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1 coat of China Glaze “Can You Sea Me?” over 2 coats of Color Club “Throwing Shade.” Throwing Shade a sheer light blue with blue and gold iridescent shimmer that shifts to violet from the Spring 2018 Shine Shifter collection. Can You Sea Me? is from Spring 2015 Sally Beauty exclusive collection and has a clear base with small and medium turquoise hex glitter and larger silver holographic hex glitter.
#nail polish#color club#shine shifter collection#china glaze#sally beauty exclusive#sally beauty exclusive collection
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Chimp ZeeZee, Sally, and the Chester Zoo Gang Enjoying Frosty Treats by SloggerVlogger *Chimpanzee ZeeZee with her baby Jeff on her back is taking an ice sheet out of the moat.* https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXC1aShJSBiXV-ghiwPw-13-rXWi7SFbM She even removes a bit of grass/dirt, it needs to be perfect to eat. Beautiful Sally comes up to have a look and gets herself a piece. The other chimpanzees from the Chester Zoo are getting the last ice sheets from the moat. Inside the ice sheet gets shared with the family members. Even the little ones have a bite and a lick. Back outside again, some more ice snacking. Don't miss a thing—hit Subscribe and Turn on all Notifications to be part of our Great Ape escapades every week. #Chimpanzees #IceTreat Looking for Jambo videos : https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXC1aShJSBiV-oQYoaemapq4zbFELy1FI 🛍️Gear up with exclusive merch from our worldwide delivery shop: 🛍️Biggest collection of T-shirts, stickers, caps and much more rawshutterbug Redbubble @ https://rb-ambassador.pxf.io/HairlessChimp #AD #RedbubbleAmbassador 🛍️Customizable T-shirts, stickers, apparel, homeware and much more rawshutterbug Zazzle: https://www.zazzle.com/collections/hairless_chimp_jambo-119785925986234731?rf=238978496872225031 🛍️Amazon USA 🇺🇲 Store https://www.amazon.com/shop/sloggervlogger #Ad #AmazonAssociate 🛍️Amazon UK 🇬🇧 Store: https://amzn.to/47mDmbA 🌐My website: https://msvrvisual.weebly.com/sloggervlogger.html via YouTube https://youtu.be/Nsixa5-m5O0
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Various Artists — Measure, Pour & Mixtape: Music for Cooking (Spinster)
It’s somewhat surprising that an organization that describes itself as a “feminist record label” should make its second mixtape compilation about food and cooking, among the most stereotypical and traditional of female activities. However, as the tape demonstrates, different women have different attitudes about the domestic arts — some warm and comfortable and full of love, others rebelling against the forced servitude that is so often entailed. I myself had a brief period in my mid-20s when I refused to cook out of some sort of inchoate resentment of the patriarchy. I came around when I realized that eating would be a lot more enjoyable, not to mention cheaper, if I learned some of the basics.
In any case, this diverse and lovely collection reclaims the kitchen for artists and thinkers, and significantly, not all of them are women (Avey Tare and Michael Hurley contribute cuts, as well as the mixed gender Magic Tuber String Band). They come primarily from the more adventurous end of folk music that Spinster focuses on, but not entirely. There are Inuit throat singers of PIQSIQ and the improvisatory percussionist Jess Tsang (who incorporates an electric mixer into her track) to break up the picking.
The tracks are so lovely and so much each its own world that it’s to choose favorites, nonetheless Sally Anne Morgan’s luminous “Grain Song,” imbues country fiddle and plucked strings with otherworldly resonance, while Lou Turner’s “Ride the Melting” is characteristically smart, surprising and beautiful. Magic Tuber String Band’s minor key hoedown “Bill Henseley’s Hoppin’ John” is as satisfying as the grain-based sustenance it celebrates, while Little Mazarn’s “Thankgiving,” limns happy memories with melancholy in banjo, bowed saw and plaintive voice.
The prompt for all the tracks, apparently, was “If you made music the way you cook, what would it sound like?” and poet Crystal Good’s “Food Poem” answers that question with silence. Good doesn’t cook, and her track makes it plain why not, in the blighted relationship between her mother and step-father, where nothing was ever good enough, and the happier pairing of her dad and step-mother, where food defined the woman of the house to the exclusion of everything else. The track is a bit of an outlier in a compilation that generally celebrates cooking and food and family, but a bracing one. Like the handful of bitter greens that makes the soup so good, her anger makes the rest sound all the more inviting. Women and food. It’s complicated.
Jennifer Kelly
#Measure#Pour & Mixtape#spinster#jennifer kelly#albumreview#dusted magazine#sally anne morgan#lou turner#magic tuber string band#cooking#food#compilation
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lately i’ve been having a lot of fun reading interactive fiction, and @mindblindbard‘s is one of my favorites!! so here’s a collection of doodles of my buttons that i wanted to get out of my system ♥
image descriptions under the cut!!
sol wiseman (she/her), a brown skinned girl with dark brown eyes and darker brown hair. her hair is short and straight, and she has a warm smile on her face as she shoots her finger guns. she’s wearing a yellowish orange shirt and sun earrings, along with other piercings on her ears. sol is latina and her highest stat is humor, followed by morbidity.
rin wiseman (she/her), a fair skinned girl with a sour expression. she has hazel colored eyes and long black hair, with fringe styled to one side. she wears three necklaces and cone shaped earrings, and by her make-up, cellphone and clothing its clear she favors the color pink. she’s korean-american, and her highest stat is confidence, followed by humor.
wanda wiseman (they/them), this button is chubby and has very light brown skin. their eyes are brown and they have pink shoulder length-hair. they have two beauty spots on their face, one above their right eyebrow and another heart-shaped one under. they wear make-up, a fashionable leather jacket and a ribbon necklace. they also wear a silver bracelet with two zeroes intertwined (they are a twin!). their highest stat is confidence, followed by morbidity. they look like they’re bashfully daydreaming about someone, their head resting on their fist.
a doodle of kent zarneki and wanda! they are both wearing their uniforms. kent is taller than her, with pale skin, dark hair and gray eyes. he motions for her to walk ahead, saying “after you, mary, dear.” wanda is slightly leaning back with a smug wink, a hand over their heart. “thanks, ronald, darling ♥” inspired by cupid calamity!
a drawing of ambrose kim’s profile reading a clipboard with a serious expression. he’s wearing a white button up and his dark hair is slicked backwards. “i don’t know whether i’m more surprised that you, rin wiseman, are into a guy, or that the guy is evil, awful instructor kim.” sally says as she and rin watch the instructor from a safe distance. rin has her head turned towards him, a cheeky expression on her face. “should’ve predicted this when you rejected me in freshman year” she says. sally, with her ginger curly hair tied up into a messy bun, elbows her best friend and rolls her eyes. “oh, you are not pinning this on me!”
sol and gray’s first meeting, when he stole her heart (and her cookies). teenager sol was very different from the person she is now. long hair, heavy black eyeliner and an exclusively black closet. she has a black shirt that simply reads “band” on her and she’s blushing slightly as she glares, pointing accusingly. “who the hell are you, and why are you in my house?” gray, with his golden brown hair and blue eyes, smiles at her. “i’m nick’s friend, grayson. hi.” he replies as he wipes cookie crumbs from his face. sol now looks exasperated, blush deepening and arms outstretched as she demands “WHY ARE YOU BRITISH!?” just in time for nick to come home with his “stop!” as he does in canon
bonus: based on a scene from monsters inc 2. nick is taller than sol and has curly hair. “shit, i think i left my wallet inside. you okay being alone, button?” he asks her. sol is wearing a beanie and a neutral expression. “sure, i’ll just be here thinking about my tunes.” in the next panel, sol is smiling while thinking about a loud heavy metal concert, and two startled ments turn to look back at her. this is what she does when she’s out in public, instead of thinking about dead frogs!
#mindblind#mind blind#rosy kim#k zarneki#sally alavidze#wanda#sol#rin#i need 2 draw glitch....#i have more doodle ideas and a nick wip but this is all i can manage for now#also the gray doodle is the simplest but let it be known hes the LOML i just did that one super quick cuz i was joking w/ a friend sjdskjf#im OBSESSED with him having met sol in the height of her emo/metal/goth fase whatever that was#my art#rin likes to joke about sally rejecting her but her confession wasn't smth acknowledged out loud and neither was sally's rejection#it was a truth or dare at a bday party kind of situation#this is ari#button wiseman#sol & gray#wanda & kent#rin & rosy
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This is actually quite lovely.
"I had thought that going into space would be the ultimate catharsis of that connection I had been looking for between all living things—that being up there would be the next beautiful step to understanding the harmony of the universe. In the film “Contact,” when Jodie Foster’s character goes to space and looks out into the heavens, she lets out an astonished whisper, “They should’ve sent a poet.” I had a different experience, because I discovered that the beauty isn’t out there, it’s down here, with all of us. Leaving that behind made my connection to our tiny planet even more profound.
It was among the strongest feelings of grief I have ever encountered. The contrast between the vicious coldness of space and the warm nurturing of Earth below filled me with overwhelming sadness. Every day, we are confronted with the knowledge of further destruction of Earth at our hands: the extinction of animal species, of flora and fauna . . . things that took five billion years to evolve, and suddenly we will never see them again because of the interference of mankind. It filled me with dread. My trip to space was supposed to be a celebration; instead, it felt like a funeral.
I learned later that I was not alone in this feeling. It is called the “Overview Effect” and is not uncommon among astronauts, including Yuri Gagarin, Michael Collins, Sally Ride, and many others. Essentially, when someone travels to space and views Earth from orbit, a sense of the planet’s fragility takes hold in an ineffable, instinctive manner. Author Frank White first coined the term in 1987: “There are no borders or boundaries on our planet except those that we create in our minds or through human behaviors. All the ideas and concepts that divide us when we are on the surface begin to fade from orbit and the moon. The result is a shift in worldview, and in identity.”
