#Moonbox Productions
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shelley-sackett · 2 months ago
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Moonbox’s ‘Crowns’ Raises the Roof Cast of Moonbox Productions’ “Crowns” at Arrow Street Arts. Photos: Chelcy Garrett By Shelley A. Sackett In Crowns, playwright Regina Taylor’s paean to the Black women who held their families, churches and communities together, gospel music, fanciful hats and swanky dresses take center stage. For 90 intermission-less minutes, this jukebox musical rocks the…
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andrewlloydwebber · 5 years ago
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Phil Tayler and Haley K. Clay in Parade (dir. Jason Modica, Moonbox Productions). For @godlessondheimite
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godlessondheimite · 6 years ago
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Here’s my scene-by-scene breakdown of Moonbox Productions’ Parade. It was written on the bus and I couldn’t dwell too much about it because I would cry.
I don’t even know where to begin. It destroyed me and I think it might have ruined all future productions of Parade for me. I thought Parade was perfect before I saw this, I can’t imagine anything topping this. 
 The boldest and most incredible choice, which enhanced the entire musical, was having Leo and eventually Mary on stage as spectral spectators throughout the show, able to see the events unfold before them but unable to intervene, and then slip back into the events when needed. Leo is on stage the entire time (except for one or two moments which were for Mary—I’ll explain later). On paper that might sound like a bad idea but it was delicately and thoughtfully done, moment-to-moment perfect, and evolved throughout the show.
 I can’t do it justice by describing it, I can’t even come close, but I need to break it down scene by scene anyway. 
So...it opens with Leo waking from a nightmare and menacing voices echoing, he runs across the stage in a panic, finding pencils on the ground. He pulls sheets off of boxes from his pencil company, then runs away. It was a weird choice that threw me at first. Then they go into Old Red Hills of home, and Leo watches from his desk. I thought it was just to emphasize Leo as an outsider, which was good, I liked it, but at that point I had no idea what it was going to become.
 Lucille/How Can I Call This Home—Some Leos are snippy and kind of mean, but this Leo in particular is a tightly coiled bundle of anxiety. It’s easy to be anxious on his behalf. I couldn’t help but get strong Matthew Broderick vibes, mostly his speech patterns but also the level of anxiety and maybe even a slight physical resemblance. It made me think of Leo Bloom in a serious, nightmare scenario. Lucille is playful and loving and particularly fiery here (more on that later). I never understood the original Broadway production’s dourness. 
Picture Show—Leo watches this part, too. It’s not obtrusive but it becomes clear this is going to be a thing throughout the show.
Newt Lee is played by a deaf actor, so he signs the Interrogation scene while the policeman taking down his statement sings it. I loved it! Mary’s body is front and center, which is first in a bunch of unsparing (in a good way) choices.
They mostly stuck to the London revision so when I heard the opening to Big News I just about busted a nut. I’m vocal about my preference for the Broadway version, and one of my major disappointments is when Big News is cut. But they did it! Britt Craig stumbles around drunk shoving newspapers in people’s face. Obviously the best staging of all time was the original production where he spends the whole song trying to find his shoe and then falls into a trash can but this was also  very funny and I’m just thrilled to hear Big News (and yes Leo watches this in the background).
The funeral was a game changer. To be honest it never particularly moved me. It’s not one of the songs I skip the most but it’s definitely not one I listen to most, and I find it a bit saccharine. But here, Mary watches her funeral—the actress is incredible, and it enhances Mary’s role. She’s now more than just a girl who was killed. My mind worked some quick mental calculations about the implications it would have for the rest of the show (her mother’s testimony came to mind, and her final scene with Leo--there was, so much more, though) and I started crying. She joins Leo as a spectactor, as a ghost, in a story where they are at the center and powerless to do anything. But she and Leo aren’t really together at this point—if I remember correctly, it’s one of the scenes where Leo isn’t present at all, or if he is, he is far off to the side. 
If there’s one inevitable downfall to the Mary+Leo watching the whole time thing, it’s that Lucille kind of gets swallowed by it. But she’s fierce in You Don’t Know This Man. She snatches Britt Craig’s notebook from him, and when she eventually hands it back to him, she holds on and pulls him to her to growl “I have nothing more to say to you” in his face. Yes! 
