Monday 28 April 2014

Gothic horror


Gothic horror
Gothic horror is a genre of literature that has elements of both romance and horror. Although it is sometimes confused with paranormal romance, according to some horror writers, gothic horror is considered a more atmospheric type of literature.


“The traditional gothic novel starred a young, usually very naïve woman who is mesmerized by a dark, handsome man with a shrouded past. The plots vary from that point, but the classic example is Rebecca by Dame Daphne du Maurier,” said Lynn Stranathan, co-owner of Yard Dog press. “Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre is another good example as is her sister’s much darker Wuthering Heights.”
veronika 1 by ~natalieshau
The Importance of Setting in Gothic Horror
According to some writers, the setting of the gothic horror almost becomes another character.
“Gothic horror is dark, stormy full of eerie winds. Set in old mansion or castles on high cliffs,” Said Gloria Oliver, author of Willing Sacrifice. “(There are) 18th and 19th century settings. Something old or feeling of antiquity needs to be involved. Vampires tend themselves to gothic horror, that influx of antiquity with aristocracy. I guess almost like blueblood horror.”
Gothic Horror Verses Paranormal Romance
Richard Dansky, artist and author of Firefly Rain, said that the difference between Gothic Horror and Paranormal Romance is in the results.
“The gothic builds up the protagonist until he achieves what he's after, and then details the terrible consequences of achieving it. This sits in contrast to paranormal romance, wherein the main character generally seems to be rewarded for achieving (or dating) the forbidden.”
Dansky said that the gothic is also generally associated with excess, and in the original was extremely gory and explicit for its time. There was a strong connection to the lurid anti-Catholic publications of the time, as demonstrated by The Monk and the details of "The Spaniard's Tale" in Melmoth. Love affairs in gothics were generally doomed to end horribly – witness Maturin's loving couple who ended up cannibalizing each other, or Victor and Elizabeth in Frankenstein. At the same time, lustful, forbidden, seductive or forced relationships.
“Really, the gothic was in many ways defined by over-the-top, and included sex, rape, murder, cannibalism, Satanism, and all sorts of debauchery,” Dansky said.
Confusion Between Paranormal Romance and Gothic Horror
According to Brad Sinor, journalist and writer of short horror stories, the confusion between paranormal romance and gothic horror comes from the gothic literature of the sixties.
“Gothic horror actually consisted of novels and shorter work likeDracula, Frankenstein, Camilla and Varney the Vampire,” Sinor said. “There was always a subtext of forbidden sex and stepping outside the accepted way things were done in the Victorian era into the dark shadows that surrounded even the industrial age. Gothic horror actually can trace its roots even further back into the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.”
According to Sinor, The traditional sixties gothic novel had a direct connection to science fiction. Donald A Wolheim, then an editor at ACE books, looked at the sales figures of the gothic romances that they were publishing. He noticed that the ones that sold better always had a woman running away from a brooding house with a single light on it. Within a year or so all of the books in that genre had covers like that.
“Paranormal romance on the other hand didn't really get going until a few years ago,” Sinor said. “It had its roots in urban fantasy novels such as the ones written by Charles de Lint, Emma Bull and even Mercedes Lackey. In fact many paranormal romance writers say that they aren't writing romance they are writing urban fantasy.”
Examples of Gothic Horror Authors


Unlike modern urban fantasy like the Anita Blake and Sookie Stackhouse series, Gothic Horror still draws its horror from the environment around it. Examples include Edward Lee, Cailin R Kiernan, H. P. Lovecraft, Brian Keene and Karl Edward Wagner, C.R. Maturin Elizabeth Kostova
What is Gothic Horror?. 2014. What is Gothic Horror?. [ONLINE] Available at:https://suite.io/tracy-morris/1y9q2a9. [Accessed 28 April 2014].