It can change the way we look at the planet but also other things like countries, ethnicities, religions; it can prompt an instant reevaluation of our shared harmony and a shift in focus to all the wonderful things we have in common instead of what makes us different. It reinforced tenfold my own view on the power of our beautiful, mysterious collective human entanglement, and eventually, it returned a feeling of hope to my heart. In this insignificance we share, we have one gift that other species perhaps do not: we are aware—not only of our insignificance, but the grandeur around us that makes us insignificant. That allows us perhaps a chance to rededicate ourselves to our planet, to each other, to life and love all around us. If we seize that chance."
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Susan B. Anthony was a lesbian hero but they don’t teach you that in history class
Susan B. Anthony was born 200 years ago in a country where few women or people of color dared to give political speeches on public platforms and that had no national voting rights for women. Both straight and queer women were often pressured into marriage when it was against their wishes. Women who did manage to remain single – or who formed partnerships with other women – were typically pitied or scorned.
She worked tirelessly for most of her long life to demand racial and gender equality and her lesbian attractions only fueled her struggle against the patriarchal system she abhorred.
Related: How lesbianism was turned into a problem a century ago
Anthony was the mastermind – more than a hundred years before ACT UP – of a protest that had women storming polling places during the 1872 presidential election to insist they be allowed to vote. After the Civil War, African-American men had been granted the national right to vote to the exclusion of women.
Anthony never married or had a serious relationship with a man. As a teenager, she prophetically confessed to her diary, in 1838, “I think any female would rather live and die an old maid.”
She continued to make pronouncements that coyly hinted at her lesbian orientation. In an 1896 interview, she told the reporter, “I was very well as I was…I’m sure no man could have made me any happier than I have been.”
When pressed by journalists, throughout her long life in the media spotlight, she stagecrafted a role for herself of not being able to find the right man. But the real reason she remained “single” was that her amorous desires and emotional needs were only fulfilled by women.
The youthful lesbian orator Anna Dickinson, hailed as “America’s Joan of Arc” during the Civil War for rallying the war-weary Union forces to victory with her fiery speeches, became the target of Anthony’s affections in the 1860s. Dickinson was catapulted to national fame as the first woman to give a full-length political speech before Congress and her motto, which appeared on some of her publicity photos, was “The World belongs to those who take it.”
Dickinson’s trailblazing achievements, acerbic wit, youthful queer energy and “handsome beauty” enraptured Anthony.
Dickinson saved personal letters from Anthony that candidly indicate physical desire. Anthony flirtatiously describes her longing to spend time with the “naughty tease” Anna.
”I invite you to come to me here and sleep with me in my fourth story bed room at Mrs. Stanton’s ever so many nights,” she wrote.” To snuggle you darling closer than ever.”
Anthony’s feelings of sensual anticipation reveal a woman who is very much flesh and blood. “Dear Dicky Darling…I have plain quarters…double bed – and big enough & good enough to take you in. I do so long for the scolding & pinched ears & every thing I know awaits me.”
The relationship cooled off by the early 1870s. Dickinson would go on to have a series of girlfriends over the years and finally settled into a 30+ year relationship with a married woman, Sallie Ackley. The rather bemused Mr. Ackley didn’t seem to mind the living arrangement.
But Anthony retained a maternal or sisterly affection for the younger Dickinson and kept mentioning her in interviews, as the decades passed. Anthony even volunteered to help solicit funds for Dickinson when she fell on hard times.
In a touching 1895 letter, Anthony wrote, “My Darling Anna…I’m awfully glad to know you still live…[no one] ever has or ever will fill the niche in my heart that you did–my dear.”
The theme of wistful reminiscence characterizes another striking comment Susan B. Anthony made later in life when discussing her lesbian niece, Lucy Anthony. Lucy’s life-partner was the brilliant orator and activist Rev. Anna Howard Shaw, who eventually took over the presidency of the suffrage movement and expanded public support for it.
But Anthony retained a maternal or sisterly affection for the younger Dickinson and kept mentioning her in interviews, as the decades passed. Anthony even volunteered to help solicit funds for Dickinson when she fell on hard times.
In a touching 1895 letter, Anthony wrote, “My Darling Anna…I’m awfully glad to know you still live…[no one] ever has or ever will fill the niche in my heart that you did–my dear.”
The theme of wistful reminiscence characterizes another striking comment Susan B. Anthony made later in life when discussing her lesbian niece, Lucy Anthony. Lucy’s life-partner was the brilliant orator and activist Rev. Anna Howard Shaw, who eventually took over the presidency of the suffrage movement and expanded public support for it.
Susan wrote, ”I wanted what I feared I shouldn’t find, that is a young woman who would be to me–every way–what she [Lucy] is to the Rev. Anna Shaw.” Clearly, Susan B. Anthony was happy for her queer-blended extended family.
It was “niece-in-law” Shaw who was Susan Anthony’s appointed spiritual heir, in one of the most moving and significant deathbed vigils of American “herstory.” Anthony drifted in and out of consciousness as the end drew near. Shaw tried her best to comfort the dying activist with a solemn promise to do everything in her power to get the vote. The scene was an emotional “last-rites” passing of the suffrage leadership torch, from one lesbian to another.
Anthony’s only regret was that she hadn’t been able to sustain an enduring lesbian union like that of Lucy Anthony and Shaw. The two life-partners created homes together and lived together and were devoted to one another till Shaw’s death in 1919, as the country stood on the cusp of national woman suffrage. Anna Shaw kept her promise.
Anthony did develop a passionate queer relationship, however, in her last years with Emily Gross, a married woman who lived in Chicago. They visited each other and traveled together. Anthony referred to Gross as her “lover.”
Why have most historians straightwashed Anthony? Why has popular culture not fully acknowledged the de facto queer-straight alliance of women who worked in “open secrecy” in the gender revolution that was the suffrage movement?
Many generally acknowledge the toxic dishonesty of white supremacy and male supremacy in historical writing. But straight supremacy, especially the erasure of queer human beings in pre-World War II historical commentary, is still prevalent.
My husband and I visited Anthony’s house in Rochester, New York, last summer. I vigorously protested the dreary straightwashed tour of her life being presented, but was made to feel like a troublemaking queer in Anthony’s own home for challenging the guide and asking questions.
“What difference does that make?!,” the tour guide snapped as she told me that the feminist icon was straight. I persevered and attempted to talk to the staff members who were there, all of whom seemed resistant and condescending. We left disheartened and triggered to recall sad memories of our own “closeted” educations.
I later had a long phone conversation with the president of the museum. She reached out to me after the unfortunate incident and seemed sympathetic.
She patiently listened and said she wanted to hear everything I had to say, restoring my hope that the museum might evolve to forthrightly embrace the many queer figures of Anthony’s coterie.
It’s troubling that our cultural institutions don’t do enough to take the initiative without being prodded to educate their staff to present queer history willingly and to respond without bigotry to questions about it. The “straight-supremacist flinch” is a homophobic kneejerk reaction that needs to be discarded.
Where are the scholars and documentarians who will tell the truth and convey it compellingly to a mass audience? Why do some modern academics continue to render lesbians invisible and refuse to use the word lesbian to describe women of earlier eras, not realizing how absurd these ivory-tower practices are?
If lesbians and gays are defined as predominantly romantically attracted to their own sex, then they’ve existed in various cultural settings throughout history and Anthony was obviously a lesbian.
If I had learned the truth about the many magnificent contributions of queer folks like Anthony, Dickinson and Shaw, to US history – if I had known that LGBTQ history is an integral part of global history – my childhood would have been different.
If we collectively continue to erase Anthony’s queerness and only vaguely say things like “she never married a man,” then what we’ll continue to churn out is the same old dishonest straight-supremacist crap. History – what people did and how they’re remembered – is power. And LGBTQ people have had the power of history taken from them for far too long.
Celebrate Susan B. Anthony as the queer, multi-dimensional, intersectional equality goddess she was. She worked with other progressives to sow and fertilize the seeds of a national and global gender revolution. She wanted queer and straight women to have the unfettered liberty to develop their own genuine ways of being and to make their own choices.I
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10 Unmissable Art Exhibitions Of 2020
10 Unmissable Art Exhibitions Of 2020
Art
by Sally Tabart
Henri Matisse – ‘The sorrow of the king (La tristesse du roi)’ , 1952. gouache on paper, cut and pasted, mounted on canvas. Courtesy of AGNSW.
Henri Matisse – ‘Blue nude II (Nu bleu II)’ 1952. Courtesy of AGNSW.
Henri Matisse – ‘Decorative figure on an ornamental ground (Figure décorative sur fond ornemental)’, 1925. Courtesy of AGNSW.
Matisse: Life & Spirit November 2020 – March 2021 Art Gallery of New South Wales, NSW
It’s no surprise that one of the most prestigious galleries in the country, Art Gallery of New South Wales (AGNSW) will show a dynamic exhibition from one of the most famous and influential artists of all time, Henri Matisse.
Exclusive to AGNSW, Matisse: life & spirit, masterpieces from the Centre Pompidou will show over 100 works spanning six decades from the French master.
Developed alongside the Centre Pompidou in Paris, known for its unmatched collection of Matisse works, Matisse: life & spirit will be the greatest single exhibition of Matisse masterworks ever to be seen in Sydney. Yep – you’ll be able to see his famed cut-outs, but also his adventures in paintings, sculptures, and drawings, tracking the vast and varied exploration of his artistic career. This is TRULY unmissable!