The trial—Jeesus fucking Christ so good! I need to single out the staging of Factory Girls/Come Up To My Office because it was thrilling and terrifying and incredible. Traditionally, Mary comes back on stage for this, but in this case, she’s already on stage, watching the proceedings with horror. When Frankie starts lying about what she said to him, Mary goes rigid as if she’s being controlled, and then she goes forward to act out the lies. When it’s Leo’s turn for his memory and reputation to be smeared against his will, the lights change, and he slams himself against the desk as if he’s trying to resist—and then Mary (they interact sparingly at this point) hands him a top hat and cane (she doesn’t want to, but neither of them have a choice) and he begins his part of the song. It’s violent. He’s a madman. The girls scream and fight back, but he throws them around, chokes them, it’s brutal and chilling. 
My Child Will Forgive Me—A song I always skip, but  here, ghost! Mary kneels at her mother’s feet and tries to reach out to her, and it’s an emotional knockout. Summation & Cakewalk—I’m just sobbing at this point.
Rumbling and Rolling—The white people are frozen in stage, oblivious to Newt, Jim, and Minnie’s lives, except when Minnie sings “Mr. Frank, at your service...” and jostles him forward. He’s confused and troubled as she takes his coat. Another skillful demonstration of him as a memory and his lack of autonomy. 
Do It Alone—Lucille starts out so strong in this production, and Leo is fairly meek in the moments leading up to it, so she seems disproportionately angry at him here, but by the end, it made sense—she’s human, she’s frustrated by the whole situation, so even if she’s not angry *at* Leo she’s directing her anger at him, because where else? And then at the end she softens, and the lyrics (“I can do more, Leo...”) which usually read as her asking him permission to let her, here read as her making a vow—she *will* do more.
Ghost Mary and Ghost Leo gradually start interacting more throughout. Again, it isn’t obtrusive, and I only paid so much attention to them because I’m so familiar with this show that of course I’m gonna allot my attention to something so innovative.The only break in my investment, as always, was The Glory...it’s incredible that Jarb took the worst, most skippable song in Parade (Letter to the Governor) and replaced it with something even more boring and forgettable, when all I really want to do is get to the money shot, This Is Not Over Yet, my favorite song ever, and then full momentum straight to the end, but I digress—I’m a whimpering trembling mess when the opening notes to This Is Not Over Yet start playing. The performances were incredible. There’s a moment where he looks back at Mary, too, like it’s all going to be OK, and Mary’s happy for him.
 Blues/Feel the Rain Fall—This is the other moment where Mary is left alone on stage, because in all likelihood, Jim Conley was her killer, so at the end, she’s left alone in the middle of the stage, on her knees, crying. The guy playing Jim Conley is great--smarmy and menacing and charming as needed.
Where Will You Stand—Another song that I enjoy but it’s not my favorite, that this production blew open. Spectral Mary and Leo are both lost in the mob, and though Leo quickly gets away from them, Mary stays in the thick of it, watching on up close in horror and disbelief. Leo repeatedly beckons for her to join him, away from them. There’s a line in the beginning of the show about Leo and Lucille wanting to start a family, and it’s a throwaway line in that it never comes up again. I realized that I usually can’t imagine Leo as a father--until now, where he is protective and fatherly and playful and kind to Mary. This is the only production where that can happen, and it’s breathtaking and shattering at the same time.
All The Wasted Time—This is usually where I *start* crying. I’m emotionally spent at this point. It’s my second favorite song, and it’s perfect, and there’s not a lot I can say about it.
The hanging scene—Leo is surprisingly calm and dignified. Usually he asks for his pants frantically but not here. He starts crying when he prays, but is still composed. The lynching scene is unflinchingly violent. He’s kicked and thrown and dragged across the stage with the noose around his neck. He’s taken off stage, and the men continue to scream at him (also off stage; it’s longer than usual). Mary wanders around the stage. She picks up the ring Leo wanted to give Lucille and sits on a swing hanging from a tree. Finally, Frankie shouts “This is for you, Mary!” And the scene ends.Lucille gets the ring from Britt Craig. Mary and Leo reenact their only scene together, as always (“Mr. Frank?” “What?” “Happy Memorial Day.”) It’s the first scene I thought of when I realized Mary and Leo were going to be ghosts together. He smiles at her warmly and genuinely (a lot of the time it’s an immediate fade to black—after all, it’s usually a flashback to the fussy, grumpy Leo of the start of the show, but here, it can be Leo at the end of his journey.Then Frankie comes out and sings “Old Red Hills of Home” in modern garb and I start sobbing, because the entire cast comes out in modern dress, too. But the show ends with a glimpse of Leo and Lucille during their picnic, which I absolutely could not handle. It fucking wrecked me. 
