Watch this Couple Travel 60 Years into the Future….!!!

 

Using the power of makeup, a couple travels 60 years into the future.

In this tearjerker, a soon-to-be-wed couple takes a seat in the makeup chair. They’re not prepping for their wedding, but rather the rest of their lives– using stage makeup and prosthetics, a team of artists showed what the happy couple would look like as they aged. It’s pretty emotional– the couple gets a “preview” of their lives as 40-year-old parents, 60-year-old retirees, and an elderly man and woman having spent their whole lives together. The whole experiment ends with much emotional crying and vow-writing. It’s sappy and wonderful.

Source: Field Day  and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan

Laughter the Best Medicine….!!!

 

Two 90 year old men, Mike and Joe, have been friends all of their lives.

When it’s clear that Joe is dying, Mike visits him every day. One day Mike says, “Joe, we both loved cricket all our lives, and we played cricket on Saturdays together for so many years. Please do me one favour, when you get to Heaven, somehow you must let me know if there’s bat and ball there.”

Joe looks up at Mike from his death bed,” Mike, you’ve been my best friend for many years. If it’s at all possible, I’ll do this favour for you.

Shortly after that, Joe passes on.

At midnight a couple of nights later, Mike is awakened from a sound sleep by a blinding flash of white light and a voice calling out to him, “Mike–Mike.”

“Who is it? asks Mike sitting up suddenly. “Who is it?”

“Mike–it’s me, Joe.”

“You’re not Joe. Joe just died.”

“I’m telling you, it’s me, Joe,” insists the voice.

“Joe! Where are you?”

“In heaven”, replies Joe. “I have some really good news and a little bad news.”

“Tell me the good news first,” says Mike.

“The good news,” Joe says,” is that there’s bat and ball in heaven. Better yet, all of our old friends who died before us are here, too. Better than that, we’re all young again. Better still, it’s always spring time and it never rains or snows. And best of all, we can play cricket all we want, and we never get tired.”

That’s fantastic,” says Mike. “It’s beyond my wildest dreams! So what’s the bad news?

“You’re in the team for this Saturday’s match !!!”
Face with stuck-out tongue and winking eyeSmiling face with open mouth and smiling eyes
Friends rock! heaven or hell Thumbs up sign😀😀

source….unknown….input from a friend of mine…
Natarajan

படியுங்க ….கடிதான் ….இருந்தாலும் சிரியுங்க …!!!

பல் டாக்டரை பார்க்க போனேன் ,
அங்க லேடி டாக்டர் இருந்தாங்க…
திரும்பி வந்துட்டேன்
.
.
ஏன் என்றால் நாம் எந்த
பொண்ணுகிட்டயும்
பல்லைகாட்டி நிற்க
கூடாது பாருங்க…!

…….


நபர் 1: தண்ணியில இருந்து ஏன் மின்சாரம் எடுக்கறாங்க?

நபர் 2: அப்படி எடுக்கலைன்னா குளிக்கும் போது ஷாக் அடிச்சிரும் … – எடிசனின் நெருங்கிய நண்பன்

…….

****** கல்யாண வீட்டில் செருப்பை தொலைத்தவன்
எழுதிய கவிதை *********

“உள்ளே ஒரு ஜோடி சேர்ந்துவிட்டது”

“வெளியே ஒரு ஜோடி தொலைந்துவிட்டது”


வாழைப்பழம் என்ன‌ விலை?
ஒரு ரூபா சார்!
60 பைசாவுக்குத் தரமாட்டிங்களா?
(நக்கலாக‌) ” அதுக்கு வெறும் தோல் தான் கிடைக்கும் ”
“அப்ப‌ இந்தா 40 பைசா,, பழத்தை கொடு ! தோல‌ நீயே வச்சுக்கோ


எந்த ஆம்பிளையையும் பொய் சொல்ல வைத்து விடும் ..மனைவியின் இந்த கேள்வி?
.
“.ஏங்க நான் அழகா இருக்கேனா?”

…………

ஜட்ஜ் : “கூண்டில் ஏறாமல் எதற்காக நடந்துகொண்டே சாட்சி சொல்கிறாய்..?”

குற்றவாளி: “நீங்கதானே எஜமான் நடந்ததை நடந்தபடி சொல்லச் சொன்னீங்க.

……..

Source…input from a friend of mine…

Natarajan

 

” Just a slip …Not a fall….” Result… An Excellent Photo !!!

Photographer Chase Richardson slipped and fell while he was in the middle of taking bridal party pictures at a wedding last June. Poor guy!

Fortunately, though, his wedding fail was not in vain because it resulted in this excellent photo:

2015-07-01-1435793979-93173-chaserichardsonslipphoto.jpg

Credit: Chase Richardson/Followell Photography

Richardson snapped the photo at the nuptials of Kristina and Will Moore in June 2014 at the McClain Lodge in Brandon, Mississippi. He explained to The Huffington Post that it had rained all morning leading up to the wedding, which gave way to some slippery pavement.

