Showing posts with label Ecard Free. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ecard Free. Show all posts

Monday, 31 March 2014

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Biography

Source(google.com.pk)
Do you like ecards? I’m not typically a big fan of them. In fact, I’ve gone so far as to have written about why you should not send ecards. That being said, occasionally a gem of an ecard makes me think or chuckle, or both, and I can’t resist liking it. I’d like to share five of these diamonds in the rough with you here.The PsPrint Blog is a resource for graphic designers, freelancers, small business owners and fans of print marketing. You'll find helpful techniques on printing everything there is to print, including business cards, postcards, brochures, stickers, invitations, greeting cards, door hangers, magnets and more. The PsPrint Blog shares creative ways to improve your design and layout skills, and useful tips for marketing your business in any medium. We also like to have a little fun, sharing design inspiration and spotlighting some our favorite customers' printed pieces in our "Hot Off the Press" series.
My work is a merging of energy & spiritual wisdom with the physical reality. To accomplish this alchemy in a painting, I begin with a sacred intent and through meditation, intuition and present moment flow, allow the piece to unfold. Intuition, clairvoyance and connection with a higher source of wisdom are my most valued and favorite elements in my process because through them, the painting, or healing treatment, becomes a source of wisdom and energy that benefits the body, mind, heart and soul.

Painting, for me, is not only about personal expression but also discovery, journey, and information. The colors, shapes, symbols and imagery convey energetic frequencies and messages on conscious and unconscious levels. When someone is drawn to my work, it is not only the image and colors that they feel connected to, but the more subtle vibrational information that dances with, informs and nurtures their soul.

Currently, I am creating acrylic paintings that attune a person and their space (home, office, meditation room) to certain desirable energies. In this way, they are supported in bringing into their life-experience more of these vibrations such as happiness, abundance, inner knowing, health and peace.
My healing work one on one with clients is carried out as well with the intent of removing blocks to wellness, attuning to and revealing from within one's true radiant nature.
If we cannot laugh at ourselves, life will become a dull and stifling experience. Life can be a challenge; of that there is no doubt. But if we take a moment to stop and see the joke, we can change our entire day.
To those that take life seriously, we may see humor as an obstacle in our paths. The truth is that jokes are funny because they contain a grain of truth about life that would not be able to be shown through any other medium.
A funny joke or poem has the power to point out subtle ironies of life that I might get shot in the head for if I were to say them straight out. Humor has the capacity to point absurdities about the way we live our lives in a non-threatening way.
We hope you enjoy browsing our collection of great funny poems!
Popular Funny Poems
Poem     Subcategory     Votes     Rating
Poem About Being 60 Years Old, I'm Not Really 60     Funny Life Poems    29     4.34
A Night With My Lady     Funny Love Poems    659     4.1
My Five Kitty Cats     Cute Poems    543     4.1
Pet Port A Potty     Funny Poems for Kids    636     4.06
To My Little Sister With Throat Cancer, Happy Trails To Cancer Shirt     Rhyming Poems    384     4.06
The Horse Ride     Humorous Poems    775     3.96
Tinkle,Tinkle Little Car     Short Funny Poems    1698     3.65
The Man From Greece     Limericks    207     3.4
Fecal Farm     Cute Poems    201     4.09
A Worm In My Pocket     Funny Poems for Kids    868     4
Poem About How Men Don't Get It, Men     Funny Love Poems    235     3.96
The Day I Remember     Funny Life Poems    190     3.9
Mary And The Mouse     Rhyming Poems    127     3.88
Nothing Rhymes with Orange, Orange     Humorous Poems    417     3.84
Dare Devil     Short Funny Poems    564     3.39
My Foolish Dog     Limericks    587     3.3
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Featured Funny Subcategories
Those who have studied poetry know that rhyming is only one style of writing a poem. The real criterion that defines a poem is whether I am writing something that could not be conveyed in prose. The strict grammatical rules that define prose have no place for a real poem's sentiment. At the same time a poem doesn't need to convey a profound message in order to qualify. A poem that is cute may very easily fit the this criterion as well.
There is a line from a country song that goes, "sometimes life's greatest gifts are unanswered prayers". It describes a man who sees his high school sweetheart at a high school reunion. He realizes how wrong they would have been for each other and how blessed he is to have the partner that he has. Many of us have similar stories. Many times we are lucky enough to end up not with the person that we thought was our soul mate but the person who is really meant for us.
Humorous poetry has been written for thousands of years. Many of us do not know that the nursery rhymes that we sang as kids were made up to convey information of a delicate political nature encoded in what sounds like a silly children's song. Living in the western world, we are lucky enough to be able (in some cases) to freely speak our minds. However, we cannot take for granted the medium of humor as a way to convey information that may be politically dangerous.
The short poem is more challenging to write than a longer poem. It seeks to make every word count and mean exactly what is intended. A short poem has the added benefit of getting the message of poem through to the reader in a succinct way. There are many traditional styles of humorous short poems. The challenge is in getting your words into the proper number of syllables in each stanza. These poems have a technical element to them that contrast with the free flowing poems that are more common today.