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brandingagencydubai · 2 years ago
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As the best video production company in UAE, Moonbox offering commercial, animation & corporate video production services in UAE. We assist you in inspiring, exciting, and leaving a lasting impression with creative, end-to-end methods that produce visual and aural impact.
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gbpflag · 3 years ago
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Moonbox Production's Torch Song
The last night of Torch Song, put on by Moonbox Productions is tonight, December 23rd at 8pm. To learn more and purchase tickets to the show, please follow this link: https://moonboxproductions.org/event/torch-song/
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moonbox1 · 3 years ago
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Best Logo Design Company In Dubai For Brand Recognition - Moonbox
The logo is one of the first things people will see when you present your company or your product. It is a big part of the identity of your company. A logo is something that will stick with your company for a long time. Whether you're looking for a logo design or other design services, Moonbox is the Best Logo Design Company In Dubai can help to create the best logo for your business. We provide all branding services at a very affordable price. If you are curious for more information related to logo design then visit our website.
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gemmabussell85 · 3 years ago
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PMS & Cramps Moonbox
Your perfect Moonbox for relief from PMS, period pain relief or cramps. A Moonbox is a collection of products purpose built for period support.
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airmilesofficial · 4 years ago
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With DHL MoonBoxTM, you can now send a package to the moon.
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The company that wants to make high-capacity space missions available for a wide variety of industry, science and social purposes, Astrobotic, is now accepting tiny mementos for inclusion on its first Moon flight. For millennia to come, these keepsakes will be stored on the Moon.
The space company is now teaming up with DHL and the DHL MoonBoxTM has been developed.
This is your special chance to celebrate your graduation, holiday, wedding, birth of a child, or remembrance of a loved one with a permanent sign that we will carry on our lunar lander. The most significant moments in life will forever be associated with the moon in the night sky.
The freight rate is very high, with a current "space rate" of $1.2 million per kilo.
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To submit your package, a 5-step plan has been created:
Phase 1: Order your space: Pick the right moon capsule for you
In space and on the lunar surface, the Moon Capsule secures your keepsake. On the Peregrine lunar lander, all of the Moon Capsules on a flight will be combined into a single Moon Pod.
On the MoonBox Kit order page, pick the Moon Capsule size that is just right for your item.
Note that MoonBox does not submit any dangerous materials or volatile products!
Phase 2: get your Moon Box Set-you will receive your MoonBoxTM kit in 5-8 weeks, the kit includes:
Container to mail your goods to
Prepaid postage for sending the container to Astrobotic with your item
Instructions for Mailing
Declaration Type for Object
Certificate of Mission
Map of the Moon Landing Site
Phase 3: give us your product-Astrobotic incorporates your memory into the pod of the moon
Place your keepsake with prepaid postage in the container and mail it back to Astrobotic, where your object will be put on the lunar lander in its Moon Capsule and inserted into the Moon Pod.
We'll take a high-resolution photo of its incorporation on its way to the lunar surface as your item is put in the Moon Capsule for flight and give it to you.
Phase 4-follow daily mission updates-Astrobotic keeps you up to date on the progress of the mission.
Astrobotic will give you insider updates on mission progress leading up to the launch as an official MoonBoxTM member.
After launch, we will also provide you with mission status updates on the launch vehicle's spacecraft deployment, lunar orbit insertion, surface descent, and landing on the Moon.
Step 5: the package is sent to the lunar surface-a photo of the poon pod on the lunar surface is sent to you by Astrobotic
MoonBoxTM participants will receive images and videos of the Moon Pod on the Moon, connected to Astrobotic's lander, after the Moon landing.
These images will be the official record of your permanent Moon Memorial. They can be shared with countless generations to forever tell you your connection to the Moon.
Site: https://www.astrobotic.com/Website:
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benychamp · 7 years ago
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The Best Subscription Boxes That Aren’t The Ones Bachelor Contestants Promote on Instagram
If you’re in the market for a subscription box but don’t want to pay into past Bachelor contestant’s Instagram-made empires, then look no further, as I’ve rounded up the six best subscription boxes that you won’t find alongside laxative teas on past cast members’ Instagram feeds. Whether you’re looking to get beauty products, spiritual shit, food, or wine delivered to your door—or simply just want to know WTF you’re actually getting in your box each month—ahead is a breakdown of the best boxes of goodies that you need to know about.