“When it came time to take the wedding party photos, the rain had subsided, but everything was wet,” he said. “So I decided to shoot the wedding party under a covered patio that was basically a concrete slab. I was framing up the photo of the entire wedding party, and I took a step backwards and slipped in a puddle. It was all kind of a blur, but I hit the ground, broke the lens I was using and cut my finger open. Embarrassing! I shot the rest of the wedding with a very noisy, broken lens and a bleeding finger.”

The groom told HuffPost that Richardson was a total trouper and didn’t miss a beat.

“[My] first thought was just hoping he was okay, it was a pretty nasty fall,” Will said. “We saw there was blood on his hand and hoped he wasn’t hurt too bad. He got up and went right back to work though.”

Richardson didn’t even know he had captured the moment until after the wedding when he was looking through what he had shot.

Fast-forward to a year later, when Richardson tweeted the photo at Jimmy Fallon along with the hashtag #weddingfail.

The “Tonight Show” host ended up featuring the photo on his show. Afterwards, the picture also made the rounds on Reddit where it received more than 5,800 upvotes at the time of publication.

“I think after all of this, I would have to say that this little accident has been worth it,” Richardson said.

H/T BuzzFeed

Source…www.huffingtonpost.com

Natarajan

Chinese Farmers Turn Rice Paddies Into Stunning Works Of Art….

Farmers in Shenyang, China, created these dazzling rice paddy images to pray for blessings, according to Imagine China. The locals inLiaoning province, members of the Xibo ethnic group, create a 3D effect with different varieties of rice saplings. The finished works span about 25 acres.

Imaginechina / Corbis
A 3D rice paddy painting is displayed at a paddy field in Shenyang city, in northeast China’s Liaoning province, on June 22.
Source…www. huffingtonpost.com
Natarajan

How Fast the World has Changed …!!!

The World Has Been Through Some Changes…

It’s amazing how fast the world has changed in the last 20 years. It seems that we just need to blink and something new comes up, and the children we once taught now teach us. But are all these changes for the best? I’m not so sure. Instead of crying about it, though, I’d rather have a good laugh!funny cartoons world changes

funny cartoons world changes

funny cartoons world changes

funny cartoons world changes

funny cartoons world changes

 

funny cartoons world changes

funny cartoons world changes

 

funny cartoons world changes

funny cartoons world changes

funny cartoons world changes

funny cartoons world changes

funny cartoons world changes

funny cartoons world changes

funny cartoons world changes

funny cartoons world changes

funny cartoons world changes

Source…www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

 

 

Why Do People say “Say Cheese” when taking Pictures …?

Why do people say “say cheese” when taking pictures?  Also, why did people not smile in old pictures and when did they start?

smiling-little-girls“Say cheese!” This simple command is meant to elicit a smile from potential photography subjects no matter what their age. It has become so commonplace that the word “say” is often no longer uttered. A simple “cheese” spreads a smile across anyone’s face, and with a click of a button, that smile is captured for eternity.

No one can say for sure who coined the phrase “say cheese” for use in getting people to smile, nor can we say with 100% certainty why that particular phrase was chosen as the smile spreader. The leading theory, however, as to the “why” of “say cheese” is that the “ch” sound causes one to position the teeth just so, and the long “ee” sound parts their lips, forming something close to a smile.

The phrase appears to have been first used in this way around the 1940s, with one of the earliest references appearing in The Big Spring Herald in 1943:

Now here’s something worth knowing. It’s a formula for smiling when you have your picture taken. It comes from former Ambassador Joseph E. Davies and is guaranteed to make you look pleasant no matter what you’re thinking. Mr. Davies disclosed the formula while having his own picture taken on the set of his “Mission to Moscow.” It’s simple. Just say “Cheese,” It’s an automatic smile. “I learned that from a politician,” Mr. Davies chuckled. “An astute politician, a very great politician. But, of course, I cannot tell you who he was…”

It is thought the “politician” he was referring to was none other than Franklin D. Roosevelt, who Ambassador Davies served under.  So did President Roosevelt himself come up with the phrase or simply learn it from someone else?  Nobody knows, but soon after, saying cheese became a common phrase for people to utter when trying to get people to smile in photographs.

You wouldn’t have had to worry so much about this cheesiness in the Victorian era (1837-1901). During this period, etiquette and beauty standards were much different than they are today. In Victorian times, a small, tightly controlled mouth was considered beautiful. In fact, photographers during this era elicited the desired portrait expression by having their subjects “say prunes”. Smiles during this time were only typically captured on children, peasants, and drunks.

One of the most common culprits blamed for the neutral expressions on subjects during the Victorian era is the long exposure time for photographs to be taken. To understand where this reasoning comes from and why it is likely incorrect, you need a very brief history of photography.

The creation of permanent images began with Thomas Wedgewood in 1790, but the earliest known camera image belongs to French inventor Joseph Nicephore Niepce in 1826. The photograph is entitled, “View From the Window at Le Gras”. It is historically said to have required 8 hours of exposure time, but in reality it could have taken as long as a few days.

