Thursday, 30 July 2009

Thursday, 16 July 2009

Little star


Little star, originally uploaded by tania.neves.

Monday, 13 July 2009

Monday, 29 June 2009

I have plans.


I haven't gone missing.

My results are back, and even though they could be better, I'm more than happy with it. And I have new plans for life. Recently I've been thinking that what really makes me happy, is travelling and sharing experiences with others. I want to raise this to another level... I want to get involved on a professional basis with the travelling business, writting and doing photography.

I'm editing the Paris photos, they will be online soon.

I'm setting up two new websites, one for my portfolios in media, and one just for my travels.

My summer course at the University of Amsterdam will start next week, so I am getting prepared for that as well. I'm currently taking photos of Bristol to present on the course... I always get really stressed, because of my lack of self-confidence. I want to do well!

I've been staying at James' flat (thank you!!!) in Bristol, which as been lovely, peace and quiet, not much to do or stress about. These are my little holidays :)

I will soon post the Paris photos and update all these portfolios and stuff... I really want to get organized. Paris was great, and I really want to get back there with more time, and do a lot more photos.

Thursday, 18 June 2009

[PARIS] Live from the train...


Now that I have started taking photos and making videos with lousy Photo Booth (Apple's webcam application) that's all I want. I never realized before how "personal" this is, and that's the kind of approach I apreciate in photography :)

The train left Amsterdam Centraal approximately half-hour ago... I still have 3h30 ahead. Have no clue where we are... Train will stop in Antwerpen and Bruxelles before heading to Paris-Nord. I'm a happy bunny, I love trains!!!

I just don't know why I always have a seat facing backwards... Guess it's Murphy's Law! Thank goodness they don't have the same seating layout on planes. Can you imagine how it'd be?!

It's a nice "landscape photography" day outside. Plenty of sunshine with those lovely fluffly clouds in the sky... big blue skies contrasting with the bright green fields. What a joy...

It's a shame I had so many bags couldn't find my camera, wanted to take a "cliché" photo to the train times. Oh well...

Catch later!

[PARIS] The parties list...




Samedi:

WIHM Events et ELECTRO CHIC présentent

SAMEDI 20 JUIN 09


à partir de 22h avec les live de THE ANKERS BAND et HANNA HAÏS

puis à partir de minuit:


WHAT IS HOUSE MUZIK ?

avec:


"LITTLE LOUIE" VEGA (MASTERS AT WORK / Vega Records)


CHARLES SCHILLINGS (Pschent)

STEPHAN (Back To Basics - A Night - WIHM)

TIBO’Z (House Nation - Back To Basics - A Night - WIHM)



En ce mois de juin ensoleillé, quoi de mieux qu'une soirée rafraichissante sur les quais de Seine ? Et pas n'importe quelle soirée car WIHM a l'honneur de recevoir Louie Vega, producteur et Dj virtuose qui aura marqué l'industrie de la dance music. Petit par la taille certes, d’où son surnom de « Little » Louie Vega, il est bien sûr le co-fondateur des Masters At Work, tandem légendaire au sein duquel il a produit des artistes de renommées planétaires tels que Janet Jackson ou encore George Benson. Sa carrière solo est dernièrement consacrée par un Grammy Award pour son remix du cultissime "Super Fly" de Curtis Mayfield. Ecrire la biographie de Little Louie Vega c'est un peu comme écrire l'Histoire de la House Music new yorkaise. Vous aurez donc l'occasion d'assister à une véritable leçon de mix donnée par l'un des Dj les plus doué et charismatique de son époque, dans un club taillé à la mesure de cet artiste légendaire. Louie sera accompagné par un ami de longue date, Mr Charles Schillings et des deux résidents WIHM, Stephan et Tibo’z. It’s alllllright ? I feeeeel it !


----------------



Dimanche:
TERRASSA reçoit cette semaine :

- Le plus Playboy : ARGY
http://www.myspace.com/argymusic

- Le plus international des Dj's parisiens : D'Julz
http://www.myspace.com/d_julz

- Le plus Berlinois : Shonky
http://www.myspace.com/shonkar

---------------------------------------

On ouvre dorénavant à 13H pour profiter pleinement du soleil dès le début d’après-midi avec un : BRUNCH !

Le club lui ouvrira à 21H afin de jouir d’un clubbing de qualité à des heures qui ne fâcheront personne le lundi matin !

Evidemment Terrassa restant Terrassa les soirs ou la folie ambiante sera au rendez vous nous fermerons quand bon nous semble ☺
3H00…4H00…6H00… Pas de limites !