Left to right: Dhuwarrwarr Marika Makassan, swords and long knives, Carlene Thompson, Kipara and Kalaya. Photo – courtesy of MAGNT.
Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards (NATSIAA) August 8th 2020 – January 31st 2021 Museum and Art Gallery Northern Territory, NT
Now in its 36th year, the Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards (NATSIAA) is a major highlight for the Museum and Art Gallery of Northern Territory (MAGNT) in Darwin. This fantastic exhibition spotlights emerging and established Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists across a varying range of mediums, and attracts more than 85,000 visitors.
This exhibition is so important for visitors to gain an insight into First Nations People’s perspective in both contemporary interpretations, as well as those steeped in generations of tradition. It also offers some prize money of up to $50,000 for winning artists, courtesy of longtime sponsor Telstra. All finalists’ work will be displayed in the world-class exhibition, opening in August.
Left: Mikala Dwyer: a shape of thought featuring The Angel; Possession; Sigil for Heaven and Earth by Mikala Dwyer, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2017. Photo – Mim Stirling. Right: Julia Robinson, Australia, 1981, Beatrice, 2019–20.
Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art February 29th – June 8th 2020 Art Gallery South Australia, SA
This year the Art Gallery of South Australia welcomes the hugely popular Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art back for its 30th year. Known for its risk-taking and expansive vision, the Biennial welcomes the wild, wacky, weird and wonderful.
The theme of the 2020 iteration is Monster Theatres, inviting artists to bring to life the ‘monsters’ of today. As described by curator Leigh Robb, ‘Monsters ask us to interrogate our relationships with each other, the environment and technology. They force us to question our empathy towards differences across race, gender, sexuality and spirituality.’
Artists involved in the Biennial include Abdul Abdullah, Polly Borland, Yhonnie Scarce + many more!
Olafur Eliasson, Riverbed 2014. Photo – Natasha Harth, QAGOMA.
Water December 7th 2019 – April 26th 2020 Gallery of Modern Art, QLD
Brisbane’s Gallery of Modern Art never fails to disappoint with its innovative, world-class programming – and Water is no exception! Exploring the theme of, you guessed it, Water, this exhibition explores this vital element from the perspective of artists around the world.
Here is some of what you can expect, according to GOMA:
‘Walk across a vast, rocky riverbed created by Olafur Eliasson. See animals from around the world gather together to drink from Cai Guo-Qiang’s brilliant blue waterhole. Gaze at Peter Fischli and David Weiss’s snowman frozen in Brisbane’s summer heat. Traverse a cloud of suspended gymnastic rings in a participatory artwork by William Forsythe. View the tidal currents rise and fall around Angela Tiatia. Reflect on the cultural traditions of bodies of water with Judy Watson, and on the long history of our reliance on water through Megan Cope’s re-created midden.’
Left to Right: Photo by Beth Wilkinson for Lindsay. Stanislava Pinchuk, ‘Topography : Topsoil Storage II, Fukushima Nuclear Exclusion Zone.’ Pin-holes on paper, 2017. Image courtesy of the artist. Photo – Matthew R. Stanton. Stanislava Pinchuk, ‘Topography : The Road to the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Plant’. Pin-holes on paper, 2017. Photo – Matthew R. Stanton.
Stanislava Pinchuk June 27th – October 4th 2020 Heide Museum of Modern Art, VIC
Stanislava Pinchuk (also known by her pseudonym, Miso) has emerged as one of Australia’s intriguing contemporary artists in the last decade. The Ukranian-born, Melbourne-based artist captures the changing topographies of war and conflict zones through data mapping, making tiny, individual pin pricks to realise these patterns – an incredibly labour-intensive and mentally and physically draining process that appears effortless, and beautiful.
This major exhibition at Heide Museum of Modern Art in Melbourne will feature a survey of Stanislava’s most powerful pinprick projects from the past five years, accompanied by terrazzo-like sculptures comprised of pieces of debris left behind in conflict zones.
Know My Name: Australian Women Artists 1900 to Now May 30th – September 13th 2020 National Gallery of Australia, ACT
The National Gallery of Australia (NGA) celebrates its ongoing initiative to increase representation of artists who identify as women with Know My Name: Australian Women Artists 1900 to Now.
Drawing on works from the National Gallery’s own collection, as well as others from across Australia, Know My Name showcases the work of lesser-known artists alongside Australian greats from different times, places and cultures.
As part of the broader Know My Name initiative, a new commission by the Tjanpi Desert Weavers will be on display at the National Gallery. Patricia Piccinini’s iconic Skywhale (2013) will also see its new counterpart, Skywhalepapa (2020) ascend over Canberra on its maiden voyage, travelling alongside Skywhale eight times during the exhibition period.
Left: Pierre Bonnard – French 1867–1947 The dining room in the country, 1913. Right: India Mahdavi (designer). Jardin d’intérieur – collection for La Manufacture de Cogolin. Images courtesy of the NGV.
Pierre Bonnard designed by India Mahdavi June 5th – October 4th 2020 National Gallery of Victoria
While Sydney-siders enjoy the masterful works of Henri Matisse, Melbournites won’t miss out on the opportunity to experience an incredible exhibition of another beloved French painter! The exquisite works of Pierre Bonnard will be on show at the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) for their major winter showcase, a kaleidoscopic exhibition of 150 works from the painter with a fondness for domestic scenes and rural life. Pierre Bonnard has been developed in partnership with Musee d’Orsay in Paris.
Described by Matisse, a close friend of Bonnard’s, as ‘a great painter, for today and definitely also for the future’, this groundbreaking exhibition spans paintings, drawings, photographs, folding screens and early cinema, depicting scenes of modern 20th century France in bright, vivid colours.
Aside from the opportunity to see one of the works of this beloved painter, what makes this exhibition absolutely unmissable is the design of the show itself. Iranian Paris-based designer India Mahdavi (the interiors genius behind the iconic pink Gallery at Sketch restaurant in London) has been commissioned by the NGV to bring Bonnard’s extraordinary works to life, elegantly balancing historical references with contemporary culture in an immersive experience.
22nd Biennale of Sydney, NIRIN November 8th 2020 – 16th February 2021 Various locations, NSW
First held in 1973 as part of the opening celebrations of the Sydney Opera House, the Biennale of Sydney is now in its 22nd year and is one of Australia’s blockbuster contemporary art events.
Taking place across six major sites – Art Gallery of New South Wales, Artspace, Campbelltown Arts Centre, Cockatoo Island, Museum of Contemporary Art Australia and the National Art School – the Biennale of Sydney will see 94 artists from 47 countries
Under the guidance of multidisciplinary artist and this year’s Biennale Artistic Director Brook Andrew, the 12-week exhibition is titled NIRIN, meaning ‘edge’ in Brook’s mother’s Nation – the Wiradjuri people of western New South Wales. He says, ‘Optimism from chaos drives artists in NIRIN to resolve the often hidden or ignored urgency surrounding contemporary life.’
Carriageworks Commissions Rebecca Baumann: Radiant Flux, January 8th – June 14th Reko Rennie: REMEMBER ME, January 2020 – January 2021 Kate Mitchell: All Auras Touch, January 8th – March 1st Daniel Boyd: Video Works, January 8th – March 1st
Australia’s largest multi-arts centre, Carriageworks, has been home to some pretty major large-scale installation commissions in its time (who could forget German artist Katherina Grosse’s otherworldly technicoloured universe in 2018?). This summer, four new site-specific commissions from leading Australian artists Rebecca Baumann, Daniel Boyd, Kate Mitchell and Reko Rennie have taken residence in the epic historical space.
Spanning over 100-metres, Rebecca Baumann’s Radiant Flux sees every glass surface of the building’s exterior covered in a film that changes colour at every angle, flooding the space with kaleidoscopic light that will never be the same twice.
A study in human energy, All Aurus Touch by Kate Mitchell captures an aura portrait for each of the 1,023 census-recognised occupations.
Video Works by Kudjala/Gangalu artist Daniel Boyd features three major video installations, where gallery walls will be mapped with the artist’s otherworldly, infinite cosmos.
Interdisciplinary Kamilaroi artist Reko Rennie references the massacre of First Nations people in Remember Me, a massive illuminated sign that will remain on display for the whole of 2020, the year marking the 250th anniversary of Captain Cook’s first landfall.
Installation view of the Archibald, Wynne and Sulman Prizes 2019 exhibition at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney. Photo: AGNSW.
Archibald, Wynne & Sulman Prizes May 9th – September 6th 2020 Art Gallery of New South Wales, NSW
The Archibald, Wynne & Sulman Prizes are some of the most prestigious and highly anticipated art events in the country. Since its inception in 1921, The Archibald Prize the most well-known of the three awards celebrates paintings of notable figures that reflect Australian culture across areas including art, media, entertainment, politics, sports and more. The works are always a great capsule to represent Australian culture of the moment.
Finalists for the Archibald (portrait), Wynne (landscape/scenery) and Sulman (genre/subject) are shown in an exhibition that starts at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, and tours at select galleries around Australia for the remainder of the year.
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This silver and shiny shade is "Robots Are Forever" in OPI Nail Lacquer from our OPI Tokyo collection. Pick up a bottle exclusively at Sally Beauty. Shop here: http://opi.is/fryfeB
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Five Real Crime Stories that Inspired Fiction – Part II
(Check Part I and Part III)
1. The Gainesville Ripper - “Scream”: Screenwriter Kevin Williamson, creator of popular TV shows like “Dawson’s Creek” and “The Following”, got his big break with the script of this 1996 horror movie, which caught the interest of genre legend Wes Craven and sparked a huge franchise. The story of a masked man that starts stabbing teenagers in a small town was inspired by real life serial killer Danny Rolling, who in 1990 murdered five college students and was later connected to another killing spree, of a family of three, that happened in 1989. Williamson said that he was struggling with writers block and watching a TV special on Rolling, when he heard a noise in the empty house. This prompted him to call a friend and they started talking about horror movie cliches, which would later turn into the famous opening scene of “Scream”, while Rolling remained the inspiration for the frenzied killer of the plot.