Presentation

Presentation: make up in motion 








Final Estella assessment




Practice of Estella look

although my Estella project not as much time preparing as miss Havisham  project, so i decided to practice on my self. 



here are shows 2 type different design, first two main colour are pink, last two are gold and orange.
am fairly please with my last two trail.but for my final i will make the colour more stronger on the face

Face chat of estella

heave pink
light pink


nude, orange, gold

my first two design i decided to use pink as the main colour of her make up, but consider that my shoot will come out with black and white, so for my final i decided to using gold orange, and contorting the face.
pale skin, long eyelashes,pretty and natural beauty look. think will effect more front of camera


Estella

key elements of Estella:
miserable
superior
cold
poised
persuasive 
powerful
broken
hopeless
beautiful



Estella

Often cited as Dickens’s first convincing female character, Estella is a supremely ironic creation, one who darkly undermines the notion of romantic love and serves as a bitter criticism against the class system in which she is mired. Raised from the age of three by Miss Havisham to torment men and “break their hearts,” Estella wins Pip’s deepest love by practicing deliberate cruelty. Unlike the warm, winsome, kind heroine of a traditional love story, Estella is cold, cynical, and manipulative. Though she represents Pip’s first longed-for ideal of life among the upper classes, Estella is actually even lower-born than Pip; as Pip learns near the end of the novel, she is the daughter of Magwitch, the coarse convict, and thus springs from the very lowest level of society.

Ironically, life among the upper classes does not represent salvation for Estella. Instead, she is victimized twice by her adopted class. Rather than being raised by Magwitch, a man of great inner nobility, she is raised by Miss Havisham, who destroys her ability to express emotion and interact normally with the world. And rather than marrying the kindhearted commoner Pip, Estella marries the cruel nobleman Drummle, who treats her harshly and makes her life miserable for many years. In this way, Dickens uses Estella’s life to reinforce the idea that one’s happiness and well-being are not deeply connected to one’s social position: had Estella been poor, she might have been substantially better off
Despite her cold behavior and the damaging influences in her life, Dickens nevertheless ensures that Estella is still a sympathetic character.


By giving the reader a sense of her inner struggle to discover and act on her own feelings rather than on the imposed motives of her upbringing, Dickens gives the reader a glimpse of Estella’s inner life, which helps to explain what Pip might love about her. Estella does not seem able to stop herself from hurting Pip, but she also seems not to want to hurt him; she repeatedly warns him that she has “no heart” and seems to urge him as strongly as she can to find happiness by leaving her behind. Finally, Estella’s long, painful marriage to Drummle causes her to develop along the same lines as Pip—that is, she learns, through experience, to rely on and trust her inner feelings. In the final scene of the novel, she has become her own woman for the first time in the book. As she says to Pip, “Suffering has been stronger than all other teaching. . . . I have been bent and broken, but—I hope—into a better shape.”





SparkNotes: Great Expectations: Analysis of Major Characters. 2014.SparkNotes: Great Expectations: Analysis of Major Characters. [ONLINE] Available at: https://www.sparknotes.com/lit/greatex/canalysis.html. [Accessed 28 April 2014].

Assessment 2 MIss havisham





final miss havisham assessment 1




Practice Miss havisham make up

     after when i designed my miss havisham make up, now i will practice on model.
first trail.
although i think the dry skin and dry lips i think effect on the model,and the illness look



this i will use for my final, am fairly pleased with this trail, i did find hard to get the colour right on the model,
and how the colour will shows on the camera.and the details of the broken skin.so i will practice more be fore my final .

Sunday 27 April 2014

Design for Miss Havisham

Face Chat
1st design 
i have created the ageing line lower the eye and side of the nose. eye bags also, breaking skin lower both eyes, red lip liner pencil for lower eyelid for tire eye look,red dry lips.  

second design 
i used a warm colour for my second design,  orange, winkle line created on the face, and the blusher to create the shape shape of the face

3rd design
i used little purple under the eyes, to make the eyes look tired and eye bags, wild eyebrow. dark orange eye shadow. 

final design, as this i gone use for my project.
pale skin, tired eyes, eye bags, some bruise one the face, also flake skin created on the face, winkle line,some black used for eye shadow, 
i used purple for my main design.

Studio:Creating the illness look

Product used: kryolan supracolor palette, due glue, glycerine, translucent poeder, stipple sponges, round brush.



