23
Sep 12

Style Inspiration: The Girls of Tumblr


Now that I’m nearly 30 and a mom, it feels kind of strange to say: Most of my recent style icons are teenage girls. Or girls in their early 20′s, at least. But it’s true! I’ve been finding so much inspiration from the girls that I see on tumblr. They style themselves in ways that I always dreamed about when I was that age, but was often too afraid to do myself. In my teenage years, you’d occasionally find me wearing things like bunny ears, blue lipstick, and bindis. But not nearly as often as I wanted to. Kids at school are dicks, and I just couldn’t handle the taunting and teasing every day. (When I wore blue lipstick, people called me “smurf-blower.” Seriously! It’s pretty funny now, but at the time, I wanted to cry. lol) So I would forgo the fashions I desired to wear in order to avoid being made fun of.

So I guess I’m living vicariously through these lovely ladies from tumblr. Here are some of my favourite gals:


CEEDLING.TUMBLR.COM


















MOONBRAINS.TUMBLR.COM






















REALFUN-FUNERAL.TUMBLR.COM




















TULLETULLE.TUMBLR.COM


























15
Sep 12

Art Inspiration: Mark Ryden






If you were able to take a look inside my mind, the aesthetics would probably look very similar to Mark Ryden‘s paintings. His style incorporates so many of the elements that I love the most — vibrant colours, little girls, religious kitsch, and Abraham Lincoln. All tied together with this perfect balance of both cuteness and creepiness. A balance which is very dear to my own heart. Though, I must say, some of his work just nearly goes over the borderline of being slightly too creepy, even for me. But that probably just makes him all the more brilliant of an artist, don’t you think?


 




















I first discovered Mark Ryden’s art years ago, probably around the time that I started listening to Jack Off Jill. I found that he created the cover art for their album Clear Hearts, Grey Flowers. I hadn’t thought about his art in years, until I saw this article about him. Now my intrigue has been rekindled, and I feel inspired all over again.


13
Dec 11

Hair Inspiration




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19
Oct 11

Witching Hour Love Letters






Digital mood board; witching hour love letters. A collection of found images that embody October and/or Autumn and/or Halloween to me.




































































Known credits:
All images were found via tumblr.
If I’m missing a credit to you, please let me know!



16
Sep 11

Summer Sessions 2011: Session Ten





via eonism.net


What is The Summer Sessions?

The Summer Sessions is a project organised by Magen Toole with the help of Melissa Dominic, bringing authors, poets, photographers and artists together under a common theme: A desire to create. This year’s project consists of ten people, in different stages of their careers and creative development, from different cultural and educational backgrounds, who agreed to be interviewed and interview one another, with the goal of cross-posting each others’ interviews in our respective blogs. It’s a project about knowing who’s in our community, and giving back to that community by helping one another promote our own work.



SESSION TEN: MAGEN TOOLE, INTERVIEWED BY BERIT ELLENGSEN

Drawing on a familiarity with the anxious and the alienated, weird and dark fiction Magen Toole takes some time to discuss her work, her favorite movies, and her love of bad television. Find more of her writing at her website eonism.net

1. Tell us a little about yourself and your stories.

I come from the Texas plains with an arts background, a love for Star Trek and a need to tell stories about people in otherworldly circumstances. I’m all about character dynamics and interactions, drawing on the supernatural to explore the duality of human nature and concepts of fear in the modern world. My stories are kind of a grab-bag of genres, from the weird to the romantic, the creepy to the surreal. I like to think that makes me entertaining, but I guess we’ll have to wait and see if there’s any truth to that.

2. Do you have a specific style or genre? If so, what would you call it or define it as?

If I had to call it a style, I’d say it was minimalism within reason. I like to be as brief and concise as possible without selling my ideas short. Give my characters just enough time and space to tell their stories, and cut out all the fat so the reader is left with the purest impression of my idea. It may be layered with other metaphors, other imagery to flesh the world out, but I hate to waste time on excess detail or diversions. I’ll never stop to talk about the drapes or that summer spent backpacking across Europe. The reader can take what he or she will from the story, just so long as I feel they got the best of what I could give them.

On the other hand, I really don’t know what genres I write, most days. I’m often published in weird tale, horror and dark fiction magazines and anthologies, so I guess that’s the clean answer. I just like to tell stories about people faced with the horror of the world around them, the low-volume dread of loneliness, of alienation from others, of separation from safety and detachment from reality. I usually represent that unknown threat with a monster, whether real or imagined, because giving a fear a face makes it palpable, even if you don’t understand why.