2. The Lindbergh Baby - “Murder on the Orient Express”: The kidnapping of the 20 month old son of beloved American hero, aviator Charles Lindbergh, in 1932, was such a huge event that it crossed borders and reached british writer Agatha Christie, who used the case as inspiration for one of her most famous stories, which has been adapted twice to the big screen, once in 1972 and another in 2017. Charles Lindbergh Jr. was taken on March 1, and although his family paid the requested ransom, the toddler’s body was found on May 12 near the house, which meant he was most likely killed very soon after his abduction. A maid was initially blamed and she ended up committing suicide. “Murder on the Orient Express” was published in 1934, and in her story, a murder victim in a train (played by Johnny Depp in the most recent film) turns out to be the man who years earlier kidnapped and killed the baby son of a famous military hero. Seven months after the novel was published, German immigrant Bruno Richard Hauptmann was arrested for the kidnapping and murder of the Lindbergh baby. He was executed in 1936.
3. Hazel Drew - “Twin Peaks”: Mark Frost, co-creator of the cult TV series, used to spend his summer vacations near Taborton, New York, where he repeatedly heard a story that was passed on as a cautionary tale. On July 7, 1908, Hazel Drew (20) disappeared after being seen in the evening picking raspberries on the side of the road by two local men. Her body was found four days later floating in a pond, her head bashed in. The case, and the legend that her ghost haunts the area, inspired the story of Laura Palmer, the high school beauty whose murder is the center of “Twin Peaks”, which premiered in 1990.
4. Ruth Snyder and Judd Gray - “Double Indemnity”: The plot of the celebrated 1944 Hollywood film is one that will likely sound familiar to you. Barbara Stanwyck portrays a woman who plots the murder of her husband with her lover, so she can collect the money of his life insurance policy. The film, which is an adaptation of a novella by James M. Cain, was based on the famous cause of Ruth Snyder, a New York housewife who convinced her reluctant lover Judd Gray to kill her husband Tom. The couple strangled Tom and filled his nose with cloroform rags in March 1927. They tried to make it seem like a burglary, but made serious mistakes that led the police quickly to them. Ruth was executed in 1928, at only 32 years old (you’ve probably seen this picture of her in the electric chair before), followed soon after by Gray.
5. Florence “Sally” Horner - “Lolita”: It’s not like Vladimir Nabokov based his famous and controversial 1955 novel about a middle age man obsessed with a 12 year old girl–later adapted in a film by Stanley Kubrick and another by Adrian Lyne– exclusively on the real life case of Sally Horner, but he definitely took some elements of it, even going as far as to directly quote that crime in “Lolita”. Sally was 11 years old in 1948 when she was abducted by Frank LaSalle, a 50 year old child molester who pretended to be an FBI agent that had caught her stealing in a store. He kept her for 21 months, a time in which they traveled all over the United States, until she finally managed to escape. She tragically died in 1952, at the age of 15, in a car accident, and since Nabokov’s novel was published she’s often been called “The real Lolita”.
#true crime#tcoriginal#true crime movies#gainesville ripper#scream#lolita#double indemnity#ruth snyder#judd grey#sally horner#frank lasalle#twin peaks#hazel drew#lindbergh baby#agatha christie
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Upcoming May Releases
Since it’s May 1st, I felt like it would be fun to talk about some of the awesome games that are coming out this month! There was a huge list of releases this month, so I tried to narrow it down to a couple big releases to keep this post from ruining anyone’s timeline today… so here we go.
Destiny 2: Warmind (5/08/18)
This is an interesting entry to start with. Personally, I never quite got into the Destiny community, but I know that those of you who did get into this community are quite invested in this game. I’ve also heard from those same players that the release of Destiny 2 has not gone exactly how a lot of you were hoping. Destiny is one of those multiplayer games that is supposed to have longevity and that just hasn’t quite happened for Bungie yet. This expansion that is being released may fix a few of the quirks that people have been less than excited about, but the biggest upside is what happened just recently in Seattle, WA. Bungie recently had a large group of players from the Destiny community in to talk about the future of Destiny. This is out of character for them as a company (they usually take the secretive route with development), but it seems like a good step. They genuinely want to improve Destiny and give it the longevity that players really want. Taking input from the community in this forum would seem to be the best way to course correct and, although all of this may have been too late for the Warmind expansion, I think Destiny is going to be one to watch going forward.
Little Nightmares: Complete Edition (5/18/18)
Here’s a release I’m very excited about! For those of you who missed this little gem when it was released almost exactly a year ago in April, 2017… it’s time to get back in the loop. Little Nightmares was a brilliant little platforming/puzzling game which captured my heart and never gave it back. I’m a huge fan of horror games, so the foreboding atmosphere of the levels in this game really spoke to me. It’s puzzles ranged from simple puzzles that might take only a minute or two to solve all the way up to some real head scratchers that you might force you to put the controller down and come back later with a fresh mind. All in all, it’s a great little game to have and I’m glad to see all your Switch players out there will soon have the complete edition available to you!
State of Decay 2 (Xbox One & PC, 5/18/18)
Let me start by saying, I am a huge fan of just about anything involving zombies… the first State of Decay game was fun, but I barely played it enough to really appreciate it. That being said, I am all aboard the hype train for this new game! The fact that this new game veers away from the previous game’s linear sequence of fetch quests and fights by introducing a more open world concept is very exciting, in my opinion. I’m also excited for some newer methods of zombie slaying… I’ve seen videos of everything from exotic weapons to mowing down Z’s in a 4-door sedan. It seems like this game is going to be a playable mashup of the movie Zombieland and GTA. The community building aspect of this game is another thing to look forward to. The need to upgrade skills, weapons, and housing for an ever-growing community brings a level of realism to this game. I’m interested to see how it pans out because the characters in your community are not only playable, but they can die permanently… Sorry, Sally, didn’t plan that raid out very well! I absolutely can’t wait to play this (and maybe get my hands a little dirty cleaning up the Z’s) and I’m thinking a lot of you are just as excited!
Mega Man Legacy Collection (5/22/18)
This release will be a cool nostalgia trip for a lot of you! The Megan Man Legacy Collection is going to include the first six installments in the series along with some extra goodies. Now, this has already been out for quite some time on PC, PS4, Xbox One, and Nintendo’s 3DS… but it’s finally making its way to the Switch for those of you who have been so patiently awaiting its arrival! The updated 16-bit graphics are great and this collection is a terrific addition to any gamer’s library. Even if your console or PC version is already out, make sure you snag this collection!
Runner 3 (Switch & PC, 5/22/18)
Runner is one of those addicting side scrolling games that you just can’t get enough of. It seems too simplistic until you suddenly realize you’ve been rage-playing this game for hours on end! The newest installment is coming out for Switch and PC gamers later this month. If you’ve never played one of these games before, I highly recommend picking up a copy of the new release… unless you can’t wait that long and then the older releases are just as great! This game provides endless hours of fun as you sprint through a variety of levels with interesting little tasks and collectibles along your path. Developers Choice Provisions have done a phenomenal job with these games in the past and I have no qualms over assuming they’ll deliver again with Runner 3!
Dark Soul Remastered (5/25/18)
This is a big release for all those of you much more skilled than myself. The remastered Dark Souls game is to be released on PS4, Switch, Xbox One, and PC this month and it’s tempting even to a talent-less game n00b like myself for the updated graphics alone. This is one of those iconic games that was not only beautiful, but extremely difficult. Dark Souls is known for being completely unapologetic and unrelenting and you’ll likely be finding yourself stubbornly refusing to give up or rage quitting with this game. If you enjoy a challenge, this is definitely a title worth picking up at the end of the month!
Detroit: Become Human (PlayStation exclusive, 5/25/18)
This is probably the game I am most excited about on this list. I have always been a huge fan of games which force you to make game altering decisions throughout their story. After playing the short demo for this game multiple times (I NEEDED to know what all the possible endings were), I was already more than hooked. The graphics are phenomenal, the voice acting is spectacular, and the tension this game can build throughout scenarios is unlike any other game I’ve ever played. In fact, I think that’s the most important piece to mention here. The weight of the decisions you make causes them to genuinely feel like they matter (at least in the free demo). I was a huge fan of Until Dawn because of the choices available and how they affected your story along with clues you needed to discover, but this game takes that concept to a whole new level and somehow just feels… different. This is one of those games I’ll be rushing out to bring home right away… and possibly having to call off sick from work the next day to keep playing.
Street Fighter 30th Anniversary Collection (5/29/18)
As you’ve probably noticed, May is a month full or rereleases and special collector’s editions, but this is probably the biggest nostalgia moment of them all! Street Fighter is celebrating its 30th anniversary with a BANG by releasing this collection on all the modern platforms (PS4, Xbox One, Switch, and PC). Personally, I never owned one of these games, but they have always been my go to choices whenever I find myself in an arcade with a handful of quarters and nowhere to be. Street Fighter has always had a fun solo/story mode, but the best way to play is (and always will be) with friends! So, when you grab this game, which I know a lot of you will, make sure you’re not forgetting to set aside some time to play against friends and strangers alike in the online multiplayer mode!
So that’s my list of upcoming releases this month! Like I mentioned before, there are TONS of games coming out this month… so what are you excited for? Let’s chat in the comments! As always, don’t forget to like, share, and subscribe and thanks for stopping by!
