angry. I don't know how you can just be calm. My family says to me, 'Oh, you're such a man!'.
Talking about fashion
"I do all these drawings for my clothes," she says. "Really terrible drawings. But I love to do them, and I could add a little bit of colour with my crayons." It's clear that Adichie sees no contradiction in being a woman of fashion and a feminist. The dress she wears for the shoot is one she designed herself; she works with local tailors to bring her drawing to reality and no doubt she is a fashionista .



Picture credit: Akintunde Akinleye


Talking about race with Adichie is fascinating. "I only became black when I came to America," she writes in Americanah; her character Ifemelu's experience is drawn from her own. "In Nigeria I'm not black," she says simply. "We don't do race in Nigeria. We do ethnicity a lot, but not race. My friends here don't really get it. Some of them sound like white Southerners from 1940. They say, 'Why are black people complaining about race? Racism doesn't exist!' It's just not a part of their existence." But it has been part of hers in America, where her experience "is always shaped by race.                 

Credit: Vogue UK .