3. Is there a message or theme in your work you want to convey to others?

The message varies from story to story, but the theme in my work usually revolves around people struggling against their surroundings. They usually feel out of synch with the world, estranged from others, just outsiders looking in on their particular circumstances. There’s almost always a sense of separation for my characters, taking the form in a person or a singular goal, manifesting as a longing or obsession that fuels their actions. My characters are incomplete, unfinished, and afraid of what they might find if they go looking for what they need to fill that void. The worlds I build for my characters are scary places, populated by monsters and the subtle horror of the mundane modern existence. I can’t really blame them for being afraid.

Having dealt with social anxiety most of my life, I’m well-acquainted with that sense of fear and alienation. It’s easy to write, because I think the modern world makes us feel alienated in a lot of ways. Most things in our lives seem colder, detached, powered by the instant gratification of technology. My generation is still adapting to the world we’ve come up in, with iPhones and Twitter and the fifteen-minute cable news cycle. We’re still sorting out our place in history, and the jury seems out on whether or not we’re going to succeed at all. So I think I like to tell stories about outsiders, because as a reader it’s easier for me to relate to characters like that.

4. What have been your biggest influences?

Good movies, super hero comic books and bad television. Good movies from guys like David Cronenberg and Tarsem Singh, and genre movies from guys like Rob Zombie and Robert Rodriguez, that taught me there’s more than one way to tell horror stories. Super hero comics taught me about adapting mythology and hero folklore traditions to modern audiences, and how to use simple symbols to talk about grand ideas. Bad television, well, that’s just fun. Some of my favorite actors do bad television, and do these amazing things with these terrible scripts they’re given. Like making gold out of oxygen, they make me believe in these characters they’re playing even when the writers have slacked off in the staff room, make me care about these tiny lives they lead. They taught me about sleight of hand, and how a little humanization can hook an audience into a story, no matter how silly.

5. What are your current projects?

At the moment, I’m kicking around ideas for an apocalyptic alternate history series based around the first half of the 20th century, revolving around World War II. I’m working up the lives of the Four Horsemen, four people called to service at the beginning World War I to end the world, and their travels across the planet leading them toward the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I’m also workshopping and preparing for my next novel White Bull, the second in the Casey Way Trilogy.

6. I know you have written a novel that you just completed, Flesh Trap. Can you tell us what it’s about and what plans you have for it?

Flesh Trap is a psychological horror and dark fiction novel, looking at how the things we do to ourselves and each other leave holes in the world so profound that others can be pulled in. It centers on the life of Casey Way, a sarcastic, caffeine-junkie insomniac library cataloger who is being haunted by violent visions of his dead rapist father, suffering under the weight of his father’s sins for twenty years. One part mystery story, one part psychedelic trip, it follows Casey, his boyfriend Joel and step-sister Mariska as the anniversary of the death of Casey’s father approaches, increasing the frequency and brutality of Casey’s visions. They come to find that Casey has become the center of a series of deaths, disappearances and attacks, all stemming from a mysterious box that begins following him. With each character working the story from their own angle, their own perspective and motivations, the mystery leads Casey back to his childhood home and the scene of the crime, as he’s forced further and further into his own fractured psyche to confront his father and also himself.

I’m planning to release the novel as a free-to-read serial beginning in September. I have an awesome team of volunteers that are helping me put together the website, illustrate the characters and key scenes, and assemble the soundtrack. It’s going to be a mixed-media project, art and music backing up the novel chapters. I’m really excited about putting this together.

7. You have said in your blog that you find it difficult to write when you’re happy. Is there anything else you find particularly challenging about writing?

I usually find myself scratching my head over how to portray horror in my stories. The horror I enjoy as a reader or viewer is largely psychological, examining fear from a more clinical, cerebral level rather than through gore and scares. Not that I don’t enjoy my schlock-and-awe movies, because I have my favorites like everybody else, but I like to explore fear as much as possible without automatically going to blood. This is why death and the fear of dying is rarely ever a source of dread in my stories. Most often my characters are afraid of living with something, be it a choice they’ve made, or a loss, or a larger truth they’ve discovered along the way. Which is scarier? That’s what I have to ask myself every time I sit down to write.

8. Can you tell us about your future projects?

I’m working on the second and third books of the Casey Way Trilogy, expanding on the concepts and themes of the first book, respectively titled White Bull and Nightmare Child. Those are a ways off at the moment, as I’m still getting the first book launched. In the meantime I have plans for a collaborative vampire novella. I’m keen on exploring the idea of the vampire from a more traditional folklore standpoint, making them more of a predatory species than the aristocratic or tragic romantic figures they’ve become. The novella focuses on a race of vampires that came out of a nomadic gypsy society in Eastern Europe, spreading across Europe and to the Americas in the chaos following World War II, living by the strict mythic traditions of their ancestors in a lifestyle akin to that of Hasidic Judaism. Living like a cloistered religious community, with well-organized means of procuring and distributing blood through human trafficking, vampires are able to live among the people they feed on with little scrutiny from law enforcement.