#upcoming#release#videogames#lists#playstation#xbox#switch#nintendo#sony#dark souls#street fighter#little nightmares#destiny#state of decay 2#destiny 2#warmind#megaman#runner3#detroit: become human#new#may#2018#bungie
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1 coat of China Glaze “Can You Sea Me?” over 2 coats of Color Club “Hooked.” Hooked is a multichrome polish that shifts from aqua to turquoise to purple from the Fall 2019 Oil Slick collection. Can You Sea Me? is from Spring 2015 Sally Beauty exclusive collection and has a clear base with small and medium turquoise hex glitter and larger silver holographic hex glitter.
#nail polish#color club#oil slick collection#china glaze#sally beauty exclusive#sally beauty exclusive collection
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How to make a sexy sea monster and other 'Shape of Water' secrets revealed! (exclusive)
yahoo
Guillermo del Toro’s romantic fairy tale The Shape of Water represents a breakthrough in human-fish relations. That’s not just because this lovingly crafted homage to classic ‘50s creature features is up for 13 Oscars at this year’s Academy Awards, including Best Director and Best Picture. It also pushes the envelope well past love stories like Splash and The Little Mermaid, where men and mermaids enjoyed relatively chaste romances. In contrast, The Shape of Water’s lovers — mute janitor, Elisa (Sally Hawkins, a Best Actress nominee) and South American river god (Doug Jones) — get hot and heavy during the course of the film, instantly making them one of the most memorable interspecies couples in movie history.
Del Toro recognized early on in the production process that his love story hinged on audiences finding the Fish-Man as attractive as Elisa does. So, he devoted more than a year — and hundreds of thousands of dollars of his own funds — towards sculpting a version of the creature that was, to put it bluntly, a total stud. “It needed to be very attractive, a creature you could fall in love with,” the director remarks in this exclusive behind-the-scenes clip that Yahoo Entertainment is premiering today. (Watch the video above.) Del Toro handed that challenge off to top creature designer, Mike Hill of Legacy Effects, who built a suit for Jones that was further enhanced in post-production by Dennis Berardi, head of the visual effects company Mr. X, which oversaw the effects work for The Shape of Water.
Sally Hawkins and Doug Jones as the lovers in ‘The Shape of Water’ (Photo: Fox Searchlight/Courtesy Everett Collection)
The technique was pure hybrid,” Berardi explains to Yahoo Entertainment in a separate interview. “Generally speaking, when you see the body and head movements of the Fish Man—or the asset as we called him — that’s Doug Jones in a suit. But whenever you see him underwater, then he’s animated. I would also say that every single shot where you have the creature onscreen, the eyes and brow area are digital, because the way the mask worked, the eyes were a thick resin plug that didn’t articulate. Our methodology was to work from the eyes out, preserving as much of Doug’s performance as possible. But every single shot has varying degrees of visual effects in it, from micro-expressions like eye blinks to full-body animation.”
Unfortunately for Berardi, visual effects was one of the few Oscar categories in which The Shape of Water missed out on a nomination, with nods instead going to Blade Runner 2049, Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 2, Kong: Skull Island, Star Wars: The Last Jedi and War for the Planet of the Apes. But he and his team absolutely share a role in the movie’s success, infusing the creature’s costume design (which is up for an Oscar) with additional life. Having collaborated with Del Toro on both Pacific Rim and Crimson Peak, Berardi has regularly enjoyed a front-row seat to the director’s creative process. Read on for additional trade secrets behind The Shape of Water and its strapping Fish-Man.
It started with a sketch. Berardi’s first glimpse of The Shape of Water‘s aquatic heartthrob was as a two-dimensional sketch in one of the notebooks that Del Toro always has on hand to jot down ideas and images as they pop into his brain. (Some of those notebooks have been published in anthology collections.) “He showed me a sketch of their embrace,” the effects supervisor remembers, referring to an early version of the clinch between Elisa and the “asset” that appears on the movie’s poster. “It was such a romantic image, and he told me, ‘This is a movie that’s in love with love.’ You had a creature that had to be a leading man that Elisa had to fall in love with and that the audience had to fall in love with. He told us right at the beginning that this wasn’t a monster — it’s an intelligent being with a soul, and eyes that had to be soulful and deep.”
The creature also had to be a top-notch swimmer whose movements read as pure poetry in the water. To aid with that, Berardi had his team study Olympians like Michael Phelps as a starting point. “Those guys are powerful and swim somewhat gracefully, but nothing as graceful as what Guillermo really wanted. So then we looked at dolphins, sea lions, otters and seals, and settled on this hybrid of a humanoid swimming, with a bit of a dolphin kick. Seals actually became a lot of inspiration as well, because they move slipstream through the water very gracefully.”
Junk in the trunk In one of The Shape of Water‘s standout sequences, Elisa and her lover act consummate their powerful attraction in a bathroom that she transforms into a makeshift water tank. It’s an erotically-charged moment and del Toro takes full advantage of his R-rating, allowing the two to see, and touch, each other’s naked bodies like any homosapien couple would. Boundary-pushing as this scene may be, it stops just short of the final frontier: merman genitalia. And that’s just fine for Berardi, who would have been responsible for helping imagine what the creature’s junk might look like. “Guillermo’s got too much taste for that,” Berardi remarks with a laugh, pointing out that Elisa and her friend Zelda (Octavia Spencer) instead discuss her lover’s size after their intimate encounter. “His inspiration for the movie was when he was six years old watching Creature from the Black Lagoon and hoping that the creature gets the girl.”
That’s a note that del Toro passed along to Hill as well. “This thing has to be attractive to a woman,” the creature designer remarks in the above clip. “My directive was that I wanted to make him handsome.” For his part, Jones clearly appreciated the matinee idol physique that Hill crafted for his aquatic alter ego. “My lips are a little fuller, there’s a strong jawline and the body they sculpted on me is very athletic. He’s handsome in a fish-like way.”
Hawkins and Jones in an embrace in The Shape of Water (Photo: Fox Searchlight/Everett Collection)
The shape of (digital) water If the Fish-Man was a hybrid of practical and digital effects, the water he calls home is almost entirely digital with one notable exception — the aforementioned love scene in Elisa’s bathroom. “That’s the only scene where we had the actors in water, ever,” Berardi reveals. “We had a water tank that we built and submerged the bathroom set, with the actors, in the tank. It was done in such a safe way that they could just be hovering around the surface with footholds and handholds. They’d film for 20 or 30 seconds, and then come back up easily because the water level was just above their heads. Sally and Doug were both game.” Everywhere else, though, the H20 was all CGI, and even with all the advancements that have been made since The Perfect Storm — the movie that Berardi cites as a breakthrough for digital water effects — simulating water is still one of the most difficult jobs for an effects house.
Interestingly, the most challenging shot involved another tank of sorts, the iron lung capsule that serves as the creature’s prison as he’s transported from South America to the Baltimore research facility where the film’s events unfold. “There was no water in that capsule,” Berardi says. “It would have been way too unsafe to have Doug in there. But we had to see water sloshing around through the glass while the asset is in there. The creature also had to slam his hand on the glass, so his digital hand would have to come through the digital water and hit the glass. All of that is 3D and volumetrically rendered. That was the shot that kept me up at night.”
Richard Jenkins and Jones in The Shape of Water (Photo: Fox Searchlight/Everett Collection)
Here kitty, kitty Cat fanciers will be happy to hear that no real felines were harmed in the making of The Shape of Water. The same can’t be said for the computer-generated cat that the creature chows down on while hiding out with Elisa and her friend, Giles (Richard Jenkins). And the Fish-Man is a messy eater, too, getting blood all over the floor and himself. That may sound like a big turnoff, but del Toro felt it was crucial to showcase his hero in his less glamorous moments. “Guillermo didn’t want to make a traditional Beauty and the Beast-type story where the beast can’t really be himself. He’s eloquent, strong and heroic, yes, but he also needs protein!”
For the first part of the scene, Jones worked with an on-set cat wrangler to provoke a flesh-and-blood feline into a hissing fit. When the time came for the creature to open the cat’s head like a Pez dispenser, Berardi’s team took over. “We put a green sock puppet in Doug’s hands, replaced that with a digital cat and then severed the head. We went through about 25 iterations about what the cross section of the neck needed to look like, and showed Guillermo the grossest ones we could devise — anatomically correct with the spinal cord, nerve endings and all that stuff. We totally went there with it. That was also a moment where we took over Doug’s head and did it digitally: we fluttered the gills and had water spray off of them. That was probably one of the most fun things for us to animate.”
The Shape of Water is currently playing in theaters and available on digital services. The film arrives on 4K, Blu-ray, and DVD on March 13.
Read more from Yahoo Entertainment:
How ‘Wonder’ completely transformed kid star Jacob Tremblay… and earned an Oscar nod
‘Wonder Woman’ wasn’t alone: 15 great movies dissed by 2018 Oscars
Charlize Theron addresses calls to play first female 007
#_author_id:195cbeb0-638b-11e4-b5fc-5a3a8a9452d9#video#movie:the-shape-of-water#guillermo del toro#the shape of water#awards#oscars#awards 2018#oscars 2018#exclusives#behind the scenes#_uuid:20020546-d15d-3a8f-b327-936e28989659#_draft:true
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'Cars 3' Races Home on Digital October 24 and Blu-ray 4K Ultra HD™ November 7
In honor of world-champion racer #95 on his date-sake 9/5, Disney•Pixar is proud to announce the in-home arrival of Disney•Pixar’s “Cars 3”! “Cars 3” surged to the front of the pack opening weekend with audiences racing to see the legendary Lightning McQueen (voice of Owen Wilson) and spirited trainer Cruz Ramirez (voice of Cristela Alonzo) team up to beat the new generation of blazing-fast racers. Now, this summer’s high-octane hit cruises home—loaded with bonus features like the all new mini-movie starring the demolition derby legend Miss Fritter— Digitally in HD and 4K Ultra HD™ on Oct. 24, and on Blu-ray 4K Ultra HD™ and Blu-ray™ on Nov. 7.