Donc on récapitule :

Ouverture de l’apéro et du brunch à 13H00.
L’entrée sera Gratuite comme chaque année.

Ouverture du Club à 21H00 avec la programmation internationale de la TERRASSA !
L’entrée sera de 10 € comme chaque année.

Rendez-vous à Paris?!

[PARIS] Playlist on my iPod...

Café de Flore - Rendez-Vouz à St.Germain des-Prés
Astor Piazolla Remixed
Bossa 'N Stones
Bossa 'N Marley
Parov Stellar - Charleston Butterfly EP
Cinematic Orchestra - The Man With the Movie Camera
John Coltrane - Coltrane Jazz
John McLaughlin - Extrapolation
Giannabest 2
Groove Armada - Greatest Hits
Mario Biondi - Handful of Soul
Jazz 'N 80's
Jazz 'N 90's
Parov Stellar - Kiss Kiss EP
Parov Stellar - Shine
The Tarantino Experience
Verve Remixed 2, 3 and 4
Amadou & Mariam - Welcome to Mali
Yann Tiersen - Amélie OST

Wednesday, 17 June 2009

[PARIS] Ten top Paris pavement cafes

Ten top Paris pavement cafes

In spring Paris's pavement cafes come to life. John Brunton picks his favourite terraces to soak up the scenery and the sun

As spring arrives, so Parisians head to their favourite cafes to while away the day on a sunny pavement terrace - a Gallic ritual that begins with a strong black coffee in the morning, through to a kir or pastis at lunchtime, and then chilled rose or a ballon de blanc for the evening apero. Ever since smoking was banned, pavement terraces have mushroomed and now some worried neighbourhood town halls are trying to enforce strict limitations on how far a terrace can actually stretch across the pavement. The police are even trying to ban the evening picnics that are so popular on the city's most beautiful pedestrian bridge, the romantic Pont des Arts. But rest assured, cafe owners may have to pay a few fines, but this is one Parisian tradition that is never going to disappear. Everyone has their own secret address, but here is a selection of landmark locales, fashionable hangouts and popular neighbourhood cafes.

1. Cafe de Flore

Paris cafes: Cafe de Flore

Enjoying a cafe and croissant on a shady pavement table outside one of Saint Germain's great literary cafes is one of the ultimate Parisian experiences, and even though the prices are totally over the top, it is worth splashing out at least once in your life. The great dilemma though is whether to choose http://www.lesdeuxmagots.fr/Les Deux Magots or Cafe de Flore, side by side but perennial rivals to attract the Rive Gauche intelligentsia for over a century. Best choice has to be the Flore, which was the favourite rendez-vous of Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre, and today, its discreet charm is still just that little bit classier than the more ostentatious Deux Magots.

• 172 boulevard St Germain 75006, cafe-de-flore.com, +33 1 45 48 55 26

2. Aux Folies

Paris cafes: Aux Folies bar, Paris

While the City of Light may not be an ethnic melting pot like London and New York, the brilliant Belleville bar, Aux Folies, offers a dazzling multi-cultural slice of Parisian life. Whatever time of the day or night, there is always a buzz sitting out on the crowded pavement terrace here. Belleville is still nostalgically remembered by the French as being the gritty home of the likes of Edith Piaf and Maurice Chevalier. But today it has become a far more authentic Chinatown, mixed in with North African food stalls and couscous restaurants.

• 8, Rue de Belleville, 75020, +33 1 46 36 65 98

3. Au Petit Fer a Cheval

Paris cafes: Petit Fer a Cheval

The Marais is the oldest part of Paris, with opulent palaces and mansions that date back to the time of Les Liaisons Dangereuses. While tourists flock here for culture and chic shopping, locals know the Marais more as the city's prime gay neighbourhood. Au Petit Fer a Cheval - the Horse Shoe Bar - is a friendly, cosmopolitan locale that attracts a stylish clientele, and the couple of tables out on the pavement are desperately sought out as the rue Vieille du Temple is the Marais' main drag. Just opposite the bar, check out La Belle Hortense, a bookshop that doubles as a winebar.

• 30, Rue Vieille du Temple , 75004, + 33 1 42 72 47 47

4. Le Sancerre

Paris cafes: Le Sancerre

Steer well clear of the tourist-trap bars around the Sacré-Coeur church in Montmartre, especially the Place du Tertre, and instead wander over to the much funkier adjoining neighbourhood, Abbesses. Open seven days a week, from 7am until 2am, Le Sancerre is a feisty mix of bohemian locals, bikers and transvestites, students and bemused tourists. Sitting out on the pavement terrace gives you a brilliant view, though you're better off with a glass of wine or a beer than the over-priced cocktails.

