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Quarter Wedding

Romantic Weddings in the Historic French Quarter,in New Orleans.Specializing in New Orleans weddings,french quarter weddings,wedding license information,handfasting,alternative weddings,voodoo weddings

Thursday, June 28, 2012

A "Quickie" Photoshoot

It's so gloomy and wet outside! What happened to all that perfectly pretty sunny & 70 weather we were having? I don't mind the break from the warm so much as I mind the way Seattlites always seem to forget how to drive in the rain. You'd think with it being drizzly 6-9 months out of the year, we'd have the wet commute down pat!

A Lucky for me, there are backroads I can sneak onto to miss the 80+ minute gridlock on the freeway. Blech! So today, I'm keeping my post light and simple (how my commute should be!) by offering up a some pics, links and a game! Check out my new furry vest for fall! I really feel like a little gray fox, now!



Oh and I had to share this thrift store find from yesterday. Seriously creepy alien cat basket. I don't know what's most creepy about it -- the fact that it has no ears, it's glass marble eyes, or those giant, realistic whiskers. Grrrrrroooossss! I also finished editing all the pics from the WhatDoBaconDo shoot from Friday. Here's another favorite. They used some of my clay mini foods in the shot, my pie magnet and a Hostess cake! So fun! They'll be having a huge announcement next week, so stay tuned!Are any of you on "Words With Friends" on Iphone? If you are, I'd love to play! My user name is TsukiF! I have about 6 different games going now..I'm pretty obsessed with it :)

Okay and now for the game YOU can play. It's from the New York Times. It's a distracted driving simulator. See how well you do with texting and changing lanes! Play it HERE!

Ooh and lastly, I've been added to a few treasuries lately. If you're bored and feel like clicking, they're pretty cute! Here's the latest:

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Sandra Bullock's Love Affair with NOLA

Cheerleader-turned-Oscar winning movie star SANDRA BULLOCK seems to have a love affair with the city of New Orleans.

Sandra Bullock's Love Affair with NOLAFollowing the devastating effects of Hurricane Katrina, Bullock became a major supporter of Warren Easton Charter High School.

Sandra Bullock's Love Affair with NOLAThe school, known for being the first public high school for boys in Louisiana, sustained $4 million in damages and Ms. bullock told PEOPLE magazine that she "felt such a profound need to do something for them".

Sandra Bullock's Love Affair with NOLAShe donated hundreds of thousands of dollars for renovations, new band uniforms, a new health clinic and established a $10,000 college scholarship, earning her an induction into the school's Hall Of Fame.

Sandra Bullock's Love Affair with NOLAThe 45 year-old star of "Speed" and "The Proposal" also purchased a mansion in the garden district and recently adopted an African American baby boy, from New Orleans naming him Louis (after "Satchmo"?).

Sandra Bullock's Love Affair with NOLAOpposing eyebrows were immediately raised over the adoption, questioning Ms. Bullock's sincerity, due to her Academy Award-winning performance in "The Blind Side" as Leigh Anne Tuohy, a white woman who adopts a black child.

Sandra Bullock's Love Affair with NOLAAdditional scepticism surfaced surrounded the controversial marriage to accused "racisct" TV star JESSE JAMES, the "fashionable" factor of movie stars adopting black children and her ability to maintain a bi-racial household as a Caucasian female.

Sandra Bullock's Love Affair with NOLABut regardless of the "Art Imitates life" similarities and ensuing controversial views, it seems clear that the accomplished actress (her films have grossed over $3.1 worldwide!) has a streak of benevolence deep within her soul and an undying affection for New Orleans.

Sandra Bullock's Love Affair with NOLAOne only hopes that she will continue this passionate "Big Easy" love affair by shooting more films here.

Sandra Bullock's Love Affair with NOLAHer underrated talent and sense of charity is illuminated by her recent notoriety as one of TIME Magazine's 2010 "100 most influential people".

