Advantages: Reduces stretchmarks, uneven skin tone, scars etc Disadvantages: A little bit expensive but worth it
I have been using Bio Oil twice a day for the last six months and I am amazed at the results. I had never heard of Bio Oil before until my mum bought me a bottle, she bought me a bottle of it because I was forever complaining about the appearance of the stretch marks I have on my belly and boobs.
My stretch marks started appearing at the age of seventeen when I was pregnant my son and I'm now twenty two. So for the last five years I have been really embarrassed by the look of them because they were bright purple and clearly visible. I was convinced that the stretch marks would always remain the same colour and never fade, I even nicknamed my stretch marked belly, I call it my Freddie Crougar belly.
Bio Oil is an oil based substance which can be used to treat and reduce the appearance of skin problems such as scars stretch marks ...
Advantages: A great adventure Disadvantages: Leave that handkerchief at home!
Welcome to the second part of my top ten tips for visitors to Japan. As this follows on from Part 1 (surprisingly enough), I'll be kicking off with number 6. By the way, in case you haven't read Part 1 I'll just mention that gaijin is Japanese for foreigner.
<6> ◄Eating in Japan►
Japan is home to one of the one of the world's great cuisines and the Japanese are passionate about food; indeed it is a bigger topic of conversation in Japan than the weather is in Britain. Japanese food is a huge subject and as I'm only offering a few tips for travellers here I can only scratch the surface. I should perhaps mention that my Japanese friends have persuaded me to try just about every weird and wonderful culinary concoction imaginable and I've never suffered any ill effects. Often the things I could barely bring myself to put in ...
Mitsudan 22.08.2007
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: exceptional Review of Customs (Japan)
Advantages: Successful communication feels like an achievement Disadvantages: It pays to invest some time and effort
<10> Communication
Welcome to the third and final part of my top ten tips for visitors to Japan. Having looked last time at the potential pitfalls for gaijin (foreigners) in blowing their noses and taking a bath amongst other hazards, this time I'm dealing with the biggest minefield of the lot - the all-important business of communication. So here is tip number 10.
The Devil's Language?
The brick wall up against which most foreign visitors come in Japan when trying to communicate is of course the Japanese language itself. It's said that in the sixteenth century the missionary St Francis Xavier, on discovering the difficulty westerners had in deciphering a single word spoken or written by the Japanese people, concluded that Japanese had been devised by the devil to prevent Christian missionaries from doing their good ...
Mitsudan 25.02.2008
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: exceptional Review of General: Japan
Product Information for "Oil On Canvas (Live/Remastered) [Digipak] - Japan" »
Product details
Title
Oil On Canvas (Live/Remastered) [Digipak]
Performer
Japan
Genre
Rock & Pop
Sub Genre
New Romantic
Release Date
15/09/2003
Recomended Retail Price
18.99 GBP
Original Release Year
1983
Label / Distributor
Virgin / EMI Operations/CEVA Logistics
Engineer
Nigel Walker
Producer
John Punter; Japan
Pieces in Set
2
Studio / Live
Live
Stereo
Stereo
Format
Performer
EAN
724359103020
Catalogue Number
CDVDX 2513
Additional notes
Album Notes
Japan: Mick Karn (vocals, clarinet, saxophone, bass); David Sylvian (vocals, keyboards); Masami Tsuchiya (guitar, keyboards); Richard Barbieri (keyboards); Steve Jansen (drums, marimba). Recorded at The Hammersmith Odeon, London in November, 1982. This was Japan's last album, a live set that serves as an overview of their work as a group. It also includes performances of songs that were not featured on the group's studio albums. In retrospect, it's an ironic twist of fate that Japan was just blossoming into its most artistically fruitful period while on the verge of breaking up. When this 1982 concert was recorded at London's Hammersmith Odeon, Japan was just around the corner from disintegration. OIL ON CANVAS makes a hell of a swan song. The band had come a long way from it's glam-rock beginnings, evolving into a subtle, complex unit that combined post-punk funk, electronics, Asian imagery and an unbridled experimental streak for some of the early-'80s most memorable recordings. Incredibly, this live album reveals that the complicated textures and fragile dynamics of Japan's studio work transferred easily to the stage. David Sylvian's velvety baritone, Mick Karn's jazzy fretless bass, and Richard Barbieri's exotic, atmospheric synthesizers make these tunes from the band's final phase as rewarding as they are inscrutable.
Titles on disc 1
1.
Oil On Canvas
2.
Sons Of Pioneers (live)
3.
Gentleman Take Polaroids (live)
4.
Swing (live)
5.
Cantonese Boy (live)
6.
Visions Of China (live)
7.
Ghosts (live)
8.
Voices Raised In Welcome Hands Held In Prayer
Titles on disc 2
1.
Nightporter (live)
2.
Still Life In Mobile Homes (live)
3.
Methods Of Dance (live)
4.
Quiet Life (live)
5.
Art Of Parties (live)
6.
Canton (live)
7.
Temple Of Dawn
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Listed on Ciao since
23/03/2005
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