Sunday Riley Wellness Box, $95
What good is a #selflovesunday (aka a Sunday spent undoing all of the bullsh*t you put your body through all weekend) without a Sunday Riley Wellness Box? This brand new box, that doesn’t actually require a subscription, contains everything of your self-love dreams—including two Sunday Riley products. There’s Sunday Riley Ceramic Slip cleanser, a daily face wash that gets deep into your pores to remove dirt, makeup, and impurities, and Sunday Riley Good Genes Acid Treatment serum that gives you good skin. Even if you don’t have good genes, it exfoliates and renews your skin to give you a refreshed, bright complexion.
You’ll also find THINX Hiphuggers underwear that are meant to save you (and your underwear) from the embarrassment of leakage when you’re on your period. And then there’s a chic bkr glass water bottle; IGK Rich Kid Coconut Oil Air Gel; Smith & Cult Nailed Lacquer in Kundalini Hustle; a pass for a free month of Headspace, the ultimate meditation app that is a necessity on a daily basis but mostly to cure the Sunday scaries; a Kitsch microfiber hair towel (which, if you’re not hip to what microfiber hair towels do for your hair, you should be as they prevent breakage and frizz); and finally, the Clear Your Space, Clear Your Mind Palo Santo + 2 Crystal Tower Points to cleanse your space of all of the bad energy brought on by past f*ckboys, so you can then welcome the good energy of a nice gentleman.
via Sunday Riley
MoonBox, $34/Month
For the spiritual person (or the Spencer Pratt of your friend group) the MoonBox subscription box is a perfect way to really nail living your life with self-love, purpose, and positive intentions. The box was created to reflect the whole monthly moon cycle. And if you’re not hip to what that cycle is, each month there is a full moon, where everything becomes magnified through our energies and emotions. Then there is the monthly new moon, which represents fresh beginnings and overall resets. So overall, the items in MoonBox are meant to promote growth and spiritual guidance all by looking cute and like, super Instagrammable on your beauty vanity while you post about hating Scorpios.
Each month, the MoonBox contains three small crystals, one premium crystal, a Lunar Phase Guide, a guided meditation, a new moon + full moon ritual, and four featured artisanal products. These can include anything from jade rollers to body oils to bathbombs to star-inspired makeup palettes, you name it. It’s your choice.
via MoonBox
Winc Wine Club, Bottles Starting At $13
Considering millennials are currently responsible for consuming about 42% of all wine sold in the U.S., the Winc Wine Club membership might be a favorite from this list, because us drunk, selfish, adventurous millennials will literally find any reason to put away an entire bottle of wine on a random Wednesday night.
Well as far as this godsend of a subscription box itself goes, Winc actually makes their own wines. You won’t find a bottle of Barefoot in your monthly box, but with bottles that start at just $13 you’re guaranteed quality, great tasting wines at very affordable prices. Each month you will receive four bottles of wine that you can either pick yourself or have the company choose for you based on your preferred taste (which they figure out through a quick questionnaire).
The total price each month will only set you back between $52 – $59 (shipping included), which, when you add up how much you spend a month on crappy wines at your corner bodega, Winc truly is a better deal. What’s more? Having bottles delivered straight to your door means that your wine rack is always stocked, and depending on your willpower and ability to not drink the bottles right away, that could be a great thing because you never have to frantically run to the liquor store before you have company over.
via Winc
Fit Snack, $27.90/Month
Fit Snack’s monthly box is curated in part by a nutritionist and personal trainer, so of course the box is going to be made up of healthy snacks, nutritional tips, and fitness inspiration. So if you’re one of those people who finds it hard to pick up almonds instead of Oreos when you’re grocery shopping, then you can leave it to Fit Snack to ship you a ton of healthy snack options to your doorstep. On average, you can find things like fiber bars, protein bars, granola, low-calorie chips, healthy drinks, beef jerky, and more.
via Fit Snack
Box of Style by Rachel Zoe, $99 For A Quarterly Membership
If you’re one of those people who can’t be bothered to find and purchase seasonal clothes, jewels, and beauty products that are necessities but also look really cute (so you can give off the vibe that you have style/actually know what you’re doing), then Rachel Zoe’s curated quarterly subscription box will get the job done for you. For just $100 every three months, you can receive a box that typically contains one staple fashion piece (for Fall the box contains this maroon Cleobella Sevigny Capelet), two accessories, a skincare product, and a makeup product. And after looking at the retail price for each item, (with the total combined cost being over $400), this box truly is a chic steal. What’s more is that the items in the box are selected and styled Rachel Zoe, so if you’re totally helpless then you can look to the OG famous stylist for inspiration on how to wear and style what comes in your box.
via Rachel Zoe Box of Style
If you’re more of a control freak when it comes to your fashion choices, FashionPass is another awesome fashion subscription service—it’s sort of like Rent the Runway, but cheaper. Starting at $79/month, you can rent a set number of designer clothes and accessories (that you choose) as many times as you want throughout the month. Seriously. And if you like something so much you want to keep it, you’ll get a discount on your purchase.
