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#sangria clip art
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Free vector clip art for Winter from Creative Fabrica
Here's a small selection of Winter themed clip art that Creative Fabrica has available for free. You can see from the little red text in some of the squares that some of these are only available for a limited time so go check them out and get some free vector files before they're gone. Winter Clip Art from CF
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boroughshq · 25 days
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EVENT 003: AURA MUSIC FESTIVAL 2024.
Aura Music Festival is back and better than ever! Starting off as a one-day music festival back in 2013 to celebrate the end of summer, it has since grown into a two-day, and now finally three-day music festival! Now boosting 90k fans over a three-day weekend, Aura Music Festival has always strived to host an open and inclusive environment for festival-goers and performers alike. Aura Fest is also highly known for prioritizing deals with local New York businesses over big name corporations. This year, long-time sponsor Glow Nightclub has been honored with the secondary stage name for their decade-long commitment to the growth of Aura Fest. Doors open at 11am and closes at 11pm. Aura Fest recommends guests to use public transportation to get to the festival, and to remember to follow the clear bag policy for quick and easy entry!
LINEUP SCHEDULE: FRIDAY. SATURDAY. SUNDAY.
27 LOCAL VENDORS (festival map)
Flash Tattoos with Electric Ink - Get flash tattoos specifically designed for this year’s lineup at Aura Fest!
Rave Sprouts with Dahlia & Daffodils - Forget to bring your sprouts? no worries! Come to Dahlia & Daffodils booth to make your own clipped sprouts to share!
Luxury Nails - for all your nail care needs!
Hammock Station - The trees in the are have been utilized to provide an array of hammocks for guests to relax in sweet bliss - at least until their 15min limit is up.
Rock Star Crystals - Palm readings and crystal jewelry at the ready!
Blue Note's Rest Zone - Relax with AC, mood lighting, and jazz at the Blue Note’s designated rest space.
Pegasus' Rest Zone - Even though everyone’s recharging, the energy never fades at Pegasus’ rest space!
Riot House's Rest Zone - The Riot House’s rest space provides a cool, rock-n-roll safe haven in the middle of the primarily-pop festival.
Glow's Rest Zone - The biggest rest space brought to Aura by Glow, providing ample seating and good vibes!
Vault's Rest Zone - Vault’s rest space is as elite as it’s bar, providing expensive drinks and a coveted indoor restroom.
WFUS 94.8 - When the radio hosts aren't privately interviewing artists backstage, they’re publicly interviewing and engaging festival-goers with fun festival-themed contests at their tent!
Giant Parachute with Gilded Gallery - Nothing beats the nostalgic, colorful, and cooperative vibes of playing with a giant rainbow parachute- and Gilded's provided two for maximum enjoyment!
Balloon Darts with Grooves - 3 chances to pop a balloon; if you manage to pop one with a vinyl piece inside, you’ll win one free record of your choosing from the collection provided by Grooves at their tent!
The Underground - In preparation for the event, up and coming artists made beautiful art pieces inspired by the festival - be it the vibes of the festival, or an artist on the lineup. Both the original and (much cheaper) prints of the artwork are available for purchase all weekend at the Underground’s tent!
Freshly Churned’s Sweets Tour - Come try a menu of ice cream flavors specifically inspired by the festival!
Puzzles Lawn Games - Everything is giant at Puzzles’ large station - from jenga to bowling to hamster races!
Sunscreen Station Sponsored by Triple D’s - Stay mindful of the sun, divas! Stop by for free sunscreen, sponsored by Diva Diner & Drag Show!
Songbirds & Sangria - That famous house sangria makes its Aura debut at the Songbirds tent, and don’t worry, they didn’t forget to bring a karaoke machine!
Sign Station with Sappho’s - Stop by Sappho’s tent to create signs to support your favorite artist!
Becky's Martini Bar - Providing the best martini’s in all of Aura, hands down.
Cowbells - Millie couldn’t make it, but Cowbells has plenty of tequila to help you forget that tragic detail.
Bit Bar’s Video Games - Play family-friendly competitive video games with strangers or friends at Bit Bar’s tent!
Face Painting with Glazed Finish - For all your face painting needs!
Corner Pub’s Trivial Pursuit - Trivia games galore all centered on different musical artists from this year’s lineup!
Photo Booths - Gather some friends and have some fun with any of the props available in front of a standard photobooth area! With an immediate sovereign printed afterwards, and the option to have the copies digitally sent to you, guests are sure to have some good ol’ classic fun with this one.