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Biography

Source (google.com.pk )
Known as one of the first greatest “stars” of the world stage, Sarah Bernhardt, or “La Divine”, dominated the theatrical scenes of both Europe and America for over half a century. In addition to being one of the greatest actresses of all time, Sarah was also noted for her “larger than life” personality and her eccentric lifestyle.

Henriette-Rosine Bernard, known to the world as Sarah Bernhardt, was born into the Parisian world of courtesans and affluent gentlemen, 1844. She never knew her father, a Parisian who did not marry her Dutch-Jewish mother. Her mother, a woman who had little time or inclination to raise a child in the social world of the Paris salon set, sent Sarah to study in a convent. After a turbulent childhood, Sarah was ready to commit herself to a religious life when a place was secured for her to study acting in the Paris Conservatoire. She began acting in 1862 but showed little of the talent that would later propel her into stardom.

Sarah's professional career began in earnest in 1866 as a member of the theater company of the Odeon. Her most notable qualities were her “voice of gold” and her ability to breathe emotional life into melodramatic heroines, lifting the characters from their former stultifying effects of tradition, adding nobility and giving the characters a depth previously unseen. In theater after theater, Sarah excelled into stardom. By 1880, Sarah was so successful, she broke her contract in the company of the Comedie to pursue her own successes.

Sarah's off-stage life was often as harrowing as that of the characters she portrayed. Her boyish figure allowed her to portray many men characters, which was her private passion. She also suffered with bouts of ill health that had plagued her since childhood. This, plus her extravagant lifestyle, the menagerie of exotic animals she loved and a passion for younger men, kept her in financial difficulties. Journalists of the day frequently painted her as an eccentric and their writings contributed to her fame as much as her acting skill.

In 1894, Sarah Bernhardt met Alphonse Mucha. She needed a poster of a coming production Gismonda. Of the many artists who submitted works, Bernhardt chose Mucha's illustration. Mucha, a budding artist, signed a five-year contract with Bernhardt, not only for posters but for the design of many of her costumes as well. Although Mucha was not part of Sarah's close company, the two formed an odd friendship that would last well past the contract.
Sarah Bernhardt's Coffin
Sarah Bernhardt's Coffin

Bernhardt and Mucha had a mutual taste for the macabre, often holding séances in his studio with the help of a medium. Alphonse often painted vivid and grotesque scenes of death and dying. Sarah had a special upholstered coffin built, took it to Mucha's studio, and had herself photographed in it, eyes closed, arms folded, surrounded by flowers of mourning. This photograph was widely circulated and gave rise to the legend that she slept in a coffin at night. The rumor was true. When she traveled for a performance, she had her coffin delivered to her private suite. This was a smart and calculated move which added to her world fame.

Bernhardts' artistic talents extended to many different fields. She often wrote her own plays, was a competent painter and loved to create sculptures. Also to her credit, she had a weakness for humanitarian causes. During the Franco-Prussian war in 1870, Sarah established a hospital in the closed Odeon theater and in WWI she contributed both money and fund-raising activities to support the war effort.

Bernhardt took a progressive attitude towards the new medium of film. She appeared in three early silent films, enabling the producer Adolph Zukor to start the Famous Players production company, which eventually became Paramount Pictures.
Sarah Bernhardt Theatre
Sarah Bernhardt Theatre

In 1899, she opened her own resident theater, the Theater Sarah Bernhardt. In 1911, Sarah's leg had to be amputated because of a chronic knee condition. She continued to perform, in some of her most famous roles, lying in a prone position or propped up by an artfully designed set. She even converted her hotel room into a film set but she died in March 1923, at the age of 79, before the film was complete.