I’m also working on a bizarro novel about a man who loses his tongue to an aquatic parasite that lives in his mouth, communicating with him telepathically and leading him on a hallucinatory, vaguely criminal joy-ride toward self-improvement.



09
Sep 11

Summer Sessions 2011: Session Nine





via eonism.net


What is The Summer Sessions?

The Summer Sessions is a project organised by Magen Toole with the help of Melissa Dominic, bringing authors, poets, photographers and artists together under a common theme: A desire to create. This year’s project consists of ten people, in different stages of their careers and creative development, from different cultural and educational backgrounds, who agreed to be interviewed and interview one another, with the goal of cross-posting each others’ interviews in our respective blogs. It’s a project about knowing who’s in our community, and giving back to that community by helping one another promote our own work.



SESSION NINE: REBECCA BLAIN, INTERVIEWED BY J.A. PAK

With a love of nature, animals and tea, fantasy author Rebecca Blain shares with us a little bit about her work, her world, and her thoughts on coffee-drinkers. You can find more on Rebecca at her website and writing blog.

If you could change one thing about your own writing, what would it be?

This is a hard question. There are so many ways that I could improve my writing. If I had to pick one, however, I would pick my tendency to repeat myself when I describe things. That, and my flaw of forgetting to write down some important details I know but the reader doesn’t!

You are a passionate tea drinker. Now V.S. Naipaul claims that he can tell whether a writer is male or female by just reading a paragraph. Can you tell if a writer is a tea drinker or coffee drinker? What are the tell-tale signs?

Oh my. If I had to give a knee-jerk reaction, you can tell the tea drinker as the person who stares at the mugs and cups as if analyzing them. Cups make a difference with tea. Not so much with coffee. I also identify the coffee drinkers as those who look glassy-eyed and ready to quit existence after not having a hit in an hour. The more zombie they look, the likelier they drink coffee, in my opinion!

If you could distill your writing into tea, what kind of tea would it be? And what time of day would you drink it?

I think my writing would be a flavored white — I think the type of white would be really determined by the day of the week. Sometimes I’m a smooth cup of white coconut creme, smooth finish and a great start. Others, I’m a white mixed with chamomile, a rough start and leaves an interesting aftertaste on the tongue. As for the time of day, I would definitely be an afternoon tea. Mornings are for chai and a swift kick in the rump. Or a nice breakfast tea.

You concentrate your fiction in the fantasy realm. If you were given the chance to fashion the world you would be born into next, what would that world look like? Can you write a paragraph for us as if it were a novel, knowing you would be an inhabitant? And who would you be? What role would you play?

Oooh ho. This is a tricky question. I’ll start with the who I would be and what role I would play. I don’t think I would really want to change who I am right now — I like what I do, and I like my dreams. Even my fantasy worlds steal from the real world. It is the hardships of our life and world that make us who we are.

That said, I would rig things so that people were more considerate to the planet. It makes me sound like a hippy (I’m not, really), but I enjoy blue skies, mild sunsets and clean waters.

How does one put into words the perfect world? It is my own, but fewer cities, cleaner cities, nicer people and fresh air not tainted with smog. If I had to make one change, it would be to encourage people to be more understanding of other cultures, religions and skin color, however lame that sounds.

(Who am I kidding? I would be Queen of the Universe and everyone would be my minion. Go, slave, fetch me some tea — and don’t screw it up!)




28
May 11

Summer solstice nostalgia


































Photo sources:
“Runaways” via Dolor Haze “Walnut Tree” by Mervecan Saral Marilyn Monroe & Dita Von Teese “Pure Summer” by Prue Rainbow braided hair found via tumblr. San Smith in heart-shaped glasses Dress from Limedrop’s Calypso collection. Moonbrains’ ring collection Avantgardess tumblr
“Runaways” via Dolor Haze (2) Smashing Pumpkins’ “Siamese Dream” album art Seahorse ring found via tumblr Juliet of Dear Sweetlings Nail polish gif by 19-ninefeethigh








Music:
The Smashing Pumpkins – Stitch In Time
Morphine – Like Swimming
Hole – Malibu
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah – Satan Said Dance
Fantomas – Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me
Lovage – Stroker Ace
Dandy Warhols – Boys Better
Fountains of Wayne – Radiation Vibe
Modest Mouse – Ocean Breathes Salty



13
Apr 11

Art That Inspires Me











Eduardo Recife
http://www.misprintedtype.com

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Tiphanie Brooke
http://www.antigirl.com

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Laurindo Feliciano
http://www.laurindofeliciano.com

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Mark Weaver
http://www.mrkwvr.com

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30
Jan 11

Favourite Quotes #005





Image found via tumblr.

28
Jan 11

Daintier Smarter Favourites; Princess Hair






Daintier Smarter is my tumblr for collecting images of fashion & style inspiration.
None of these photos belong to me. All images are credited at tumblr.

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