Video Booth - Go solo or partner up and step into Aura’s high tech video booth. Accompanied by dramatic lighting and with a variety of electronic music at your disposal, embrace your inner diva or showcase your dance moves in a video made perfect for Instagram!
Earplug Station - Free, cheap earplugs available to help guests protect their hearing!
OOC DETAILS BELOW!
OOC DETAILS.
IC Timeline: Canonically, the music festival occurs over the weekend, from August 30th — September 6th. OOC Timeline: Members will have between August 30th through September 6th to post their initial starters for the festival. After 9/6, no new starters are permitted, but members are free to continue their ongoing event threads until their natural conclusion. An announcement will be made on both days when the event has started and ended. Festival Inspo: Aura Fest takes direct inspiration from two other NYC music festivals, Governors Ball Music Festival & All Things Go Music Festival. Specifically, the location and layout of Governor’s Ball (minus one stage) and the inclusion and sound of All Things Go. As for size, Aura Fest lies in the middle of the two, bigger than All Things Go (13k daily cap), but smaller than Gov Ball (50k daily cap), with a daily cap of 30k attendees to max out at 90k over the weekend. Involvement: Aura Fest is known for sponsoring partnerships with local vendors, many of which have been included in the vendor list above. Characters are welcome to both be guests of the event or employees manning a tent, aiding a musician, volunteering as security or cleanup crew, or anything in between! Food: Small note, but for ease, listing out all the food options available was omitted. Members are free to use their imagination when it comes to what food is available at all the food symbol locations on the map. Threads: Members are highly encouraged to engage in any music festival related threads during this time, and are free to continue non-event threads as well! Just please be sure to tag all event threads as bhqevent003 for differentiation purposes.
If you have any other questions about the event, please do not hesitate to reach out to the main!
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kaileydeweerd · 3 years
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Module 1
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Picture 1: This Nivea Lotion uses different typefaces and a picture of vanilla beans/almond flowers to communicate that it's is a different scent.
Picture 2: This deodorant uses a tropical themed picture to imply that it is so good that it will work even in tropical heat (and that it smells tropical). The typeface they used for "old spice" looks older therefor suggests that it is an established and reliable brand.
Picture 3: This makeup primer says PORE boldly to grab attention because poreless skin is highly sought after in that industry. I believe this product also uses aged aesthetics to imply a successful reputation.
Picture 4: The sangria shown uses a funky pattern on the can and a brawny logo so it appeals to all audiences. The design looks modern and communicated that it is new.
Picture 5: The puzzle book gets straight to the point by communicating exactly what the book entails, the cover is very simplistic consisting of an example of a puzzle, a simple typeface, and a clip art pilot. This example can appeal to all generations.
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divinenyco · 4 years
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This is my latest collection of hand-dyed fabric. I dye in small batches, one yard at a time. I used a very different technique this time, where I folded the fabric into pleats before folding again into a packet, held together with clips and immersed in the dye bath. Dyes used: Sangria & Power Berry Procion is from #DharmaTrading, Navy Procion and Black RIT Dye is from Blick Art #handdyed #fabricdyeing #Prociondyes #RITdyes #pattern #textiledesign #blickartmaterials https://www.instagram.com/p/CD2iu3BB3rB/?igshid=sauifc70r5al
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mrmichaelchadler · 6 years
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Climax
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In the wake of Stanley Donen's death last week, there was an outpouring of appreciation on social media, with people sharing clips of dance numbers from Donen's movies, including "Singin' in the Rain," "Funny Face," and "On the Town." Donen got his start as a dancer, and it shows in his treatment of dance sequences. He often filmed in long shot, with a minimum of cuts. When he did cut, it was with great precision, and usually to change the angle in which we see the dance. He didn't insert closeups of the dancer's feet, or chop the dance up in a flurry of quick cuts to make it look more exciting. Dancers do miraculous things, and Donen let us see it. Watching all of those clips drove home how dance cinematography like this is mostly—and sadly—a lost art.
But it's alive and well in “Climax," the latest from French cinema's bad boy, Gaspar Noé. The first dance sequence in “Climax" is so electrifying it took me a while to realize it plays out in one long take. Apparently based on a true story, "Climax" takes place in 1996, when a dance troupe holes up in a community center on the eve of an American tour. Most of the kids in the troupe have never been outside of France (as they admit in their taped audition interviews). They're talented club kids, a diverse multicultural group, wrenched out of the ordinary because what they can do is so extraordinary. 