An exposure time of this length was obviously not conducive to capturing images of people and so the quest to do so continued. In 1839, Louis Daguerre introduced a new form of photography, Daguerrotype, where a positive of the image was developed directly on the photographic plate. This did not allow for reproduction of shots taken, but it did cut down exposure time significantly. Daguerrotypes remained extremely popular until the 1860s. From 1839 – 1845, exposure time for Daguerrotypes was about 60 – 90 seconds, which was a long time to remain motionless and hold a smile, but not impossible.

By 1845, exposure time on daguerrotypes was cut to only a few seconds. The majority of pictures we see are daguerrotypes taken after 1845, thus eliminating the blame for the lack of pearly whites shown by our ancestors of the Victorian era on long exposure time.

Speaking of pearly whites- the next most common reason cited for people not smiling in photographs in the Victorian era is blamed on dental hygiene. The most common cure for sick teeth during this time was to pull them out. There were no caps or other fixes to make chipped or broken teeth more aesthetically pleasing. So perhaps the reason tightly controlled mouths were considered more beautiful than beaming smiles in the Victorian era was in part due to dental hygiene.

Keep in mind too that daguerrotypes were expensive. The rich were more likely to be photographed than the poor, and even then, most families were only photographed on special occasions, perhaps only even once in a lifetime. The majority of these photographs were taken in a professional photography studio. There was nothing casual about photos taken then and the etiquette for formal occasions at that time was to act “prim and proper”. What was socially acceptable in photography during the Victorian era mirrored the beauty and etiquette standards of the times.  You wouldn’t want to pay all that money and have the one time you’re photographed in your lifetime showing you smiling like a drunkard!

Fast forward to 1888. This is the year George Eastman founded Kodak, a company most widely known for its production of photographic films. Kodak changed the face of photography in more ways than one. Kodak brought photography to the masses and to all occasions ranging from super casual to superbly formal. The company introduced its first pocket camera at a cost of $5 ($135 today), the Pocket Kodak, in 1895. It was the introduction of Kodak’s $1 Brownie camera in 1900, however, that changed the world of photography forever.

The Brownie camera was intended to be so inexpensive and so simple to use that anyone could take a picture. In fact, the Kodak slogan at this time was, “You push the button, we do the rest.” Photography as a hobby was now a possibility. Capturing “everyday” moments was now a reality- more and more smiles were now captured on film.

With the invention of film also came the movie industry. Although the majority of films made before 1930s were silent, everyday moments and facial expressions were reproduced on the big screen for all to see. Movie stars of that era were captured in photographs with *gasp* smiles. As we know, the media and Hollywood have a huge influence on social etiquette and beauty standards. As more and more celebrities were captured on film smiling, the smile became more socially accepted as beautiful and as an acceptable thing to do in photographs.

So when did it become tradition for people to smile in photographs? This happened in the beginning of the 1900s, due to more and more casual moments being caught on film both in Hollywood and amongst family and friends.

Bonus Facts:

  • George Washington is one of those who had incredibly bad teeth and by his inauguration in 1789, he had only one natural tooth remaining- this would have been hardly a dignified look in his Presidential portrait, had he chosen to smile. ;-)  Despite what you may have heard, though, he did not have wooden dentures.
  • Today, one of the more well-known and inexplicably popular photographic “smiles” for teenagers and some young adults is the “duckface”. This is usually performed by females during self-photographs with said photography subjects pressing their lips together in a half pout, half kiss formation, causing them to look very similar to a duck’s bill. This may be yet again owing to the influence of Hollywood, with the obsession with botoxed, full-looking lips. Who knew Daisy Duck would become the new face of “beauty”?

[Smiling Girls Image via Shutterstock]

Source…www.today i foundout.com

Natarajan

India-Photographs that will Make You Say…” Vow”…!!!

Why travel overseas when you can travel in India?

The latest in our series on #India-Photos!

We start with this picture of River Narmada at Maheshwar, Madhya Pradesh

Photograph: Palanki Narayana

This unnamed but stunning landscape

Photograph: Sudeep Chakraverty

An Indian Army Post in Kashmir at Mahagunus Top 14500 feet above sea level.

Photograph: Parmod Sharma

The beautiful Nohkalikai Falls in Shillong

Photograph: Kishan Shah

Kalimpong under a cloud cover

Photograph: Bijit Bhusan

And Darjeeling in rain-drenched June

Photograph: Bijit Bhusan

Humayun’s Tomb, New Delhi

Photograph: Nitin Chavan

And this view of Dhauladhar range from Sidbari, Himachal Pradesh

Photograph: Nitin Chavan

This is the Patalpani waterfall, located some 36 km from Indore, Madhya Pradesh.

Photograph: Vaibhav Rege

 

breathtaking view of Tsongo Lake in Sikkim.

Photograph: Madhusudan Reddy

Source….www.rediff.com
Natarajan