Although Sarah never performed any of her roles in any language but French, she was hailed and revered as a great actress on both sides of the Atlantic, regardless of her audiences' ability to comprehend the language. This popularity is a testament to her emotional and vocal power as an actress, as well as, her contribution to the stage as a truly great singular star.
Known as one of the first greatest “stars” of the world stage, Sarah Bernhardt, or “La Divine”, dominated the theatrical scenes of both Europe and America for over half a century. In addition to being one of the greatest actresses of all time, Sarah was also noted for her “larger than life” personality and her eccentric lifestyle.

Henriette-Rosine Bernard, known to the world as Sarah Bernhardt, was born into the Parisian world of courtesans and affluent gentlemen, 1844. She never knew her father, a Parisian who did not marry her Dutch-Jewish mother. Her mother, a woman who had little time or inclination to raise a child in the social world of the Paris salon set, sent Sarah to study in a convent. After a turbulent childhood, Sarah was ready to commit herself to a religious life when a place was secured for her to study acting in the Paris Conservatoire. She began acting in 1862 but showed little of the talent that would later propel her into stardom.

Sarah's professional career began in earnest in 1866 as a member of the theater company of the Odeon. Her most notable qualities were her “voice of gold” and her ability to breathe emotional life into melodramatic heroines, lifting the characters from their former stultifying effects of tradition, adding nobility and giving the characters a depth previously unseen. In theater after theater, Sarah excelled into stardom. By 1880, Sarah was so successful, she broke her contract in the company of the Comedie to pursue her own successes.

Sarah's off-stage life was often as harrowing as that of the characters she portrayed. Her boyish figure allowed her to portray many men characters, which was her private passion. She also suffered with bouts of ill health that had plagued her since childhood. This, plus her extravagant lifestyle, the menagerie of exotic animals she loved and a passion for younger men, kept her in financial difficulties. Journalists of the day frequently painted her as an eccentric and their writings contributed to her fame as much as her acting skill.

In 1894, Sarah Bernhardt met Alphonse Mucha. She needed a poster of a coming production Gismonda. Of the many artists who submitted works, Bernhardt chose Mucha's illustration. Mucha, a budding artist, signed a five-year contract with Bernhardt, not only for posters but for the design of many of her costumes as well. Although Mucha was not part of Sarah's close company, the two formed an odd friendship that would last well past the contract.
Sarah Bernhardt's Coffin
Sarah Bernhardt's Coffin

Bernhardt and Mucha had a mutual taste for the macabre, often holding séances in his studio with the help of a medium. Alphonse often painted vivid and grotesque scenes of death and dying. Sarah had a special upholstered coffin built, took it to Mucha's studio, and had herself photographed in it, eyes closed, arms folded, surrounded by flowers of mourning. This photograph was widely circulated and gave rise to the legend that she slept in a coffin at night. The rumor was true. When she traveled for a performance, she had her coffin delivered to her private suite. This was a smart and calculated move which added to her world fame.

Bernhardts' artistic talents extended to many different fields. She often wrote her own plays, was a competent painter and loved to create sculptures. Also to her credit, she had a weakness for humanitarian causes. During the Franco-Prussian war in 1870, Sarah established a hospital in the closed Odeon theater and in WWI she contributed both money and fund-raising activities to support the war effort.

Bernhardt took a progressive attitude towards the new medium of film. She appeared in three early silent films, enabling the producer Adolph Zukor to start the Famous Players production company, which eventually became Paramount Pictures.
Sarah Bernhardt Theatre
Sarah Bernhardt Theatre

In 1899, she opened her own resident theater, the Theater Sarah Bernhardt. In 1911, Sarah's leg had to be amputated because of a chronic knee condition. She continued to perform, in some of her most famous roles, lying in a prone position or propped up by an artfully designed set. She even converted her hotel room into a film set but she died in March 1923, at the age of 79, before the film was complete.