LiveGlam, $19.99/Month
If you’re addicted to affordable, high-quality lippies then for 20 bucks a month, you can select your color scheme from LiveGlam’s selection of nine mood boards and get three longwear liquid lipsticks sent your way every month. LiveGlam also offers a brush club and an eyeshadow club. When you join the brush club, you can get anywhere from three to eight brushes for $19.99 a month as a way to “brush” up your makeup kit. As an eyeshadow club member, you can receive six-pan eyeshadow palettes every two months for $19.99. The palettes contain six creamy, highly-pigmented hues that range from matte, velvet, shimmery, bold, and neutral colors.
via LiveGlam
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theconservativebrief · 7 years ago
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Lingerie. Macarons. Small-batch liquors. Bacon. Weed. What do all these things have in common? You can get them in subscription boxes.
Now, spirituality has also made its way into the subscription box economy. From “Enchanted Crystals” — a monthly crystal subscription service — to “Goddess Provisions,” which promises its customers supplies like candles and special teas that work “positive energy, magic, self-care, and self-love” into customer’s lives, the aesthetic trappings of witchcraft, folk magic, and New Age spirituality are now just a browser click away.
Among the latest forays into this space, the $34-a-month Moonbox, billed as a “monthly checkup for the soul,” entered the market in its current form earlier this year. (A previous version of the product debuted under different leadership in 2015.) The current box combines explicitly spiritual items (say, crystals) with beauty products designed to be used during different phases of the lunar cycle.
A typical box might feature Tarot cards, instructions for performing new-moon and full-moon rituals, a guided meditation packet, pillow sprays, and artisanal beauty supplies. October’s “Balance” themed box, for example, featured among other items an eye shadow wheel, in which each shade is pegged to a different astrological sign of the zodiac, and a packet of “emotionally balancing” spices.
What makes Moonbox notable, even among spiritual subscription boxes, is the way in which it blends more explicit forms of New Age spirituality — crystals, rituals, tarot cards — with the broader and less spiritually loaded language of beauty and self-care. Within the confines of the Moonbox, there is little distinction between, for example, a skin care ritual and a full-moon ritual. Here, self-care, self-beautification, and spiritual identity become one.
The fact that Moonbox can take such a “mix and match” approach to spirituality is evidence of a wider trend in America: the phenomenon that Harvard Divinity School researcher Casper ter Kuile calls “unbundling.”
While we’ve traditionally thought of religions as “bundled” — a collection of elements, including beliefs, rituals, sacred objects, and specialized language that are inseparable from one another — ter Kuile argues that, in the internet age, we’re more open to “unbundling” those collections. The contemporary spiritual landscape, he says, is defined by our willingness to take elements of different religious or spiritual traditions and splice them together.
“In an internet-defined generation,” ter Kuile told Vox, “we’re used to finding our own sources of information, and mixing it together with eight different perspectives. We want to contribute in the comments section; we want to engage with it in a more discursive way.” In an increasingly multicultural society, ter Kuile adds, “people’s identities and relationships become mixed … Maybe they have a Buddhist practice. Maybe they use a tarot deck.”
Increasingly, ter Kuile argues, people — including the religiously unaffiliated, though not exclusively — are willing to create their own individualized religious practice by synthesizing the elements of traditional ones they find most affecting.
Some of these people attracted by “unbundled” elements of spiritual identity and ritual may belong to one of America’s fastest-growing religious groups: the approximately 20 percent of Americans who identify as “spiritual but not religious.” Others may be part of the wider spectrum of the “religiously unaffiliated,” which comprises a full third of adults under 30.
But others may still identify as part of an established faith tradition. A Pew poll from early October found that up to 61 percent of self-identified American Christians (and 62 percent of the United States population more broadly, as well as 69 percent of women) report believing in one or more principles more widely associated with New Age practice as a whole, such as the presence of spiritual energy in physical objects, psychics, reincarnation, and astrology.
What this suggests is that the kinds of items found in a Moonbox or a Goddess Provisions box, and the spirituality they represent, aren’t necessarily replacing other spiritual or religious practices. Rather, they are reflecting a wider trend of contemporary millennials curating their religious identity the same way they do their social media feeds: blending and “remixing” diverse spiritual, ritualistic, and religious traditions.
