Jumat, April 26

Waste Management In School


 School is the place where people gathered produce the largest waste besides the market, household, industrial and institutional. If the waste or garbage ss not well treated it will be big issue.  In general, waste can be separated into:
1. Organic waste / nonperishable comes from food scraps, vegetable scraps and fruit skins, fish and meat, garden waste (grass, leaves and twigs).
2. Inorganic waste / nonperishable form: paper, wood, fabric, glass, metal, plastic, rubber and soil.
            In school environments mostly they produce dry waste and wet waste. Dry waste is produced mostly in the form of paper, plastic and a little metal. While the wet garbage from  fallen leaves, food scraps and food wrapping  which made from banana leaves.
Waste management
1. Sorting is separating the waste  into groups of organic and non-organic waste and placed in different containers.
2. Processing by implementing the 3R concept:
o Reuse (reuse) that is using a particular waste is still possible to use [reuse old bottles].
o Reduce (reduction) that is trying to reduce everything that can lead to waste and reduce the waste that already exists.
o Recycle (recycled) that is using certain waste to be processed into a more useful item [recycling organic waste into compost].
3. For waste that can not be handled within  the school environment they can store it to temporary place or Tempat Pembuangan Sementara (TPS) before the janitor took them all Final Disposal. The waste that dumped TPS should be sorted. This is done because the rapid decay of organic waste non-organic waste takes longer to decompose so require special treatment. For TPS are intentionally provided by the school polling station should be equipped with a system hole cover so that rodents, insects, and certain animals not enter into it, and also to avoid the smell of garbage that could interfere.
To facilitate the range is usually also provided small bins are placed in places easily accessible as temporary shelters waste before disposal to the polls. Garbage disposal in the garbage should also be separated into organic and inorganic trash when it's full and must be immediately discarded to the polling station or directly taken up by the janitor for disposal to landfill.
The most important thing is to create school community that can campaing about waste management so it can rise student awareness how important manage the waste to more fruitfull

Sabtu, April 20

Foie Gras - The most sadistic food in France

Do you know what Foie Gras is ? Foie gras - French for "fatty liver" - is the diseased and enlarged liver of a duck or goose, produced through force feeding.  Foei Gras is one from many elite food in France . But , Do you know that Foie Gras is the most sadistic food in France ?  It is because the steps to get a good liver for Foie Gras . Let's look how to get it . 




These geese were forced to eat althought they have already fed up . 


Iron pipe was inserted through the esophagus into the stomach, although it did not want to eat anything. This is to make its heart swell and fat.

Geese were included in cramped cages, which forces them not to rotate or move his body. Their feet were swollen because standing all day.They Can not sleep because they are always caught, forced to eat.
They rebelled but it was useless

They were forced to eat until death or could not stand up anymore. You see ... The food overflowed from their mouth

Who could survive will got inflammation of the anus . Blood flowed out easily . They were very tortured . They couldn't stand , couldn't sleep because their bodies were sick . They couldn't see the sky and couldn't swim with their friend on the river . Their spirit of life had already gone . 

To get the white and beautiful liver like this . Look , we can see that the normal liver (left) and the Foie Gras liver . 

A beautiful and delicious food but it is a very cruel food . 




Jumat, April 12

Evian Royal Resort


Evian Royal Resort 
Perfect for luxury retreat in rural areas. Most of the largest luxury hotels in France are concentrated in the cities, but if you long to combine five-star splendor by relaxing rural retreat, Evian Royal Resort is the perfect choice. Located at the foot of the French Alps and on the shores of Lake Geneva, is set in 47 acres of his land - a luxury hotel in France can boast of so enviable location. Inside, it's a miracle baroque architecture and handicrafts wooden furniture. As soon as you walk through the front door, there is no doubt that you are one of the best European hotel, and with 11 restaurants, a spa, a casino, a theater and a golf course yourself, you will never lack luxury experiences to keep you entertained. And will not the children as one between the ages of three months and 16 treated and entertained on a scale the Kingdom throughout they years

10 Trends from Paris Fashion Week 2013


Paris Fashion Week is an apparel trade show held semi-annually in Paris, France with Spring / Summer and Autumn / Winter events held each year. Dates are determined by the French Fashion Federation. Currently, Fashion Week is held in the Carrousel du Louvre, as well as at various other venues throughout the city.
Paris Fashion Week is part of the Big 4 fashion weeks internationally, the others being London Fashion Week, Milan Fashion Week and New York Fashion Week. The schedule begins with New York, followed by London, and then Milan, and ending the events in Paris.
 There are 10 trends from Paris Fashion Week 2013:


    Paris Fashion Week is an apparel trade show held semi-annually in Paris, France with Spring / Summer and Autumn / Winter events held each year. Dates are determined by the French Fashion Federation. Currently, Fashion Week is held in the Carrousel du Louvre, as well as at various other venues throughout the city.  Paris Fashion Week is part of the Big 4 fashion weeks internationally, the others being London Fashion Week, Milan Fashion Week and New York Fashion Week. The schedule begins with New York, followed by London, and then Milan, and ending the events in Paris.   There are 10 trends from Paris Fashion Week 2013: Strapless  A definite example of the Raf-at-Dior effect. Ever since Simons arrived at the French house, he has worked strapless looks into his collections with verve and modernity. Last Friday, in Paris, he did it again with silk bustiers, either as the tops of dresses or as a separate top with a skirt. Alexander Wang’s largely successful Balenciaga debut (above) featured a black bustier with cigarette trousers. Very Raf-at-Dior. Stella McCartney also featured a strapless pinstripe day dress, as well as strapless cocktail numbers, while Margiela took a mannish shirt and made it strapless Pink  No, it’s not the new black but it may be the new camel, ie the shade most likely to provide a break from all the black this autumn. Pink momentum gathered in London, from pale to Pepto-Bismol, at Topshop Unique, Richard Nicoll and Simone Rocha. In Paris, Dries Van Noten’s brilliant Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers-inspired collection featured pink feathers and pink embroideries. Other pink spots: Dior’s delicate pale-pink coat dress, Chanel’s heathery-pink mini-skirt suit while Carven showed excellent powdery-pink coats (above). Too girlie? See Stella’s deep violet as an alternative Checks  Laundry bags are officially haute (again). Phoebe Philo’s excellent collection at Céline (above) featured four looks revolving around the checks associated with them, while Stella McCartney included two coats with a similar riff. But these are not the only checks in the game for autumn. There’s plaids – see Saint Laurent, then buy one from the menswear floor of Uniqlo. Lanvin had a tweedy houndstooth, as did Dior, whose came in typically classic monochrome. Junya Watanabe was a riot of checks with brilliant pairs of jeans boasting patchwork plaids with a grungy DIY flavour. Basically though, Bretons should remain archived for another season at least Hats  Stella McCartney had nine baseball caps in her show – some grey, some black. In its Paris fashion week debut, high-street brand H&M mustered up 10 fisherman caps while Neil Barrett, whose sporty, sharp, minimalist collection is well worth studying for next season, raised the baseball-cap stakes to 12. Naturally, though, none of them could quite compete with Karl Lagerfeld’s latest Chanel epic (above), which saw a whopping 21 furry helmets in shades of rose, bright teal and a classic lipstick rouge. Givenchy, meanwhile, takes the hair prize – models sported coloured kiss-curled hair that looked like swim caps Gallery chic  It is customary for fashion designers to reference artists in their work – it sounds fancy in the press release. But with designers such as Raf Simons at Dior and Phoebe Philo at Céline – both of whom are at the top of their game – you genuinely believe art informs their world. Simons, in an homage to Christian Dior’s own career as a gallerist, had a Magritte-inspired runway with 1950s Andy Warhol drawings embroidered on to the clothes and accessories (above). Philo’s inspiration scrapbook featured Flemish paintings, which influenced her colour palette while Van Eyck and Sarah Lucas also featured. These collections triumphed Masculine slacks  Tailoring that winks and nods and generally takes its cues from menswear is a headline theme running through the collections for autumn/winter. Stella McCartney’s pinstripe heavy show (a bit Comme?) saw tailored jackets with awkward skirts and coats with large rounded shoulders. The takeaway trend, though, is for a pair of wide trousers, which showed up at Givenchy, Margiela, Vanessa Bruno and Haider Ackermann to name but four. Dior’s haute denim “Bar” trouser suits came with rippling bottom halves, while Van Noten opened his show with the perfect pair of wide, grey wool trousers and mannish laceups (above) Cocoon shoulders  Soft really is the new power shoulder. Labels from Carven to Céline and Chanel to Mugler have all favoured a silhouette that curves around the shoulders rather than jutting out from them. The Balmain show, for all its disco-meets-superhero high-energy spark, underlined that super wide jackets have no place in a modern women’s wardrobe circa 2013 – too clumpy. Meanwhile, Balenciaga’s rounded shoulder tops and jackets look likely to end up being snaffled up by all the most cutting-edge editors and stylists. Kenzo (above) also had plenty of takes on this look, from furry to golden. Modern The 1990s  Wet-look hair and Brit-pop soundtracks have been back in the fashion frame this season, while at Colette, the cult Parisian concept store, an exhibition of Marcelo Krasilcic’s 1990s photographs is on display. But no one quite injected the spirit of Courtney Love and the grunge era with as much literal gusto as Hedi Slimane for his second women’s collection at Saint Laurent (above). Plaid shirts, slouchy cardigans, biker boots and baby doll or slip dresses all ticked the 90s box, and divided opinion. Interestingly, the grungy spring/summer collection by Dries Van Noten seems like a much fresher take on the look Skirts  Yes, I know it sounds ridiculous, but skirts really are in next season. In London and Milan, a flippy little pleated kilt or skater number emerged triumphant (especially when worn with a jumper). A variation on this look also appeared as part of classic skirt suits at Chanel. Givenchy’s collection (above) featured hems that swish and flick – stills of this collection do not do it justice – while Lanvin offered pleats or pin-tucked hems. It was Céline’s skirts, though, ones that hugged the hips before gliding into a chic flare, that looked the most directional Tractor-tread soles  Stella McCartney’s footwear (above), from black ankle boots to white hospital ward-style shoes, came beefed up with thick soles reminiscent of heavy-duty tyres. In fashion circles, it’s a look being dubbed “tractor soles”. In Milan, Miuccia Prada added that level of chunk to her silver or tan catwalk sandals, while her ankle boots (they’ll sell like crazy) also featured hefty treads. Carven’s shoes also towered on their Parisian catwalk. And if all this seems like too much of a balancing act, you can always plump for a flat Saint Laurent biker boot, which accessorised the whole show
Strapless