Although Sarah never performed any of her roles in any language but French, she was hailed and revered as a great actress on both sides of the Atlantic, regardless of her audiences' ability to comprehend the language. This popularity is a testament to her emotional and vocal power as an actress, as well as, her contribution to the stage as a truly great singular star.

Known as one of the first greatest “stars” of the world stage, Sarah Bernhardt, or “La Divine”, dominated the theatrical scenes of both Europe and America for over half a century. In addition to being one of the greatest actresses of all time, Sarah was also noted for her “larger than life” personality and her eccentric lifestyle.

Henriette-Rosine Bernard, known to the world as Sarah Bernhardt, was born into the Parisian world of courtesans and affluent gentlemen, 1844. She never knew her father, a Parisian who did not marry her Dutch-Jewish mother. Her mother, a woman who had little time or inclination to raise a child in the social world of the Paris salon set, sent Sarah to study in a convent. After a turbulent childhood, Sarah was ready to commit herself to a religious life when a place was secured for her to study acting in the Paris Conservatoire. She began acting in 1862 but showed little of the talent that would later propel her into stardom.

Sarah's professional career began in earnest in 1866 as a member of the theater company of the Odeon. Her most notable qualities were her “voice of gold” and her ability to breathe emotional life into melodramatic heroines, lifting the characters from their former stultifying effects of tradition, adding nobility and giving the characters a depth previously unseen. In theater after theater, Sarah excelled into stardom. By 1880, Sarah was so successful, she broke her contract in the company of the Comedie to pursue her own successes.

Sarah's off-stage life was often as harrowing as that of the characters she portrayed. Her boyish figure allowed her to portray many men characters, which was her private passion. She also suffered with bouts of ill health that had plagued her since childhood. This, plus her extravagant lifestyle, the menagerie of exotic animals she loved and a passion for younger men, kept her in financial difficulties. Journalists of the day frequently painted her as an eccentric and their writings contributed to her fame as much as her acting skill.

In 1894, Sarah Bernhardt met Alphonse Mucha. She needed a poster of a coming production Gismonda. Of the many artists who submitted works, Bernhardt chose Mucha's illustration. Mucha, a budding artist, signed a five-year contract with Bernhardt, not only for posters but for the design of many of her costumes as well. Although Mucha was not part of Sarah's close company, the two formed an odd friendship that would last well past the contract.
Sarah Bernhardt's Coffin
Sarah Bernhardt's Coffin

Bernhardt and Mucha had a mutual taste for the macabre, often holding séances in his studio with the help of a medium. Alphonse often painted vivid and grotesque scenes of death and dying. Sarah had a special upholstered coffin built, took it to Mucha's studio, and had herself photographed in it, eyes closed, arms folded, surrounded by flowers of mourning. This photograph was widely circulated and gave rise to the legend that she slept in a coffin at night. The rumor was true. When she traveled for a performance, she had her coffin delivered to her private suite. This was a smart and calculated move which added to her world fame.

Bernhardts' artistic talents extended to many different fields. She often wrote her own plays, was a competent painter and loved to create sculptures. Also to her credit, she had a weakness for humanitarian causes. During the Franco-Prussian war in 1870, Sarah established a hospital in the closed Odeon theater and in WWI she contributed both money and fund-raising activities to support the war effort.

Bernhardt took a progressive attitude towards the new medium of film. She appeared in three early silent films, enabling the producer Adolph Zukor to start the Famous Players production company, which eventually became Paramount Pictures.
Sarah Bernhardt Theatre
Sarah Bernhardt Theatre

In 1899, she opened her own resident theater, the Theater Sarah Bernhardt. In 1911, Sarah's leg had to be amputated because of a chronic knee condition. She continued to perform, in some of her most famous roles, lying in a prone position or propped up by an artfully designed set. She even converted her hotel room into a film set but she died in March 1923, at the age of 79, before the film was complete.

Although Sarah never performed any of her roles in any language but French, she was hailed and revered as a great actress on both sides of the Atlantic, regardless of her audiences' ability to comprehend the language. This popularity is a testament to her emotional and vocal power as an actress, as well as, her contribution to the stage as a truly great singular star.

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems

Ecard Free Funny Vlentines Day Cards Tumblr Day Quotes Pictures Day Poems Day Memes Poems