This month’s Moonbox offerings include a jade roller and “emotionally balancing” spices. Moonbox
The founders of Moonbox, Paula Pavlova and Katie Huang, actively stress the “remixing” angle of Moonbox. “There’s lots of different practices handed down by different cultures,” Pavlova told Vox. “Our generation is the most ‘melting pot’ generation that we’ve seen. We take up all these different things and make our own version of spirituality. And I think that’s incredibly beautiful.”
Huang added that, ultimately, these rituals connect to “mindfulness,” or the practice of being fully present in a moment. She accesses that mindfulness through exercise, meditating through running, while Pavlova says she prefers yoga.
In each case, Pavlova and Huang present Moonbox as, fundamentally, a reappropriation of religious and spiritual ritual specifically as a form of self-care, rather than a form of engaging with a wider or coherent spiritual tradition or search for meaning. Huang cites “the overwhelming need for people to find their balance again,” but notes “that doesn’t necessarily have to be through religion.”
But Moonbox also raises a wider question: What, exactly, is spirituality for? Central to Moonbox’s ideology is the idea that spirituality is a form of self-care: something you do for yourself in the same way you would wash your face before going to bed. The same consumer-focused ideology has become ubiquitous across the wellness world. Consider the rebranding of Weight Watchers as WW, focusing on guided meditations and mindfulness training instead of pounds lost. Similarly, spirituality is for you.
As Pavlova puts it, “That’s what people crave when they find some spiritual practice or religion — that it grounds them, and makes them feel that everything will be okay … and that their problems aren’t really the end of the world.”
What’s less clear is the connection between individual spiritual practices and a wider sense of either communal or metaphysical meaning.
What is lost, for example, when the act of burning sage for purification — something traditionally practiced by some Native American tribes — is removed from its cultural context, and the necessary supplies are sold to an unfamiliar audience in a monthly subscription box? What does a ritual mean if its elements don’t coalesce into a single meaningful tradition? If it’s not done as part of a community? If it isn’t tied into wider, bigger questions about how we should live in the world? And what does it say about our society that our most meaningful rituals are increasingly isolated and self-contained, focusing on personal growth instead of community?
The proliferation of the spiritual subscription box, therefore, represents both an “unbundling” of spirituality and also an increasingly narrow conception of it, as something designed to make bearable, rather than challenge or transform, a life within modern capitalism. It’s difficult to argue with the fact that most of us need to feel that “everything will be okay” at one point or another.
But it’s worth asking — when we fit spirituality into that small of a box, what do we have to leave outside it?
Original Source -> What a “spiritual” beauty subscription box says about religion today
via The Conservative Brief
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brandingagencydubai · 2 years ago
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Brochure design services
Brochure design is a great way to advertise your business. Brochure designs are simple, affordable and reliable with beautiful designs. Brochure design in UAE is an effective way to promote your website or business with the customers and it helps you to reach out. 
You might be wondering why you need "traditional" printed marketing materials in the digital age we live in. Studies have shown that tangible advertising media is more action-oriented than digital media, which may come as a surprise to you. And you want your customers to perform the action you want them to.
It is a promotional piece used to present a business, a product, or a service, explain the advantages, and broaden the reader's knowledge on a particular subject. A brochure can be used in a variety of methods, but the following are the most typical ones:
for business services,
as product instructions, 
as promotional mailers, 
as a component of giveaway packets
Here are some tips for brochure design , from Moonbox UAE
Keep it simple 
When it comes to creating, straightforward and appealing patterns are crucial. The logo, along with pertinent images, and just about the right quantity of information, are included.
Select the right Fond 
The proper font sizes, styles, and hues are also crucial components of a creative brochure design. However, how do you pick the best fonts? Keep things straightforward and basic. Keep your use of loud, large fonts from being excessively "in your face" for the users.