CARS 3 – (L-R) Lightning McQueen and Cruz Ramirez. ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
Race fans of all ages are invited to ride along with the “Cars 3” crew for hilarious and heartfelt extras, including an exclusive new mini-movie, “Miss Fritter’s Racing Skoool,” taught by the queen of the Crazy 8; a feature detailing how real-world race training influenced filmmakers; the journey taken by voice actor Cristela Alonzo and team while shaping tech-savvy trainer Cruz Ramirez; behind-the-scenes access to the story team who crafted Lightning McQueen’s third chapter; deleted scenes; and much more.
CARS 3 (Pictured) – Jackson Storm (voice of Armie Hammer) and Lightning McQueen (voice of Owen Wilson). ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
“Cars 3” is Disney•Pixar’s first in-home title released in stunning 4K Ultra HD format, the next-generation viewing format with four times the resolution of HD and exceptional high dynamic range (HDR), resulting in brilliant highlights, vibrant colors and greater contrast on compatible displays than ever before. With 4K Ultra HD, viewers will feel like they’re at the center of the action—holding their breath during the dramatic crash that launches Lightning’s journey, feeling the pulse-pounding action at the Florida International Super Speedway, and getting down and dirty at the Crazy 8 demolition derby.
Bonus Features*
Blu-ray & Digital:
Miss Fritter’s Racing Skoool (Exclusive new mini-movie) – Enjoy blindsided testimonials from the Crazy 8’s, touting the transformative impact Miss Fritter’s Racing School has had in reshaping the direction of their lives
Theatrical Short: “Lou” – When a toy-stealing bully ruins recess for a playground full of kids, only one thing stands in his way: the “Lost and Found” box.
Let’s. Get. Crazy. – Get schooled in the world of demolition derby, the “rules” of figure 8 racing, and how Pixar puts the crazy in the Thunder Hollow Crazy 8 race. This piece is hosted by Lea DeLaria.
Legendary – a close, historical look at the racing legends Wendell Scott and Louise Smith, whose tenacity and perseverance got them into the race even when they weren’t invited.
Ready for the Race – Disney Channel’s Olivia Rodrigo and NASCAR Racer William Byron check out the Hendrick Motorsports campus to showcase how real-world race training influenced the filmmakers.
World’s Fastest Billboard – Blink and you will miss all of the graphics and “car-ified” advertisements created by Pixar’s Art team to make the ”Cars 3” world as believable as possible.
Cruz Ramirez: The Yellow Car That Could – Join Cristela Alonzo and the filmmakers on their journey to create a race-car trainer turned champion racer.
Generations: The Story of “Cars 3” – For the story team, creating Lightning McQueen’s next chapter didn’t involve just a tune-up, but a complete overhaul.
My First Car – A collection of illustrated first-car stories as narrated by members of the “Cars 3” cast and crew. “A Green Car on the Red Carpet with Kerry Washington,” “Old Blue,” and “Still in the Family.”
5 Deleted Scenes – Each deleted scene is set up with an introduction as to why it was removed from the film. Deleted scenes include “The Boogie Woogie,” “The Jars of Dirt,” “Lugnut,” “The Bolt,” and “More Than New Paint.”
Cars To Die(cast) For – Take a look at the phenomenon of die-cast toy collecting and the more than 1,000 unique designs that exist in the Cars universe.
Commentary – Brian Fee (Director), Kevin Reher (Producer), Andrea Warren (Co-Producer) and Jay Ward (Creative Director)
And more…
DVD:
Theatrical Short: “Lou” & “Commentary”
#95 by the #s in “Cars 3”
5 – As “Cars 3” gets underway, world-champion racer Lightning McQueen is riding high with five Piston-Cup wins under his hood.
11 – Lightning McQueen raced into moviegoers’ hearts 11 years ago—making his rookie debut in “Cars” in March 2006—and remains an iconic character today.
24 – The dramatic, slow-motion crash scene in which Lightning McQueen hits a wall and rolls several times takes 24 seconds.
95 – Lightning McQueen still sports the dynamic #95 with his signature lightning-bolt graphics. He displays five distinct looks in “Cars 3,” including one that pays homage to his original paint, a primer look he gets following the devastating crash, a custom wrap ordered by Sterling, and more.
198 – Lightning McQueen tops out at a speed of 198 miles per hour on his last lap with Cruz Ramirez on Fireball Beach. But Lightning’s nemesis—next-gen racer Jackson Storm—races at speeds pushing 207 mph.
CRAZY 8 DRAMA — In “Cars 3,” Lightning McQueen (voice of Owen Wilson) hits the road in an effort to reignite his career. Along the way, he finds himself in the middle of a smash-and-crash, figure-8 race, facing off against local legend Miss Fritter, a formidable school bus who—like #95 himself—doesn’t like to lose. Featuring Lea DeLaria (Netflix’s “Orange is the New Black”) as the voice of Miss Fritter, Disney•Pixar’s “Cars 3” opens in U.S. theaters on June 16, 2017. ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
“Cars 3” Pit Cast and Crew
“Cars 3” features Owen Wilson (“The Royal Tenenbaums,” upcoming “Wonder”) as the voice of Lightning McQueen. Cristela Alonzo (“The Angry Birds Movie”) voices tech-savvy trainer Cruz Ramirez, who tries to help #95 return to greatness, and Armie Hammer (“The Birth of a Nation”) lends his voice to next-gen racer Jackson Storm, whose high-tech speed leaves Lightning McQueen behind. Kerry Washington (ABC’s “Scandal,” HBO’s “Confirmation”) was called on to voice statistical analyst Natalie Certain, Nathan Fillion (ABC’s “Castle,” ABC’s “Modern Family”) provides the voice of brilliant businesscar Sterling, Lea DeLaria (Netflix’s “Orange is the New Black”) lends her voice to formidable school bus Miss Fritter, and Formula One driver Lewis Hamilton helps bring voice command assistant Hamilton to life.
The third chapter of Lightning’s story pays homage to NASCAR with four characters based on real-life stock car racing legends. Chris Cooper (“Adaptation,” “American Beauty”) voices Doc Hudson’s crew chief Smokey; team owner and NASCAR racing legend Junior Johnson lends his voice to Junior “Midnight” Moon; three-time Emmy® winner Margo Martindale (FX’s “The Americans,” FX’s “Justified,” Amazon’s “Sneaky Pete”) provides the voice of Louise “Barnstormer” Nash; and Isiah Whitlock Jr. (HBO’s “The Wire,” “Cedar Rapids,” HBO’s “Veep”) is the voice of River Scott. The film also features NASCAR drivers and the voices behind the sport, as well as a host of returning characters from Radiator Springs and the “Cars” racing world.
MEET THE LEGENDS — Lightning McQueen comes hood to hood with a group of characters who represent the roots of stock car racing—and provide a link to Lightning’s late coach and mentor, Doc Hudson. From left: River Scott (voice of Isiah Whitlock Jr.), Junior “Midnight” Moon (voice of Robert Glenn “Junior” Johnson), Smokey (voice of Chris Cooper), Louise “Barnstormer” Nash (voice of Margo Martindale), and Lightning himself (voice of Owen Wilson). “Cars 3” opens in U.S. theaters on June 16, 2017. ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
Directed by Brian Fee (storyboard artist “Cars,” “Cars 2“), produced by Kevin Reher (“A Bug’s Life,” “La Luna” short) and co-produced by Andrea Warren (“LAVA” short), “Cars 3” is executive produced by John Lasseter, who directed the first two films in the franchise. With a story by Fee, Ben Queen (TV’s “Powerless”), Eyal Podell (actor “Code Black”) & Jonathon E. Stewart (“Doing Time” short), the screenplay was penned by Kiel Murray (“Cars”), Bob Peterson (“Up,” “Finding Nemo”) and Mike Rich (“Secretariat,” “The Rookie”). The film features a score by Oscar®-winning composer Randy Newman (“Toy Story 3,” “Cars”), instrumental cues composed by Brad Paisley, and original songs by ZZ Ward and Grammy® winner Dan Auerbach.
