Wednesday, 29 April 2009

New haircut

I used to have long hairs.I liked them and I didn't want to cut them!!
My dad has also the same opinion...he liked my long,long hairs!!!
The true is that I always had a strange feeling that I wanted to make something new with my hairs to make something different in order to make the change perceptible in the others.But I was scared that when I will cut them and I won't like them then I will have to wait a long time until they will grow up again!!
When I went to the the hairdresser I wanted to make the big change but something stonger inside me was telling me 'Don't do that' and as usually I made the same haircut...nothing special like the most haircuts!!!I was sure that if I will cut them after a little time I will regret my decision.
And so it happened!!!The previous week I call the hairdresser to close an appointment.
When I arrived at the hairdresser I didn't know how I would cut my hair.After un whole hour I have decided but after a short discussion with the hairdresser she convinced me to make an extreme haircut!!!Very short in the back and little longer from front!!When she finished I liked them very much but the worst happened when I returned at home!!!I started to cry without stopping.My best friend and my sister tried to calm me down...They told me that I was very beautiful...but it was hard to believe them!!!I didn't liked them!!!
Now I am trying to get used of it...I don't believe I can,it's really difficulte!!!I won't cut my hair again for one year at least!!!
Is there anything I can put to my hairs in order to grow up faster?

Friday, 21 November 2008
















These are some of the graffitis that I liked and I copied...!!Not all of them...The ANGEL is mine...!!!

Thursday, 25 September 2008

Thessaloniki




As you know,I live in Thessaloniki,it is a very big town with lots of traffic and pollution.Thessaloniki is the co-capital of Greece and I believe that it is as popular as Athens.It is near the sea and it has lots of entertainment.Everynight the bars,the cafeterias and all the clubs are full of people.

THESSALONIKI

Tuesday, 23 September 2008

Graffiti









Graffiti (singular: graffito; the plural is used as a mass noun) is the name for images or lettering scratched, scrawled, painted or marked in any manner on property. Graffiti is sometimes regarded as a form of art and other times regarded as unsightly damage or unwanted. Some people think of it as art, others vandalism, and others, a culture of its own.
Graffiti has existed since ancient times, with examples going back to
Ancient Greece and the Roman Empire.[1] Graffiti can be anything from simple scratch marks to elaborate wall paintings. In modern times, spray paint and markers have become the most commonly used materials. In most countries, defacing property with graffiti without the property owner's consent is considered vandalism, which is punishable by law. Sometimes graffiti is employed to communicate social and political messages. To some, it is an art form worthy of display in galleries and exhibitions, to others it is merely vandalism. There are many different types and styles of graffiti and it is a rapidly evolving artform whose value is highly contested, being reviled by many authorities while also subject to protection, sometimes within the same jurisdiction.

Drinks containing Sprite










007 (Cocktail)
Orange Juice, Sprite, Stolichnaya Orange Vodka




101 (Cocktail)
Ice 101, Sprite




118 Brown (Cocktail)
Chocolate Milk, Everclear, Sprite




501 Blues (Cocktail)
Blue Curacao, DeKuyper Bluesberry Schnapps, Sour Mix, Sprite




Apple Crunch (Cocktail)
Apple Pucker, Captain Morgan's Parrot Bay Coconut Rum, Cranberry Juice, Pineapple Juice, Sprite, Triple Sec




Apple Jolly Rancher #2 (Cocktail)
Midori, Sour Apple Schnapps, Sprite, Sweet and Sour Mix




Bacardi O And Sprite (Cocktail)
Bacardi O, Sprite




Barbie Doll (Cocktail)
Malibu Rum, Pineapple Juice, Raspberry Sourpuss, Sprite




Bitch Candy (Cocktail)
Amaretto, Everclear, Lemonade Mix, Orange Juice, Sprite




Blue Motorcycle (Cocktail)
151 Proof Rum, Blue Curacao, Rum, Sprite




BuChampion's bblin Cherry (Cocktail)
Sprite, Vodka




Eels Tail (Cocktail)
Blue Curacao, Gin, Melon Liqueur, Rum, Sprite, Sweet and Sour Mix, Tequila, Triple Sec, Vodka




Minnesota Slammer (Cocktail)
Cherry Brandy, Peach Schnapps, Sour Apple Schnapps, Sour Mix, Sprite




Orange Moon (Cocktail)
Soda, Sprite, Triple Sec, Vodka




Passion (Cocktail)
Coconut Rum, Pineapple Juice, Sour Mix, Sprite, Sugar, White Rum




Purple Poison (Cocktail)
Grape Pucker, Sprite, Tequila




Secret Ceremony (Cocktail)
Gin, Italian Vermouth, Sprite, Strega




Sex With (server's name) (Cocktail)
Crown Royal, Grenadine, Peach Schnapps, Sprite, Sweet and Sour Mix




Southern Lemonade (Cocktail)
Jack Daniel's Whiskey, Sour Mix, Sprite, Triple Sec




Swampwater (Cocktail)
Apricot Brandy, Lime Juice, Lime Vodka, Sour Mix, Sprite




Take Me Home #2 (Cocktail)
151 Proof Rum, Grenadine, Peach Schnapps, Red Bull Energy Drink, Sprite, Vodka