• 35 rue des Abbesses, 75018, +33 1 42 58 08 20

5. Chez Prune

Paris cafes: Chez Prune

The bars, cafes, boutiques and restaurants that line the bank along the Canal Saint-Martin have transformed what was once a sleepy part of town hidden away off the Place de la République into one of the hippest parts of Paris. Chez Prune has become an institution, looking out over the canal, so arrive early if you want to grab a table outside. Across the water at the Jemmapes Bar, prices are cheaper and everyone sits right on the water's edge, but they don't have the same licence as Prune, so you have to make do with plastic glasses, not the best way to enjoy a chilled rose wine.

• 36, Rue Beaurepaire, 75010, +33 1 42 41 30 47

6. Pause Cafe

Paris cafes: Pause Cafe

There are sprawling pavement cafes all around the impressive Place de la Bastille, but to really put your finger on the pulse of this cool "quartier", search out Pause Cafe, just off the bustling rue du Faubourg Saint-Antoine. With its sunny terrace, this is the perfect spot to chill out with a lazy breakfast of orange pressée, café au lait and melt-in-the-mouth croissants. Ever since it featured in the cult Parisien movie, Chacun Cherche son Chat (Everyone's Looking for their Cat), the Pause Cafe has attracted a fashionable Bobo (Bourgeois Bohemian) crowd.

• 41, Rue de Charonne, 75011, +33 1 40 21 89 06

7. Le Select

Paris cafes: Le Select

Montparnasse has changed a lot since the decadent days of the Belle Epoque when an explosive mix of chic cafe society and bohemian artists flocked to grand Art Nouveau locales like La Coupole and the Closerie des Lilas. But today, it is still worth grabbing a table on the terrace outside legendary literary cafe, Le Select, once the haunt of Hemingway, Picasso and Henry Miller. The place really hasn't changed much since it opened in 1925 - apart from the prices which are not cheap. For sure, there will be plenty of tourists, but you'll also be rewarded with a delightfully cliched, but authentic, slice of Left Bank life, with students earnestly discussing philosophy, businessmen holding an impromptu meeting or elegant fashionistas taking a break from shopping.

• 99 boulevard du Montparnasse, 75006, +33 1 45 48 38 24

8. Cafe de la Paix

Paris cafes: Cafe de la Paix

If you really want to see just how crazy Parisian drivers can be, there is no better spectator seat than the front row of the terrace of the historic Cafe de la Paix, which looks right out over the frenetic crossroads at the Place de l'Opera. Sit back and watch the free cabaret, though if you splash out to enjoy half a dozen oysters and a glass of Chablis, expect a hefty "addition" of €31. The Cafe is part of the Le Grand Hotel, which was built in 1858 by the same architect as the sumptuous Opera Garnier, so be sure to at least have a look around the incredible interiors of the cafe and the splendid Winter Garden in the hotel itself.

• 5 Place de l'Opera, 75009, cafedelapaix.fr, +33 1 40 07 36 36

9. Cafe Charbon

Paris cafes: Cafe Charbon

Rue Oberkampf is a long, narrow street that runs all the way from near Bastille up to Belleville. During the day it is a quiet laid-back place, but when the sun goes down it transforms into one of the funkiest nightlife sectors of Paris. You can choose between hip locales like the Mecano, Chez Justine and Nouveau Casino, but the place that first began the Oberkampf revolution is the Cafe Charbon, and a table on its pavement terrace is still the ultimate spot to be seen and for people-watching.

• 109 Rue Oberkampf, 75011, +33 1 43 57 55 13

10. Cafe Beaubourg

Paris cafes: Cafe Beaubourg

The Costes brothers are style gurus who have been behind pretty much every trend-making cafe, bar and hotel in Paris for the last two decades, beginning with their seminal Cafe Costes through to the uber-chic Hotel Costes on rue St-Honoré. When the sun is shining, it is difficult to beat their cool Cafe Beaubourg, whose terrace has a prime view over the Pompidou Centre and assorted mime artists, musicians, fire-eaters, puppeteers and comics performing on the Esplanade in front of the museum. Prices are not cheap, but you can linger as long as you want over a chocolat chaud.

• 43 rue Saint-Merri, 75004, +33 1 48 87 63 96

• All photographs by johnbrunton.com


in The Guardian

Feckin amazing.

This is a bunch of videos from youtube, that a guy has edited together., and created ThruYou I admire people who spend their spare time so wisely!