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breazyvapors · 7 years ago
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Vcigo Moon Box Mod - Sigelei
Vendor: Sigelei Type: Hardware Price: 34.99 Vcigo Moon Box Mod - Sigelei    This ultra funky and stylish mod will pack a punch with its astounding value. The Vcigo Moon Box Mod by Sigelei is a very powerful device that features four wattage settings at 50W, 100W, 150W and 200W that can be adjusted with a knob on the side of the device itself, a long battery life with its lack of LED screen and a lightweight, easy to hold design that will be ideal for people who love to vapetheir favorite blends as much as possible! Sigelei delivers a beautiful and tiny mod.   Product Features: * Dimensions: 3-7/16" x 2-1/8" x 1-1/16" (Without Tank) * 510 Threaded * Adjustable Wattage Knob * Four Wattage Settings: 50W, 100W, 150W and 200W * Voltage Input: 6.4 - 8.4V * Voltage Output: 2.0 - 7.5V * Resistance Range: 0.1 - 2.5ohm * Lightweight Tinplate and Plastic Construction * Battery LED Indicator Light * Requires (2) High Amp 18650 Batteries (Sold Separately) * External charger recommended for optimal charging speeds * Micro USB Charging Port (DC 5V/2.5A) * Low Resistance Warning * Low Battery Warning   Package Contains: * 1 x Sigelei Vcigo Box Mod * 1 x Micro USB Cable * 1 x User Manual * 1 x Warranty Card   Disclaimer: Use At Your Own Risk! Advanced products are for experienced users with extensive knowledge of how electronic devices work along with access to the appropriate safety tools. Please ensure proper precautions are taken when using these devices.  There is an inherent risk with the use of any and all rechargeable batteries in any circumstance. Use special caution when working with Li-ion (Lithium-ion), LiPo (Lithium-ion Polymer) and any rechargeable cells, as they are very sensitive to charging characteristics and may explode or burn if mishandled. Never leave charging batteries unattended. Breazy Inc will not be held responsible or liable for any injury, damage, or defect, permanent or temporary that may be caused by the improper use of a Li-ion (Lithium-ion), LiPo (Lithium-ion Polymer) and any rechargeable battery/batteries. https://breazy.com/products/vcigo-moonbox-mod-sigelei?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=tumblr
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moonbox1 · 3 years ago
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Way To Success With Design Agency In Dubai - Moonbox
Design makes your website look attractive and user-friendly. It is the colour combination which makes the whole site look appealing. With the help of a professional full-service design agency, your website will look really eye-catching. As a professional full-service creative design agency in Dubai, we know the importance of effective advertising. We can help you create an effective and well-designed logo that will help sell your product or services and get the results that you want. Visit our websites to get in touch with us.
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the-connection · 7 years ago
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If you’re in the market for a subscription box but don’t want to pay into past Bachelor contestant’s Instagram-made empires, then look no further, as I’ve rounded up the six best subscription boxes that you won’t find alongside laxative teas on past cast members’ Instagram feeds. Whether you’re looking to get beauty products, spiritual shit, food, or wine delivered to your door—or simply just want to know WTF you’re actually getting in your box each month—ahead is a breakdown of the best boxes of goodies that you need to know about.
Sunday Riley Wellness Box, $95
What good is a #selflovesunday (aka a Sunday spent undoing all of the bullsh*t you put your body through all weekend) without a Sunday Riley Wellness Box? This brand new box, that doesn’t actually require a subscription, contains everything of your self-love dreams—including two Sunday Riley products. There’s Sunday Riley Ceramic Slip cleanser, a daily face wash that gets deep into your pores to remove dirt, makeup, and impurities, and Sunday Riley Good Genes Acid Treatment serum that gives you good skin. Even if you don’t have good genes, it exfoliates and renews your skin to give you a refreshed, bright complexion.
You’ll also find THINX Hiphuggers underwear that are meant to save you (and your underwear) from the embarrassment of leakage when you’re on your period. And then there’s a chic bkr glass water bottle; IGK Rich Kid Coconut Oil Air Gel; Smith & Cult Nailed Lacquer in Kundalini Hustle; a pass for a free month of Headspace, the ultimate meditation app that is a necessity on a daily basis but mostly to cure the Sunday scaries; a Kitsch microfiber hair towel (which, if you’re not hip to what microfiber hair towels do for your hair, you should be as they prevent breakage and frizz); and finally, the Clear Your Space, Clear Your Mind Palo Santo + 2 Crystal Tower Points to cleanse your space of all of the bad energy brought on by past f*ckboys, so you can then welcome the good energy of a nice gentleman.
via Sunday Riley
MoonBox, $34/Month
For the spiritual person (or the Spencer Pratt of your friend group) the MoonBox subscription box is a perfect way to really nail living your life with self-love, purpose, and positive intentions. The box was created to reflect the whole monthly moon cycle. And if you’re not hip to what that cycle is, each month there is a full moon, where everything becomes magnified through our energies and emotions. Then there is the monthly new moon, which represents fresh beginnings and overall resets. So overall, the items in MoonBox are meant to promote growth and spiritual guidance all by looking cute and like, super Instagrammable on your beauty vanity while you post about hating Scorpios.