To start with the look make sure the face is clean .
Apply a pale foundation, very finely. If using panstik, apply it sparingly. Work the foundation in so that it doesn’t sit on the surface of the skin.
Add a tiny amount of white foundation to the forehead, cheeks, and chin. Again, work it in well.
Put a little blue and mauve greasepaint under the eyes (lines going down) and around the nostrils.
Add brown shading in the corners of the eyes and hollow out the temples and under the cheekbones.
Use dark grey-brown - sparingly - in circles under the eyes. Blend the edges.
Put scarlet greasepaint - toned down on the back of your hand - onto the eyelids. Place it close to the lashes and blend it upwards until it disappears. Do the same under the bottom lashes and add a little on the nostrils.
Add some more high up on the cheekbones. Use it unevenly to produce a blotchy and feverish look.
Place a little blue on the lips. Use a shading colour to emphasise the natural lines of the lips to make them look cracked. Frown lines can be added to denote stress.
Powder the make-up to set it.
Smooth a little Vaseline on your fingers and apply it lightly across the forehead and above the top lip. Break the face up a little with shine, so that light reflects on it.
To suggest perspiration, mix equal parts glycerine and water in a fine spray bottle. Spray finely onto the forehead where it will stick to the Vaseline. Dab the upper lip with water. (Use a dropper - made from an empty medicine bottle with dropper attached.)
Add more red to the eyelids and below the eyes to close the eyelashes.


Studio:Dirtying down

Product used: kryolan colour tube,supracolour palette, fake dirt, dry shampoo, coloured hairspray.
Blackened teeth


Portfolio | Chloe Louisa. 2014. Portfolio | Chloe Louisa. [ONLINE] Available at:http://www.chloelouisa.com/portfolio/. [Accessed 27 April 2014].
Open mouth and dry with a cotton bud
Apply black onto the tooth and keep the lip up to allow the colour to dry.

Shade around the edges of the teeth gives more effect.

Dirtying down
Moistures the skin area you want to create dirt on.
Rub fake dirt or can use coloured hairspray to make the skin darken.
Apply some water or moisturizer to make it look greasy
Spray dry shampoo to make it dull 

Studio:Creating wounds using gelatin, wounds created in mould

Products used: gelatin, wound moulds, round brush, power, suprecolor palette, Vaseline, prosaide.




Halloween Make Ups By Make Up For Ever – I | Absolutely Faaabulous…. 2014. Halloween Make Ups By Make Up For Ever – I | Absolutely Faaabulous…. [ONLINE] Available at:http://absolutelyfaaabulous.com/2012/10/21/halloween-make-up-2/. [Accessed 27 April 2014].

To create gelatin wound using the mould, chose a mound shape you want to create, place small amount  of Vaseline around the area so that gelatin doesn’t stick to much when we remove.
Add warmed gelatin to the mould have choice, place it until it set.
When removing the mould from the plastic, powder the edges with a brush, gently pull the gelatine wound until it peels away slightly from the sides, and avoid any breaking.
Next place a small amount of prosaide where the gelatin wound you want it are, to hold it in place.
Using warm water and cotton bud to smooth the edges down, for a seamless edge, blending it into the skin and make it more realistic.

Use supracolor to add some colour to the wound, or can add some fake blood on the top, last to powder around to remove the shine.

Studio:Creating burns

Product used: latex, tissues, spirit gum, supracolour palette, ben nye bruise wheel, gelatine clear, hairdryer, fine brush, small round brush.




Make sure the model is not allergic to the product, warm up the gelglyk, put it in a small bowl and with some water, put it in the microwave for 1 minute.
Take it out, shake the bottle, test it melted enough before apply.
Use pieces of roughly ripped up tissue, place these in the area you want the burns are, then apply spirit gum over the top so they are in place, leaving the jagged edges.
Next apply supracolour to give the sore effect.

Fake blood to give more effects.

Studio:Creating scarring

Product used:  collodion, clear tuplast, derma shield, fixer spray, ben nye bruise sheels, foundation palette, hairdryer, fine liner brush




Always make sure the model is not allergic to any of the product you gone use on them, first, apply some of the product to the wrist area, then wait a little while to see if there any reaction to the model.
Apply a small amount of the derma shield around the area.
Next apply the collodion on to the desired area and in the shape as you want it to, squeeze the skin wither side of the collodion, to make the skin stick together, to create the looks of a scar, can speed dry with hairdryer.

Can repeat the method depend how deep your scar want it to be.
To finish the look, using a fine brush and a greasepaint palette, add some colour to make it look more realistic.