Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Making Your Home A Resort

!±8± Making Your Home A Resort

In today's world of home channel popularity and all things fashionable, making your home magazine perfect and envied by all isn't such a hard or expensive thing to do. Even the smallest changes and additions can make a huge difference for less than a weekend getaway. After all, your home is lived in before and after the getaway.

Start with space. You'll need to open up the cluttered space in your home to make it instantly appear larger and cleaner. Take a look at the corners of your rooms and you should be able to find something to store away or move into a more appropriate room. Books add brains to a home but too many can cause it to feel like a library or book store not a homey retreat.

Decide which decorative items you really have outgrown and get rid of them! Too many eye distracting knickknacks cause the brain to feel jumbled and that certainly doesn't help with stress or relaxation.

Tops of entertainment centers and stands shouldn't be bare but they also should show! Often times homeowners pack on the pictures and collectibles too heavy leading to lots of beautiful items with no way to focus in on any. Less is more. Pick the items you want to keep or the ones that make the best statement or compliment the room's decor. Make a select few focal points and let them stand alone.

It truly is amazing what a fresh coat of paint can accomplish. Nothing beats this upgrade for the price. It really all comes down to the color selection. If your walls are a contemporary white, spruce it up! Make one wall a focal wall and paint it a bold color. This will energize the room and everything placed on that wall will pop. If your walls are a tad too neutral and drab, try a modern earthy tone such as sage green, mocha, or a pale deep yellow. Depending on your furniture color, flooring, and drapery, select a color that will compliment and yet not blend in too much. Note* using a semi-gloss finish may be great for washing or children, but flats are really the best finished look for a room.

Bathrooms and bedrooms are always a sanctuary or at least they should be. You'd be amazed what a few simple projects can do to your rooms. For the bedroom, try painting the trim on the windows and doorways a deep chocolate, switching out the metal or plastic mini-blinds for a dark wood bamboo blind. A new bed-in-a bag can cost you as little as and still look modern and fresh. Martha Stewart's bed-in-bags are surprisingly classy and comfortable. Add a small lamp behind a cornered bed or behind a larger item on the dresser, (Television) the lighting in the room will be soft and inviting.

Bathrooms should make you feel welcome and leave you with a calming feeling. Try sprucing up your small space with new color and texture. Replace hardware in the bathroom, (towel racks, faucets, hooks and doorknobs) with a brushed nickel or stainless steel instead of the out of date gold plated or brass. Purchase a new bathroom set that is plush and feels good to the hand. Your feet will thank you and so will your eyes. A new modern shower curtain will look great against your new chrome fixtures and will make them pop. Clear away all personal items including combs, brushes, lotions and cups on the sink, and keep it minimal. Hang fresh new hand towels. You'll feel like you're in a resort when you enter your new bathroom.

Your kitchen should be a fun place to be. It may be the busiest room in the house and most used, but it should look like it. It's easy to pile up papers and photos on the fridge, and snacks and appliances on the counters. Make a new home for these items tucked away out of site. The less you have in the kitchen, the less you'll have distracting you physically and mentally. Lighting is important in every room of the home and most neglect the kitchen. You can purchase a miniature lamp at a local drugstore and add it to the end of a counter or corner baker's rack to illuminate the room and add a cozy soft glow at night. It will make you feel at home in your home.

If you have an outdoor space such as a porch or deck, treat it as an indoor space. Add plants, lighting, perhaps a small water fountain for a tranquil setting. Don't neglect the texture and appeal of these spaces. Enjoy plush rugs, seating and color as you do indoors.

Even making small changes to each room such as removing boxes of extra clutter or belongings can make a huge impact on your mental outlook and internal mood. You'd me amazed at how desterilizing a sterile space can make you want to stay in that space. Adding even a splash of color or a new item to a room can change the whole effect. I know there's something in your home that shouldn't be there. Take one room at a time and turn your abode into a lifetime getaway.


Making Your Home A Resort

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Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Timothy's World Coffee German Chocolate Cake for Keurig Brewers 4 Boxes x 24 K-Cups

!±8±Timothy's World Coffee German Chocolate Cake for Keurig Brewers 4 Boxes x 24 K-Cups

Brand : Timothy's World Coffee
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Post Date : Dec 20, 2011 17:15:17
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Coconut, Sweet, Chocolate. Relax with the comforting aroma and flavor of bakery fresh chocolate cake. This coffee features the unique sweetness of a creamy German frosting that blends caramel and vanilla with toasted coconut.

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Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Cafe Escapes Art - Collage fabricated with Mocha and Chai Latte K-Cups

Cafe Escapes Art - Collage made with Mocha and Chai Latte K-Cups Keurig Collage fueled by and made with www.facebook.com I made a collage with Cafe Escapes Mocha and Chai Latte K-Cup lids. They are the lids from the k-cups that you use with the Keurig Machines. I have to say I had A LOT of fun. I had to consume huge amounts of Cafe Escapes drinks to make this happen - oh the sacrifice :) So.. does this collage make you go "Mmmmm" ? :) I want YOU in my video! Do you want to see yourself in my video? Leave a comment on YouTube, G+, FB. Twitter, etc. I might mention your comment in my next video! Add Me! GOOGLE PLUS - gplus.to FACEBOOK - www.facebook.com TWITTER - www.twitter.com WEBSITE - www.valsartdiary.com d'Art Lottery! Win a print of my art! If you leave a comment under my art video on YouTube, G+ or FB you might win a print of my art. My dart will decide who the winner is. BUY MY ART To buy or commission a painting please go to my website. WEBSITE - http DOWNLOAD A COLORING BOOK from my website! Eat Your Cookies!

