Category: buffalo
12/03/10 08:31 - 31.ºF - ID#53200
Braiding Specialist in Buffalo?
Will be eternally grateful for suggestions!!
Okay, I have some recommendations from people online, and people on the street.
Germa's African Hair Braiding
1231 Hertel Avenue
Buffalo, NY 14216
716-986-1675
(Can't locate any reviews... To trust or not to trust?!)
Hair to go Natural
Main St. (Near Chow Chocolat)
(Disturbing review on yelp.com)
My.braids.com
Hair by Khaili
Apparently, this stylists travels to your place.
(Same situation... To trust or not to trust?!)
I have now registered on 2 African-American hair forums specially to ask for recommendations. Let's see what comes out of that.
And braiding is expensive! It can cost you anywhere between $150 and $250 for braids... which makes me think that if I put in some effort and practice, I could possibly do it for free.
PS: Image from Amanda Chronister's blog
Permalink: Braiding_Specialist_in_Buffalo_.html
Words: 171
Location: Buffalo, NY
Last Modified: 12/10/10 10:20
Category: fashion
12/02/10 06:41 - 28.ºF - ID#53194
Wool and Lace - Part I
I see I am stuck in step 2. Researching fabrics has to wait because I am off to another exciting salsa class!
Permalink: Wool_and_Lace_Part_I.html
Words: 53
Location: Buffalo, NY
Last Modified: 12/02/10 11:40
Category: fashion
12/02/10 12:37 - 29.ºF - ID#53192
Turns out...
is not how a pattern works or even looks like.
And that has been your sewing lesson for the day.
Permalink: Turns_out_.html
Words: 24
Location: Buffalo, NY
Last Modified: 12/02/10 12:56
Category: eating in
12/01/10 09:34 - 31.ºF - ID#53191
Scharffen Berger Unsweetened Cocoa
Permalink: Scharffen_Berger_Unsweetened_Cocoa.html
Words: 14
Location: Buffalo, NY
Last Modified: 12/01/10 09:35
Category: art
12/01/10 02:46 - 46.ºF - ID#53186
Flamenco!
There can be few images that capture the intense vibrancy of the human form and exquisite tailoring in harmonious yet rebellious action as shots at a flamenco performance.
But the most attractive skill for me personally, (if I ever get to learn flamenco) will be learning to dance in these absolutely and gorgeously sexy shoes!
Permalink: Flamenco_.html
Words: 100
Location: Buffalo, NY
Last Modified: 12/01/10 02:57
Category: fashion
11/30/10 05:11 - 52.ºF - ID#53178
Patterning and Sewing a Winter Coat
The trouble is how does one make a pattern and sew a coat based on photographs? Does anyone have any experience in drawing patterns (with appropriate sizing) looking at photographs alone?
Permalink: Patterning_and_Sewing_a_Winter_Coat.html
Words: 68
Location: Buffalo, NY
Last Modified: 12/01/10 10:40
Category: i-tech
11/21/10 10:29 - 34.ºF - ID#53146
Twittering no more
Permalink: Twittering_no_more.html
Words: 3
Location: Buffalo, NY
Last Modified: 11/21/10 10:29
Category: dance
11/21/10 02:15 - 32.ºF - ID#53145
Salsera!
She is a true flowing river in spirit and I think I can hear this every time I see her flow in dance!
Permalink: Salsera_.html
Words: 29
Location: Buffalo, NY
Last Modified: 12/11/10 02:45
Category: dance
11/21/10 12:28 - 32.ºF - ID#53143
Salsero!
He is the beyond perfect fluid lead who makes it look so effortless, you want to work on those wobbly steps just to match 1/millionth of his grace! :-)
Permalink: Salsero_.html
Words: 31
Location: Buffalo, NY
Last Modified: 12/11/10 02:45
Category: dance
11/20/10 09:54 - 35.ºF - ID#53142
Scientific Salsa
The dance is a fascinating study in body dynamics. Quoting Joanna Bosse, who conducted ethnographic research into Salsa...
One of the most difficult aspects of salsa dance to convey to newcomers is the distinctive counter-body motion—a product of a particular combination of knee, hip, and ribcage movements.
Generally, the basic position requires one bent knee while the other remains straightened, and the basic movement involves alternating bent and straight knees. This juxtaposition of one bent knee and one straightened knee causes a secondary response as the hip above the straight knee juts out slightly. Simultaneously, the ribcage moves in the direction of the bent knee, opposite the direction of the extended hip.
The position of the ribcage serves to balance the weight distribution of the extended hip. With each beat of the music, salsa dancers alternate bent and straight knees and direction of the ribcage, maintaining a level height (with little rise and fall or bobbing of the head) and a balanced center of gravity. Another secondary result of this motion (in addition to the hip movement) is that the arms move forward and back in small circles, following the direction of the ribcage and shoulders.
This combination of movements is very subtle and can be executed in a number of ways, depending upon other elements such as arm movement, posture, foot placement, and direction of knee movement; however, it was present to varying degrees among most, if not all, of the Latin American salsa dancers with whom I worked. This is not to say that all Latin Americans were great salsa dancers, but generally speaking this particular issue was not a problem. During my six years of fieldwork I never personally witnessed a salsa dancer specifically reference this aspect—the counter-body motion—in any way. They generally focused on the rhythm and placement of the footwork.
{and this is such an interesting observation...}
Though the Latin American salsa dancers I worked with understood that their hips were moving, their focal awareness was invested in the active engagement of the knees and virtuosic footwork.
In contrast, outsiders to the genre overlooked the complex interplay of body movements and singled out only the movement of the hips as the root of salsa’s energy and perceived sexual appeal. Many fixated on the hip movement and worked exclusively on its performance, forsaking the necessary footwork and knee and ribcage movements that actually make it possible. This movement was not a typical component of their movement dialect and as such, it was very difficult to master and became something upon which newcomers fixated. This fetishization of hip movement on the part of my informants who were new to salsa resulted, in part, from the fact that the requisite counter-body movement was not a typical component of their movement dialect.
References (Taken in whole from):
Joanna Bosse. "Salsa Dance and the Transformation of Style: An Ethnographic Study of Movement and Meaning in a Cross-Cultural Context." Dance Research Journal 40.1 (2008): 45-64.
::READ PDF::
Permalink: Scientific_Salsa.html
Words: 519
Location: Buffalo, NY
Last Modified: 12/11/10 02:45
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But all this begs the question of why? You have very short hair.