Gallery:
MEET THE LEGENDS — Lightning McQueen comes hood to hood with a group of characters who represent the roots of stock car racing—and provide a link to Lightning’s late coach and mentor, Doc Hudson. From left: River Scott (voice of Isiah Whitlock Jr.), Junior “Midnight” Moon (voice of Robert Glenn “Junior” Johnson), Smokey (voice of Chris Cooper), Louise “Barnstormer” Nash (voice of Margo Martindale), and Lightning himself (voice of Owen Wilson). “Cars 3” opens in U.S. theaters on June 16, 2017. ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
ROAD TO VICTORY — When faced with a new generation of racers who threaten to derail his career, Lightning McQueen (voice of Owen Wilson) teams up with tech-savvy, unconventional trainer Cruz Ramirez (voice of Cristela Alonzo) to find his way back to the top. Directed by Brian Fee, produced by Kevin Reher and co-produced by Andrea Warren, Disney•Pixar’s “Cars 3” opens in U.S. theaters on June 16, 2017. ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
CARS 3 (Pictured) – Jackson Storm (voice of Armie Hammer) and Lightning McQueen (voice of Owen Wilson). ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
CARS 3 (Pictured L-R) – Guido, Sally, Sarge, Mater and Luigi. Disney•Pixar’s “Cars 3” opens in U.S. theaters on June 16, 2017. © 2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
CARS 3 (Pictured) – Lightning McQueen (voice of Owen Wilson). ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
NEXT-GEN COMPETITION – In Disney•Pixar’s “Cars 3,” a sleek, new generation of racers hits the track, including frontrunner Jackson Storm, who threatens Lightning McQueen’s championship status and forces him to rethink his strategy. With Owen Wilson and Armie Hammer as the voices of Lightning McQueen and Jackson Storm, “Cars 3” opens in theaters nationwide on June 16, 2017. ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
SIMULATED SPEED — Tech-savvy trainer Cruz Ramirez (voice of Cristela Alonzo) is armed with cutting-edge tools—like a racing simulator—to help turn racers-in-training into champions. But Lightning McQueen (voice of Owen Wilson) isn’t a fan of Cruz’s high-tech techniques and decides instead to return to his roots—bringing his skeptical trainer along for the ride. Disney•Pixar’s “Cars 3” opens in U.S. theaters on June 16, 2017. ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
SIMPLY STERLING — In “Cars 3,” Lightning McQueen (voice of Owen Wilson) is invited to train at the brand-new, elite, high-tech Rust-eze Racing Center, run by an always-dapper, brilliant businesscar named Sterling. Featuring Nathan Fillion (ABC’s “Castle,” ABC’s “Modern Family”) as the voice of Sterling, Disney•Pixar’s “Cars 3” opens in U.S. theaters on June 16, 2017. ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
CRAZY 8 DRAMA — In “Cars 3,” Lightning McQueen (voice of Owen Wilson) hits the road in an effort to reignite his career. Along the way, he finds himself in the middle of a smash-and-crash, figure-8 race, facing off against local legend Miss Fritter, a formidable school bus who—like #95 himself—doesn’t like to lose. Featuring Lea DeLaria (Netflix’s “Orange is the New Black”) as the voice of Miss Fritter, Disney•Pixar’s “Cars 3” opens in U.S. theaters on June 16, 2017. ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
CARS 3 (Pictured) – Cruz Ramirez (voice of Cristela Alonzo) and Lightning McQueen (voice of Owen Wilson). ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
CARS 3 – (Pictured) Cruz Ramirez. ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
CARS 3 – (L-R) Lightning McQueen and Cruz Ramirez. ©2017 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.
‘Cars 3’ Races Home on Digital October 24 and Blu-ray 4K Ultra HD™ November 7 was originally published on The Happiest Blog On Earth
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If they ask, tell ’em you found it exclusively at Sally Beauty. “Robots Are Forever” from our OPI Tokyo collection in OPI Nail Lacquer brings glitters to the streets ✨. Shop here: http://opi.is/KNcO9H
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Modern Farmhouse with Front Porch
Designed and built by Todd Wilson of Wilson Design & Construction, Inc., this modern farmhouse with front porch brings beauty to our day and shows that modern farmhouses don’t need to feel cold, bare have all-white interiors.
Being one of the most popular Southern Living Showcase Homes, this Valdosta, Georgia project began as a custom home and it’s actually part to Southern Living House Plans for resale (“Whiteside Farm” (SL-1979)), so if you’re dreaming of building a farmhouse, this home might be the inspiration you were waiting for. Just make sure to send me pictures or invite me over for a glass of a lemonade on that porch after your home is ready.
Pin your favorite interior design pictures, take notes on the sources such as paint colors, and I really hope you have a good time, my friends!
Modern Farmhouse with Front Porch
This home has plenty of curb-appeal without feeling pretentious. In fact, it feels very approachable and welcoming.
Roof
The roof is a combination of Gaf Elk Pewter Grey Blend roof shingles and metal roof.
Windows
Windows are Integrity by Marvin, Ultrex, Black.
Siding Paint Color
Siding is James Hardie, Plank & Trim, Smooth. Paint color is Sherwin Williams SW 7004 Snowbound in satin.
Porch Floor
The porch flooring is AZEK, Harvest Collection in Slate Gray. Notice the classic square porch columns and the coffered ceiling.
Outdoor Bench: here.
Foyer
This is one beautiful and welcoming foyer. The board and batten paneling is painted in Sherwin Williams Extra White.
Similar Front Door Paint Color: Sherwin Williams SW 6230 Rainstorm.
The furniture and decor items were selected by Marie Holland (Wilson Design & Construction) and Sally Pace (Turner’s Fine Furniture Valdosta). I’ll be giving some similar options because many of the pieces were custom or are discontinued.
Beautiful Foyer Benches: here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here & here.
Lighting: Currey & Co. – similar here.
Rug: here – similar.
Faux Fiddle Leaf Tree: here.
Copper Planter: Vintage – similar here.
Similar Artwork: here.
Dining Room
This gorgeous dining room features gray walls, painted in Sherwin Williams Silver Strand, wide plank hardwood floors and double chandeliers. The custom hutch cabinet is painted in Sherwin Williams SW 7067 Cityscape.
Antique Dough Bowl: here.
The dining table is an one-a-kind antique table salvage from a North Carolina textile mill. Other Dining Tables: here, here, here, here, here & here.
Dining Chairs: August Grove.
Chandeliers: here.
Kitchen
The kitchen features breathtaking cathedral ceilings and an inspiring layout.
Island measures 8’2” x 4’ (cabinets) legs add another foot, making it 5’ total.
Backsplash: 3×12 Ash Blue Tile – Other Beautiful Tiles: here, here, here, here & here.
Flooring: Bella Cera Galgano 8″ European Oak Engineered Hardwood – similar here, here & here.
Kitchen Paint Color
Wall paint color is Sherwin Williams SW7057 Silver Strand in Satin.
Countertop: Ocean Beige Marble, Leathered.
Counterstools: Paula Deen (Discontinued) – Others Similar: here, here & here.
Kitchen Island
The kitchen cabinets are custom and the island features X detail on both ends. Paint color is Sherwin Williams SW 7067 Cityscape.
Lighting: Capital Lighting – Other Affordable Pendants: here, here, here, here, here & here.
Faucet: DXV – similar here & here.
Sink: DXV – similar here & here.
Great Room
This room is truly impressive. The custom-designed crossed trusses gives continuity to the “X” theme found in many spaces of this home, including cabinetry and furniture.
Leather Chairs: here – Others: here, here & here.
Similar Table Lamp: here, here, here & here.
Fireplace
The fireplace is flanked by custom cabinets painted in Sherwin Williams SW 7006 Extra White.
Built-in Lighting: Trent Austin Dazzle Swing Arm in Satin Nickel.
Fireplace Tile: 3×12 Ash Blue Tile
Chairs by Fireplace: Guild Master Manor Wing Chair (discontinued)- Similar: here, here & here.
Coffee Table: Discontinued – Others: here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here & here.
Sofas: Paula Deen – Others: here, here, here & here – similar.
Chandelier: Kichler Lighting.
Rug: here.
Den
Painted in Sherwin Williams SW 9164 Illusive Green, the grey grid board-and-batten paneling adds drama and character to this den.
Beautiful Wingback Chairs: here, here & here.
Accent Table: here, here & here & here.
Stool: here – similar.
Cowhide Rug: here – similar.
Cowhide Lumbar Pillows: here – similar.
Table Lamp: Uttermost.
Chandelier: here.
Master Bedroom
The master bedroom has a traditional and warm vibe. Paint color is Sherwin Williams SW 7658 Gray Clouds in Satin.
Bed: Universal Furniture.
Ceiling Fan: Minka Aire in Oil Bronze.
Similar Bench: here & here.
Master Bathroom
The master bathroom features an elegant grey and white color scheme. Wall and cabinet paint color is Gray Clouds by Sherwin Williams.
Countertop: Arabescato Marble, polished.
Faucet: American Standard Berwick in Chrome.
Sink: American Standart Estate 18×12.
Pendant Lighting: here.
Ceiling Lighting: here.
Floor Tile: MSI Porcelain Sophie Maron.
Tub Faucet: American Standart.
Tub: American Standart.
Screened-in Porch
Bi-fold patio doors open to a beautiful screened porch with brick fireplace and coffered ceiling. Also notice the stunning waterview and the pool.
Outdoor Sofa: Paula Deen – Similar: Sofa & Loveseat. Other: here.
Rocking Chairs: here.
Similar Outdoor Rug: here.
Ceiling Fan: Fanimation.
Mirror: Universal Furniture.
Many thanks to the builder for sharing all of the details above.
Architect & Builder: Wilson Design & Construction, Inc. (Instagram)
Interiors by Marie Holland (Wilson Design & Construction) and Sally Pace (Turner’s Fine Furniture Valdosta).
Photography: Laurey Glenn Photography.
Best Sales of the Month:
Thank you for shopping through Home Bunch. I would be happy to assist you if you have any questions or are looking for something in particular. Feel free to contact me and always make sure to check dimensions before ordering. Happy shopping!
Serena & Lily: Free Shipping. Use code: LETSROLL
Wayfair: Up to 70% OFF – Home Remodel Sale!!!
Joss & Main: Warehouse Clearout – Up to 70% off!
Pottery Barn: 20% off + Free Shipping. Use Code: Refresh
One Kings Lane: High Quality Design Decor for Less.
West Elm: Best time to shop. Up to 40% off Everything!!!
Anthropologie: See the super-popular Joanna Gaines Exclusive line!
Urban Outfitters: Hip & Affordable Home Decor.
Horchow: High Quality Furniture and Decor. Up to 30% off the entire site!
Nordstrom: Up to 40% OFF. New Easter Decor!
Arhaus: Dining Sale. Up to f0% OFF!
Posts of the Week:
New England Home.
Beautiful Homes of Instagram: Rental Home.
Modern Coastal Shingle Home.