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Thursday, December 8, 2011

Dunkin' Donuts - Fritalian Commercial

Funny commercial by Dunkin Donuts. I love coffee, it's great, but for the love of God, why must I need training to understand a menu? Plus the song kinda gets stuck in your head... so here you go!

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Friday, December 2, 2011

The Myth of Pearl Harbor

!±8± The Myth of Pearl Harbor

On Sunday morning, December 7, 1941, the Japanese launched a sneak attack at Pearl Harbor that decimated the U.S. Pacific Fleet and forced the United States to enter WWII. That's what most of us were taught as school children...

But, except for the date, everything you just read is a myth. In reality, there was no sneak attack. The Pacific Fleet was far from destroyed. And, furthermore, the United States took great pains to bring about the assault. With Roosevelt's approval, the United States manipulated Japan into attacking, purposefully allowed their operation to proceed, and then played the victim for all it was worth

The Sneak Attack Myth

On January 27, 1941, Joseph C. Grew, the U.S. ambassador to Japan, wired Washington that he'd learned of the surprise attack Japan was preparing for Pearl Harbor. U.S. intelligence, which had broken every major Japanese code, also deciphered many Japanese dispatches.

In May, Japanese Adm. Nomura warned his superiors that Americans were decoding his dispatches. However, nobody in Tokyo thought the Japanese codes could be broken, and the transmissions continued.

On September 24, a dispatch from Japanese naval intelligence to Japan's consul general in Honolulu was deciphered. The transmission was a request for a grid of exact locations of ships in Pearl Harbor. Surprisingly, Washington chose not to share this information with the officers at Pearl Harbor.

Then, on November 26, the main body of the Japanese strike force--consisting of six aircraft carriers, two battleships, three cruisers, nine destroyers, eight tankers, 23 fleet submarines, and five midget submarines--departed Japan for Hawaii.

Despite the myth that the strike force maintained strict radio silence, U.S. Naval intelligence intercepted and translated many dispatches. And, there was no shortage of dispatches: Tokyo sent over 1000 transmissions to the attack fleet before it reached Hawaii. Some of these dispatches, in particular this message from Admiral Yamamoto, left no doubt that Pearl Harbor was the target of a Japanese attack:

The task force, keeping its movement strictly secret and maintaining close guard against submarines and aircraft, shall advance into Hawaiian waters, and upon the very opening of hostilities shall attack the main force of the United States fleet and deal it a mortal blow. The first air raid is planned for the dawn of x-day. Exact date to be given by later order.

Even on the night before the attack, U.S. intelligence decoded a message pointing to Sunday morning as a deadline for some kind of Japanese action. The message was delivered to the Washington high command more than 4 hours before the attack on Pearl Harbor. But, as many messages before, it was withheld from the Pearl Harbor commanders.

In addition to the US-decoded radio transmissions from the attack fleet, there were many specific warnings delivered to Roosevelt via non-American sources: a Yugoslav double agent named Dusko Popov, a dispatch decoded by the Dutch Army, a message from Kilsoo Haan of the Sino-Korean People's League.

Despite repeated denials, it's clear the Roosevelt administration knew full well of the "sneak" attack long before it arrived.

The Destroyed Pacific Fleet Myth

Although many ships were damaged at Pearl Harbor, they were all old and slow. The main targets of the Japanese attack fleet were the Pacific Fleet's aircraft carriers. But, Roosevelt made sure these were safe from the attack: In November, at about the same time as the Japanese attack fleet left Japan, Roosevelt sent the Lexington and Enterprise out to sea. Meanwhile, the Saratoga was in San Diego.

The Myth of U.S. Reluctance for War

It's true the American public, still nursing an anti-war sentiment leftover from the first World War, was reluctant to jump into a second World War. There were also many members of Congress backed by wealthy Americans who had significant financial ties to the fascist powers of Germany and Italy at the time.

But, Roosevelt wanted a piece of the war pie. Having failed to bait Hitler by giving .1 billion in war supplies to Britain, the Soviet Union, France, and China as part of the Lend Lease program, Roosevelt switched focus to Japan. Because Japan had signed a mutual defense pact with Germany and Italy, Roosevelt knew war with Japan was a legitimate back door to joining the war in Europe.

On October 7, 1940, one of Roosevelt's military advisors, Lieutenant Commander Arthur McCollum, wrote a memo detailing an 8-step plan that would provoke Japan into attacking the United States. Over the next year, Roosevelt implemented all 8 of the recommended actions.

As with recent wars, it all boiled down to oil. In the summer of 1941, the US joined England in an oil embargo against Japan. Japan needed oil for its war with China, and had no remaining option but to invade the East Indies and Southeast Asia to get new resources. And that required getting rid of the US Pacific Fleet first.

Although Roosevelt may have got more than he bargained for, he clearly let the attack on Pearl Harbor happen, and even helped Japan by making sure their attack was a surprise. He did this by withholding information from Pearl Harbor's commanders, and even by ensuring the attack force wasn't accidentally discovered by commercial shipping traffic. As Rear Admiral Richmond K. Turner stated in 1941: "We were prepared to divert traffic when we believed war was imminent. We sent the traffic down via the Torres Strait, so that the track of the Japanese task force would be clear of any traffic."

The plan worked.


The Myth of Pearl Harbor

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