Monday, February 20, 2012

Drenched Crowd on Last Day of Jazz Fest Feast on Seafood Amidst Oil Spill Concerns

MATTHEW HINTON / THE TIMES-PICAYUNE Loren Eckstein, left, and Parker Schonekas, of New Orleans dance to the music of Van Morrison by the Acura Stage during the New Orleans Jazz Fest and Heritage Festival at the Fair Grounds May 2, 2010

Drenched Crowd on Last Day of Jazz Fest Feast on Seafood Amidst Oil Spill ConcernsWorried about the effect of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill on the seafood industry, Devi Miron knew exactly how she was going to spend the last day of the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival presented by Shell.

Drenched Crowd on Last Day of Jazz Fest Feast on Seafood Amidst Oil Spill ConcernsSure, she was there for the music. She and her friend were especially looking forward to Trombone Shorty and Van Morrison.

Drenched Crowd on Last Day of Jazz Fest Feast on Seafood Amidst Oil Spill ConcernsBut first she had to eat. She started with a bowl of crawfish etouffee and said she would later try the crawfish bread and shrimp taco.

Drenched Crowd on Last Day of Jazz Fest Feast on Seafood Amidst Oil Spill Concerns"I'm worried, " she said, referring to the oil spill. "So I'm going to try to eat as much seafood as I can."

Drenched Crowd on Last Day of Jazz Fest Feast on Seafood Amidst Oil Spill ConcernsFortunately for Miron and other seafood lovers, the lines for such popular dishes as softshell crab po-boys and boiled crawfish were relatively short, thanks to an overcast, windy day that saw drizzles turn to downpours and back to drizzles.

Drenched Crowd on Last Day of Jazz Fest Feast on Seafood Amidst Oil Spill ConcernsAlthough last-day attendance figures won't be available until later this week, the nasty weather made for much lighter crowds than what is typical for the final day of Jazz Fest.

Drenched Crowd on Last Day of Jazz Fest Feast on Seafood Amidst Oil Spill ConcernsFor those who braved the weather, they couldn't have asked for a more satisfying experience. At the Economy Hall Tent, they second-lined to the music of Don Vappie and the Creole Jazz Serenaders. At the Blues Tent, they danced to the sounds of Margie Perez, who ended her show with a tribute to the late Marva Wright. And at the Acura Stage, they moved to the music of Van Morrison.

Jayashree Rao of New Orleans said she actually prefers the Jazz Fest atmosphere on rainy, even stormy days. She attended the festival on the first Friday -- an especially inclement day -- and said she had the time of her life.

"I had more fun, " said Rao, accompanied by her daughter, Aparna Rao, a New Orleans native who now lives in Washington, D.C. "The crowd chemistry is different. People don't care if they get wet or dirty. They have fun regardless."

With open seating and standing room available at almost every stage and tent and no jams of people clogging the walkways, getting from venue to venue was relatively easy, even with the slushiness that the rain produced.

At the Blues Tent, Chris Beattie of Blacksburg, Va., and Sissy Wiggin of New Orleans neither stood nor sat. They danced to the music of Margie Perez and planned to do the same at the Los Po-Boy-Citos and Davell Crawford Singers shows.

"One of the things that I love about this place is that we can just go from place to place and dance, " said Beattie, who invested in a $425 Brass Pass and attended the festival six out of seven days.

He said the only thing that would have kept him away from the festival Sunday would have been "six feet of snow."

During some of the heaviest downpours, many fest-goers took refuge in the covered areas of the Lagniappe Stage. Among them were Chandler and Leslie Green and their 14-month-old daughter, Haroly, of Baton Rouge.

"We used to come here to cool off; now we come to dodge the rain, " Chandler Green said as he danced with his daughter to the music of Jonno and Bayou DeVille.

While he was not discouraged by the weather, Green, an avid birdwatcher, said he has been especially upset about the oil spill and its impact on wildlife and seafood.

"I've been really down about the oil spill, " he said. "But I said, 'We have to go to Jazz Fest. We have to support this thing.' This is still 100 percent New Orleans."

Wayne Baquet of Li'l Dizzy's Cafe said that while lines for his crawfish bisque, creole file gumbo and trout Baquet may have been shorter than usual, he was more than happy with sales.

In fact, he said, he heard several people say they wanted to eat as much seafood as they could because of the unknown future of the seafood industry.

"They say, 'Let me get my seafood now because we don't know what's going to happen, '" Baquet said. "We tell them, 'Get it now. Get it while it's here.' "

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