Beautiful Homes of Instagram: Fixer Upper.
Colorful Coastal Interiors.
2019 New Year Home Tour.
Beautiful Homes of Instagram: Horse Farm.
Empty Nester Kitchen Renovation.
Kitchen Renovation with Before & After Pictures.
Full-scale Home Remodel Inspiration.
Beautiful Homes of Instagram: How to Build your own Home.
Connecticut Beach House.
Interior Design Ideas: Colorful Interiors.Classic Colonial Home Design. Family-friendly Home Design. Grey Kitchen Paint Colors.
Follow me on Instagram: @HomeBunch
You can follow my pins here: Pinterest/HomeBunch
See more Inspiring Interior Design Ideas in my Archives.
“Dear God,
If I am wrong, right me. If I am lost, guide me. If I start to give-up, keep me going.
Lead me in Light and Love”.
Have a wonderful day, my friends and we’ll talk again tomorrow.”
with Love,
Luciane from HomeBunch.com
Come Follow me on
Come Follow me on
Get Home Bunch Posts Via Email
Contact Luciane
“For your shopping convenience, this post might contain links to retailers where you can purchase the products (or similar) featured. I make a small commission if you use these links to make your purchase so thank you for your support!”
from Home http://www.homebunch.com/modern-farmhouse-with-front-porch/ via http://www.rssmix.com/
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Text
Modern Farmhouse with Front Porch
Designed and built by Todd Wilson of Wilson Design & Construction, Inc., this modern farmhouse with front porch brings beauty to our day and shows that modern farmhouses don’t need to feel cold, bare have all-white interiors.
Being one of the most popular Southern Living Showcase Homes, this Valdosta, Georgia project began as a custom home and it’s actually part to Southern Living House Plans for resale (“Whiteside Farm” (SL-1979)), so if you’re dreaming of building a farmhouse, this home might be the inspiration you were waiting for. Just make sure to send me pictures or invite me over for a glass of a lemonade on that porch after your home is ready.
Pin your favorite interior design pictures, take notes on the sources such as paint colors, and I really hope you have a good time, my friends!
Modern Farmhouse with Front Porch
This home has plenty of curb-appeal without feeling pretentious. In fact, it feels very approachable and welcoming.
Roof
The roof is a combination of Gaf Elk Pewter Grey Blend roof shingles and metal roof.
Windows
Windows are Integrity by Marvin, Ultrex, Black.
Siding Paint Color
Siding is James Hardie, Plank & Trim, Smooth. Paint color is Sherwin Williams SW 7004 Snowbound in satin.
Porch Floor
The porch flooring is AZEK, Harvest Collection in Slate Gray. Notice the classic square porch columns and the coffered ceiling.
Outdoor Bench: here.
Foyer
This is one beautiful and welcoming foyer. The board and batten paneling is painted in Sherwin Williams Extra White.
Similar Front Door Paint Color: Sherwin Williams SW 6230 Rainstorm.
The furniture and decor items were selected by Marie Holland (Wilson Design & Construction) and Sally Pace (Turner’s Fine Furniture Valdosta). I’ll be giving some similar options because many of the pieces were custom or are discontinued.
Beautiful Foyer Benches: here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here & here.
Lighting: Currey & Co. – similar here.
Rug: here – similar.
Faux Fiddle Leaf Tree: here.
Copper Planter: Vintage – similar here.
Similar Artwork: here.
Dining Room
This gorgeous dining room features gray walls, painted in Sherwin Williams Silver Strand, wide plank hardwood floors and double chandeliers. The custom hutch cabinet is painted in Sherwin Williams SW 7067 Cityscape.
Antique Dough Bowl: here.
The dining table is an one-a-kind antique table salvage from a North Carolina textile mill. Other Dining Tables: here, here, here, here, here & here.
Dining Chairs: August Grove.
Chandeliers: here.
Kitchen
The kitchen features breathtaking cathedral ceilings and an inspiring layout.
Island measures 8’2” x 4’ (cabinets) legs add another foot, making it 5’ total.
Backsplash: 3×12 Ash Blue Tile – Other Beautiful Tiles: here, here, here, here & here.
Flooring: Bella Cera Galgano 8″ European Oak Engineered Hardwood – similar here, here & here.
Kitchen Paint Color
Wall paint color is Sherwin Williams SW7057 Silver Strand in Satin.
Countertop: Ocean Beige Marble, Leathered.
Counterstools: Paula Deen (Discontinued) – Others Similar: here, here & here.
Kitchen Island
The kitchen cabinets are custom and the island features X detail on both ends. Paint color is Sherwin Williams SW 7067 Cityscape.
Lighting: Capital Lighting – Other Affordable Pendants: here, here, here, here, here & here.
Faucet: DXV – similar here & here.
Sink: DXV – similar here & here.
Great Room
This room is truly impressive. The custom-designed crossed trusses gives continuity to the “X” theme found in many spaces of this home, including cabinetry and furniture.
Leather Chairs: here – Others: here, here & here.
Similar Table Lamp: here, here, here & here.
Fireplace
The fireplace is flanked by custom cabinets painted in Sherwin Williams SW 7006 Extra White.
Built-in Lighting: Trent Austin Dazzle Swing Arm in Satin Nickel.
Fireplace Tile: 3×12 Ash Blue Tile
Chairs by Fireplace: Guild Master Manor Wing Chair (discontinued)- Similar: here, here & here.
Coffee Table: Discontinued – Others: here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here & here.
Sofas: Paula Deen – Others: here, here, here & here – similar.
Chandelier: Kichler Lighting.
Rug: here.
Den
Painted in Sherwin Williams SW 9164 Illusive Green, the grey grid board-and-batten paneling adds drama and character to this den.
Beautiful Wingback Chairs: here, here & here.
Accent Table: here, here & here & here.
Stool: here – similar.
Cowhide Rug: here – similar.
Cowhide Lumbar Pillows: here – similar.
Table Lamp: Uttermost.
Chandelier: here.
Master Bedroom
The master bedroom has a traditional and warm vibe. Paint color is Sherwin Williams SW 7658 Gray Clouds in Satin.
Bed: Universal Furniture.
Ceiling Fan: Minka Aire in Oil Bronze.
Similar Bench: here & here.
Master Bathroom
The master bathroom features an elegant grey and white color scheme. Wall and cabinet paint color is Gray Clouds by Sherwin Williams.
Countertop: Arabescato Marble, polished.
Faucet: American Standard Berwick in Chrome.
Sink: American Standart Estate 18×12.
Pendant Lighting: here.
Ceiling Lighting: here.
Floor Tile: MSI Porcelain Sophie Maron.
Tub Faucet: American Standart.
Tub: American Standart.
Screened-in Porch
Bi-fold patio doors open to a beautiful screened porch with brick fireplace and coffered ceiling. Also notice the stunning waterview and the pool.
Outdoor Sofa: Paula Deen – Similar: Sofa & Loveseat. Other: here.
Rocking Chairs: here.
Similar Outdoor Rug: here.
Ceiling Fan: Fanimation.
Mirror: Universal Furniture.
Many thanks to the builder for sharing all of the details above.
Architect & Builder: Wilson Design & Construction, Inc. (Instagram)
Interiors by Marie Holland (Wilson Design & Construction) and Sally Pace (Turner’s Fine Furniture Valdosta).
Photography: Laurey Glenn Photography.
Best Sales of the Month:
Thank you for shopping through Home Bunch. I would be happy to assist you if you have any questions or are looking for something in particular. Feel free to contact me and always make sure to check dimensions before ordering. Happy shopping!
Serena & Lily: Free Shipping. Use code: LETSROLL
Wayfair: Up to 70% OFF – Home Remodel Sale!!!
Joss & Main: Warehouse Clearout – Up to 70% off!
Pottery Barn: 20% off + Free Shipping. Use Code: Refresh
One Kings Lane: High Quality Design Decor for Less.
West Elm: Best time to shop. Up to 40% off Everything!!!
Anthropologie: See the super-popular Joanna Gaines Exclusive line!
Urban Outfitters: Hip & Affordable Home Decor.
Horchow: High Quality Furniture and Decor. Up to 30% off the entire site!
Nordstrom: Up to 40% OFF. New Easter Decor!
Arhaus: Dining Sale. Up to f0% OFF!
Posts of the Week:
New England Home.
Beautiful Homes of Instagram: Rental Home.
Modern Coastal Shingle Home.
Beautiful Homes of Instagram: Fixer Upper.
Colorful Coastal Interiors.
2019 New Year Home Tour.
Beautiful Homes of Instagram: Horse Farm.
Empty Nester Kitchen Renovation.
Kitchen Renovation with Before & After Pictures.
Full-scale Home Remodel Inspiration.
Beautiful Homes of Instagram: How to Build your own Home.
Connecticut Beach House.
Interior Design Ideas: Colorful Interiors.Classic Colonial Home Design. Family-friendly Home Design. Grey Kitchen Paint Colors.
Follow me on Instagram: @HomeBunch
You can follow my pins here: Pinterest/HomeBunch
See more Inspiring Interior Design Ideas in my Archives.
“Dear God,
If I am wrong, right me. If I am lost, guide me. If I start to give-up, keep me going.
Lead me in Light and Love”.
Have a wonderful day, my friends and we’ll talk again tomorrow.”
with Love,
Luciane from HomeBunch.com
Come Follow me on
Come Follow me on
Get Home Bunch Posts Via Email
Contact Luciane
“For your shopping convenience, this post might contain links to retailers where you can purchase the products (or similar) featured. I make a small commission if you use these links to make your purchase so thank you for your support!”
from Home http://www.homebunch.com/modern-farmhouse-with-front-porch/ via http://www.rssmix.com/
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