In the first dance sequence, with house music throbbing so loud it obliterates thought, the dancers prowl in their own zones, but there's an organizing principle to their movements as a group. Together, they're a writhing multi-tentacled beast. One after the other, each dancer comes to the front to flaunt their specialty: voguing, contortion, krumping. It's exuberant chaos, but chaos contained in a form where everyone can shine. For the majority of the first dance, Noé keeps his camera stationary, with occasional almost imperceptible zooms in (cinematography by the gifted Benoît Debie). Eventually, and suddenly, the camera moves forward and then way up, until we're pinned on the ceiling, looking down on the dancers, calling to mind Busby Berkeley's overhead shots of kaleidoscope formations. We get to know each dancer without dialogue, we can distinguish each one (the voguing brunette, the contortionist kid in a track suit, the undulating sexy blonde). The sequence is hypnotic, their collective high is so pure.
That high turns dark, and with Noé dark is really dark. The troupe mills around in the common room and Noé drops in on conversations. You put together who's who, the power struggles, the drugs, the sex people are having or want to have. One dancer says, out of nowhere, "I don't dig the vibe in this group" and as the sequence moves on you can see what she is talking about. Everyone drinks from a punch bowl of sangria, and Noé's camera swirls among them, floating, or crawling along the floor, sometimes turning upside down. These drifting, swirling moves are one of his signatures as a filmmaker, pushed to its most extreme in 2009's "Enter the Void", but it’s way "out there" in "Climax" too. Soon, it's obvious that someone has spiked the sangria with acid. Horror dawns, then fury, and then all hell breaks loose. What was once collective energy fragments, and they turn on each other, wracked by hallucinations and paranoia. The second half of "Climax" is an unholy mix of Lord of the Flies and an Agatha Christie novel. The group morphs into a vigilante mob, determined to sniff out "whodunit," pointing fingers at those who didn't partake, throwing a Muslim dancer out into the blizzard, locking the door behind him. 
As the horror increases—and much of “Climax" is horrifying—the dancers spread out through the building, having grotesque experiences, with glimpses of awful things happening in adjacent rooms. The lighting is sickly green, or hellish red, the building like the circles of hell, pulsing and monstrous. There are surreal murals on the wall, and one lavendar-blue room is a space where maybe, maybe, you will be left alone to sleep it off. Screams tear through the air. The music never stops. 
It's an understatement to say that Noé’s work is divisive. His films cause uproars at Cannes. He is lambasted for his use of graphic violence and sex. 2002's "Irreversible", told in reverse, is his most extreme film, and as harrowing an experience as I have ever had at the movies. "Enter the Void" (with one of my favorite opening credits sequences in film) is vertigo-inducing, told from the point of view of a man wounded by a gunshot, floating above himself, pulled towards death and repeatedly yanked back into life, the camera swirling downwards over and over again. 2015's "Love," a sex movie shot in 3D, was muted by comparison (especially considering all the sex, including a penis ejaculating ... in 3D). The dialogue was banal and the sex pretty banal, too. Noe’s desire to provoke fell flat.
Maybe Noé is an acquired taste. Maybe he's not your thing at all. He can be hard to take, and sometimes it's all a little bit silly, "Climax" included. But Noé is a personal filmmaker, an artist, with a unique vision and style, pulling off feats with bravura, like a lion tamer taking a melodramatic bow. He's grandiose and more than a little bit mad. If you think too hard about what "Climax" means, the film deflates. It's not news that civilization is a thin veneer and human beings need very little excuse to go off the rails. "Climax" has much in common with "Irreversible" and "Enter the Void," although "Climax" is also a weirdo acid-trip polemic (there's that flag of France on the wall, a flag everyone mentions with uneasiness and disgust). The dancers come from all walks of life, but everyone goes down with the ship, clinging to their final shreds of sanity. There's a mournfulness in all of this: "Climax" is haunted by the joy of the first dance.
from All Content https://ift.tt/2C1vkIG
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kreativproject · 7 years
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Sangria. Watercolor collection
This Collection of high quality hand painted watercolor floral Graphic in Hires. Included are Wreaths, Bouquets, Floral Elements, Template. Perfect graphic for DIY projects, cards, wedding invitations, greeting cards, identity, packaging design, cases, photos, posters, bags, wallart, logos, quotes, blogs, website, banners and more. **This Collection includes:** – 27 x Floral Element in PNG with…
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