Each month, the MoonBox contains three small crystals, one premium crystal, a Lunar Phase Guide, a guided meditation, a new moon + full moon ritual, and four featured artisanal products. These can include anything from jade rollers to body oils to bathbombs to star-inspired makeup palettes, you name it. It’s your choice.
via MoonBox
Winc Wine Club, Bottles Starting At $13
Considering millennials are currently responsible for consuming about 42% of all wine sold in the U.S., the Winc Wine Club membership might be a favorite from this list, because us drunk, selfish, adventurous millennials will literally find any reason to put away an entire bottle of wine on a random Wednesday night.
Well as far as this godsend of a subscription box itself goes, Winc actually makes their own wines. You won’t find a bottle of Barefoot in your monthly box, but with bottles that start at just $13 you’re guaranteed quality, great tasting wines at very affordable prices. Each month you will receive four bottles of wine that you can either pick yourself or have the company choose for you based on your preferred taste (which they figure out through a quick questionnaire).
The total price each month will only set you back between $52 – $59 (shipping included), which, when you add up how much you spend a month on crappy wines at your corner bodega, Winc truly is a better deal. What’s more? Having bottles delivered straight to your door means that your wine rack is always stocked, and depending on your willpower and ability to not drink the bottles right away, that could be a great thing because you never have to frantically run to the liquor store before you have company over.
via Winc
Fit Snack, $27.90/Month
Fit Snack’s monthly box is curated in part by a nutritionist and personal trainer, so of course the box is going to be made up of healthy snacks, nutritional tips, and fitness inspiration. So if you’re one of those people who finds it hard to pick up almonds instead of Oreos when you’re grocery shopping, then you can leave it to Fit Snack to ship you a ton of healthy snack options to your doorstep. On average, you can find things like fiber bars, protein bars, granola, low-calorie chips, healthy drinks, beef jerky, and more.
via Fit Snack
Box of Style by Rachel Zoe, $99 For A Quarterly Membership
If you’re one of those people who can’t be bothered to find and purchase seasonal clothes, jewels, and beauty products that are necessities but also look really cute (so you can give off the vibe that you have style/actually know what you’re doing), then Rachel Zoe’s curated quarterly subscription box will get the job done for you. For just $100 every three months, you can receive a box that typically contains one staple fashion piece (for Fall the box contains this maroon Cleobella Sevigny Capelet), two accessories, a skincare product, and a makeup product. And after looking at the retail price for each item, (with the total combined cost being over $400), this box truly is a chic steal. What’s more is that the items in the box are selected and styled Rachel Zoe, so if you’re totally helpless then you can look to the OG famous stylist for inspiration on how to wear and style what comes in your box.
via Rachel Zoe Box of Style
If you’re more of a control freak when it comes to your fashion choices, FashionPass is another awesome fashion subscription service—it’s sort of like Rent the Runway, but cheaper. Starting at $79/month, you can rent a set number of designer clothes and accessories (that you choose) as many times as you want throughout the month. Seriously. And if you like something so much you want to keep it, you’ll get a discount on your purchase.
LiveGlam, $19.99/Month
If you’re addicted to affordable, high-quality lippies then for 20 bucks a month, you can select your color scheme from LiveGlam’s selection of nine mood boards and get three longwear liquid lipsticks sent your way every month. LiveGlam also offers a brush club and an eyeshadow club. When you join the brush club, you can get anywhere from three to eight brushes for $19.99 a month as a way to “brush” up your makeup kit. As an eyeshadow club member, you can receive six-pan eyeshadow palettes every two months for $19.99. The palettes contain six creamy, highly-pigmented hues that range from matte, velvet, shimmery, bold, and neutral colors.
via LiveGlam
Read more: https://www.betches.com
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gemmabussell85 · 3 years ago
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larryland · 10 years ago
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"Kimberly Akimbo," a quirky coming-of-age play in Boston from Moonbox Productions
“Kimberly Akimbo,” a quirky coming-of-age play in Boston from Moonbox Productions
Featured in “Beverly Akimbo” (l to r) are Shana Dirik* (Debra), Lucas Cardona (Jeff), Andrew Winson (Buddy), Sheriden Thomas* (Kimberly) and Micah Greene (Pattie).
Moonbox Productions presents Kimberly Akimbo, the heartwarming and quirky coming-of-age play from Pulitzer Prize-winning South Boston native David Lindsay-Abaire (Rabbit Hole), April 3–25, 2015 at the Boston Center for the Arts Plaza…
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