Halloween libations
What’s spookier than a creaking, haunted, dust-filled Southern mansion in a stormy October? Nothing, that’s what.
What’s spookier than a creaking, haunted, dust-filled Southern mansion in a stormy October? Nothing, that’s what.
I was never a huge Halloween fan as a kid. A born procrastinator born to procrastinators, I would have lofty ideas for a costume but no good follow-through, causing me to spend the spooky October holiday alternating between a witch and a princess.
Make-up has become a ritual of war paint for most women (and some men) these days. We don it and feel invincible on our quest to tackle the world at large, and if it’s a night out, to find a date.
New York Fashion Week, which took place September 4 to 11, is a colourful event—a fertile breeding ground for fashion trend-maker Pantone Colour Institute to come up with its yearly Fashion Colour Report.
So Halloween is here and you don’t have a costume. There are many routes to go in the land of last-minute costumes, including lazy classics like a sheet-clad ghost, or a cheesy pun costume that usually only takes a good idea and a T-shirt.
Last month, Apple announced the new versions of the iPhone—the 6 and the 6 Plus—which have become the fastest selling versions of the iPhone, with sensationalized reports that the 6 Plus could be bent.
You get home feeling rather proud of your recent purchase of a box of condoms, but now you’re questioning your ability to use them.
Halloween sometimes seems like the one holiday without a specific way to celebrate it. Although younger people generally celebrate by trick-or-treating, that becomes socially unacceptable when you’re in college—no matter how hard I try.
Music can set any mood. So what do you need on your playlist to make sure your Halloween party is spooktacular without being cheesy?
Seriously, don’t make this dessert. I shouldn’t even be publishing this! If you make these bars for a party or dinner, or even just as a study snack, I warn you, you will become addicted.