Trippin (Cocktail)
Grenadine, Hawaiian Fruit Punch, Peach Pucker, Pineapple Rum, Sprite, Vodka




Vodka Fruit (Cocktail)
Popsicle, Sprite, Vodka




Wet T-Shirt (Cocktail)
Orange Juice, Southern Comfort, Sprite




White Dog (Cocktail)
Soju, Sprite, Yogurt




Yvette (Cocktail)
Apricot Brandy, Cream, Sprite, Tequila




Saturday, 20 September 2008

Strange Houses























HOME
IS WHERE YOU MAKE TI!!!
Frank Webb has a most unusual house,a former ladie's lavatory in Kew,south-west London.
As soon as Frank heard that someone was trying to sell the ladie's loo,he wanted it.He was sure that he could make the building,which is situated next to the famous gardens at Kew,into a beautiful home.Now he's very busy-he has converted it into a one bedroom house.
'It might seem rather old to want to live in a place which used to be a lavatory',he said,'but I think it's really beautiful'.
He was divorced recently,and he needed somewhere to live.He knew he wanted something small but unique.'A friend told me about it.I think she was joking,but it was exactly what i was searching for.'
He is 57.His 25-year-old daughter,Kathy,loves the place,too.She has helped her father with the work for the past few weeks as she has been on holiday.He advises visitors not to go into the kitchen.'It is being decorated at the moment,and it looks awful.'
Since he bought the lavatory,several ladies have knocked on the door,wantingto use it.He lets them use his own bathroom.When he first saw the building,it hadn't been used for several years,so it was quite a mess.
It was built in 1905.It is very solid,so he didn't have to do any work on the walls or roof,He paid $60.000 for it a year ago,and since then he has spent an extra $20.000putting in an upper floor for the bedroom.
'I like the thought that my home has a history,'he says with great pride

Hip Hop Dance








Hip Hop


Hip hop dance refers to dance styles, mainly street dance styles, primarily danced to hip hop music, or that have evolved as a part of the hip hop culture.
By its widest definition, it can include a wide range of styles such as
breaking, popping, locking and krumping, and even house dance. It can also include the many styles simply labelled as hip hop, old school hip hop (or hype), hip hop new style and freestyle


History and classification


The dance style primarily associated with hip hop is breaking, which appeared in New York City during the early 1970s and truly became a cornerstone (or "element") of hip hop as a culture. Funk styles, such as popping and locking, evolved separately in California in the 1960-70s, but were also integrated into hip hop when the culture reached the West Coast of the United States.
Though breaking and the original funk styles look quite different stylistically, they share many surrounding elements, such as their improvisational nature, the music they're danced to and the way they originated from the streets, mainly within
black and Hispanic communities. These similarities helped bring them, and other street dance styles, together under the same sub-culture, and help to keep them alive and evolving today. Yet, this has not been without problems, often involving the media, such as when the movie Breakin' put all various styles under the label "breakdance", causing a great naming confusion that spawned many heated debates.
In the late 1980s, as hip hop music took new forms and the hip hop subculture established further, new dance styles began appearing. Most of them were danced in an upright manner in contrast to breaking with its many ground moves, and were in the beginning light-feeted with lots of jumping. Some moves hit the mainstream and became
fad dances, such as The Running Man, but overall they contributed a lot to later hip hop styles, and heavily influenced the development of house dancing.
During the 1990s and 2000s, parallel with the evolution of hip hop music, hip hop dancing evolved into heavier and more aggressive forms. While breaking continued to be popular on its own, these newer styles were danced upright, and draw much inspiration from earlier upright styles. Classifying these newer hip hop styles as a unique dance style of its own has grown common with larger street dance competitions such as
Juste Debout, which includes hip hop new style as a separate category for people to compete in. Today, we see many specific styles that first appeared on their own, such as krumping and clown walking, now being danced and accepted within hip hop new style contexts.
All hip hop styles from the 1980s and beyond are sometimes collectively called new school while the distinct styles from the 1960-70s, such as breaking,
uprocking
, locking and popping, are considered old school. However, this classification is controversial, and often old school hip hop (or, in some areas, hype) is used solely for the late 1980s upright and jumpy hip hop styles, excluding locking, popping and breaking, and new style hip hop for the heavier hip hop styles of today.


Controversy


Today, many dance studios offer hip hop classes of some sort. They might focus on a specific style such as breakdancing or combine elements of various street dance styles. As hip hop dancing is such a broad genre, the teacher has much freedom and room for personal interpretation, and often mixes various styles freely, even mixing them with other dance forms such as jazz dance.
Some criticize this type of teaching as being too strict and too
choreographed, losing important elements such as improvisation
and personal interpretation on the students' side. Because of this, some dislike labeling these dance classes as "hip hop" as it might not actually include all aspects of the traditional hip hop dances, especially when the teacher mixes it with dance styles not originally related to hip hop.
Despite the controversy, studio-choreographed hip hop is still widely accepted today by many.