Showing posts with label Black. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Darkening Hair With Foods

Tips on some dishes prepared from certain herbs that can help darken early gray hair

Early gray hair, aesthetically, causes inconveniences for the sufferers, especially women. However, it causes neither physical disorders nor complications, and is thus harmless to health. The symptom often comes from heredity, a wrong nutrition regime, stress, pessimism or sorrow.
To date, there have not been drugs or remedies that are effective for the treatment of early gray hair. In Western medicine, vitamins B5 and E have been used to treat this symptom, but they may have certain side effect. A proper regime and an optimistic spirit play an important role in the treatment of early gray hair.
In traditional medicine, u en, literally means black beans, or catjang (Vigna cylindrica), and hà th ô (Polygonum multiflorum) have long been used to cure early gray hair.

Remedies

Stew pig bone with black beans. Eat this soup once a day.

Roast black beans, black sesame, bch qu (Ginkgo biloba) and hà th ô; grind them all into powder and store the powder in a tightly closed jar; eat 30 grams of the powder a day. Or, roast dried black beans and store the roasted beans in a tightly closed jar; chew a teaspoonful of roasted beans well, twice a day, with a little water.

Stew hà th ô well; stir-fry sliced pig liver and then cook them with the broth of hà th ô; add minced cabbage and mc nh (cloud ear fungus – Auricularia polytricha); cook for a few minutes and add spices. Eat this soup every day.
Stew a hen stuffed with hà th ô in an earthen pot; add spices. Eat the soup once a day.

Roast the same amount of hà th ô and black sesame and grind them into powder; add a little purified sugar. Mix two to three teaspoonfuls of the sugared powder with water and drink the solution twice a day.

Roast hà th ô, th ty t (Cuscuta chinensis) and phá c ch (Psoralea corylifolia); grind the roasted stuffs into powder; make a drink by mixing the powder with hot water. Drink the solution during the day instead of tea.

Or, you can squeeze garlic and ginger and rub your hair with the garlic and ginger juices before going to bed at night; rinse your hair well with warm water and shampoo it the next morning. Repeat the remedy in three to four months.

It is worth noting that all the above-mentioned herbs are available at all traditional medicine shops throughout the country.

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Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Monochrome photos connect communities

HA NOI – A photo exhibition by French professional Sebastien Laval, entitled Communities through Time, will open this evening in Ha Noi.

The black-and-white photos tell stories of the lives of ethnic people in three countries: Cambodia, Laos and Viet Nam.

Through the photos, Laval shows portraits, traditional customs and changes in people's lives. Without titles, visitors could think, feel and freely discover the characters, "try to meet them, talk to them, look at them and understand them", Laval said.

Born on March 11, 1973, in Alfortville, Laval discovered photography when he was given a black-and-white camera by his father. He moved to Paris to work as an assistant for a photo studio in 1992 and cultivated his knowledge by studying black and white photos. He began working as a professional in Poitiers City.

Laval visited Viet Nam for the first time in 1995 and is acclaimed by Vietnamese and tourists for his outstanding and lively views.

The exhibition runs until February 11 at L'Espace, the French Cultural Centre, Trang Tien Street. – VNS

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Saturday, December 18, 2010

Action flick kicks off holiday season

Black and white: Singer Siu Black and model Anh Thu in the movie Gentle as a Nun. — File Photo

Black and white: Singer Siu Black and model Anh Thu in the movie Gentle as a Nun. — File Photo

HA NOI — Viet Nam's first holiday season movie release, Em Hien Nhu Ma So (Gentle as a Nun), hits cinemas yesterday.

In the film, directed by Hoang Thien Tru, a former singing star (real-life singer Siu Black) meets a Buddhist nun (Anh Thu) who is a martial arts expert on a secret mission to recover a priceless religious artefact. The two of them witness a murder committed by the son of a mafia boss and, entangled with the underworld, take refuge in a church.

Anh Thu has previously appeared in such popular films as Nhung Co Gai Chan Dai (Long-Legged Girls) and Hon Truong Ba Da Hang Thit (The Butcher's Soul and Truong Ba's Body). Playing a Buddhist martial arts nun in the new film, she spent two months in martial arts training and performs her own stunts in the film.

For Black, movie acting is still an experiment, although she turned in an engaging performance in the film Huyen Thoai Bat Tu (The Legend Alive). She turns in another surprising performance here, as a former star sour with the passing of her youth.

"I'm keen on action movies," said Black. "Sometimes I forget dialogue, but I'm absorbed in the action scenes,

The holiday movie season will eat up at Tet (Lunar New Year), when the Thien Ngan Studio will release Bong Ma Hoc Duong (Ghost at School), the first 3D movie from director Le Bao Trung.

"To prepare for my biggest project, I spent time to learn 3D filmmaking from specialist Chuck Comisky in Hong Kong," said Trung.

Trung and his crew were supported by cinematographer Joel Spezeski, and post-production for the film was completed in Hong Kong.

Pop singers Wanbi Tuan Anh, Truong Quynh Anh and Elly Tran all play leading roles in the film.

"By using 3D technology, we can make films completely different from 2D products, which have poorer images and music," said Dinh Thanh Huong, the movie's production manager.

High-tech, sophisticated productions would attract fans of different ages and backgrounds, he added.

Ghost at School will be screened in both 2D and 3D versions.

Viet Nam first saw 3D technology in the cartoon Phu Dong Thien Vuong, produced by the HCM City-based LCKSoft Company. Other 3D animations like Tho Va Rua (Rabbit and Turtle) and Chu Heo May Man (Lucky Pig), produced by the Viet Nam Cartoon Studio and the 3D Sao La company, have impressed children.

"I think making 3D cartoons and movies isn't difficult for domestic filmmakers," said Trung, who recently opened his own studio, LBT Entertainment. "But the problem is how to encourage movie producers to become involved in the new business."

Other movies expected for the holiday season will be the Viet Film Studio's Dai Chien Co Dau (Fighting Bride), Thien Su 99 (Angel 99) – produced for the teen market by Phuoc Sang Studio – and Sai Gon Yo! from the Chanh Phuong Studio. — VNS

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