A definite example of the Raf-at-Dior effect. Ever since Simons arrived at the French house, he has worked strapless looks into his collections with verve and modernity. Last Friday, in Paris, he did it again with silk bustiers, either as the tops of dresses or as a separate top with a skirt. Alexander Wang’s largely successful Balenciaga debut (above) featured a black bustier with cigarette trousers. Very Raf-at-Dior. Stella McCartney also featured a strapless pinstripe day dress, as well as strapless cocktail numbers, while Margiela took a mannish shirt and made it strapless












Pink

No, it’s not the new black but it may be the new camel, ie the shade most likely to provide a break from all the black this autumn. Pink momentum gathered in London, from pale to Pepto-Bismol, at Topshop Unique, Richard Nicoll and Simone Rocha. In Paris, Dries Van Noten’s brilliant Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers-inspired collection featured pink feathers and pink embroideries. Other pink spots: Dior’s delicate pale-pink coat dress, Chanel’s heathery-pink mini-skirt suit while Carven showed excellent powdery-pink coats (above). Too girlie? See Stella’s deep violet as an alternative






Checks

Laundry bags are officially haute (again). Phoebe Philo’s excellent collection at Céline (above) featured four looks revolving around the checks associated with them, while Stella McCartney included two coats with a similar riff. But these are not the only checks in the game for autumn. There’s plaids – see Saint Laurent, then buy one from the menswear floor of Uniqlo. Lanvin had a tweedy houndstooth, as did Dior, whose came in typically classic monochrome. Junya Watanabe was a riot of checks with brilliant pairs of jeans boasting patchwork plaids with a grungy DIY flavour. Basically though, Bretons should remain archived for another season at least






Hats

Stella McCartney had nine baseball caps in her show – some grey, some black. In its Paris fashion week debut, high-street brand H&M mustered up 10 fisherman caps while Neil Barrett, whose sporty, sharp, minimalist collection is well worth studying for next season, raised the baseball-cap stakes to 12. Naturally, though, none of them could quite compete with Karl Lagerfeld’s latest Chanel epic (above), which saw a whopping 21 furry helmets in shades of rose, bright teal and a classic lipstick rouge. Givenchy, meanwhile, takes the hair prize – models sported coloured kiss-curled hair that looked like swim caps













Gallery chic

It is customary for fashion designers to reference artists in their work – it sounds fancy in the press release. But with designers such as Raf Simons at Dior and Phoebe Philo at Céline – both of whom are at the top of their game – you genuinely believe art informs their world. Simons, in an homage to Christian Dior’s own career as a gallerist, had a Magritte-inspired runway with 1950s Andy Warhol drawings embroidered on to the clothes and accessories (above). Philo’s inspiration scrapbook featured Flemish paintings, which influenced her colour palette while Van Eyck and Sarah Lucas also featured. These collections triumphed











Masculine slacks

Tailoring that winks and nods and generally takes its cues from menswear is a headline theme running through the collections for autumn/winter. Stella McCartney’s pinstripe heavy show (a bit Comme?) saw tailored jackets with awkward skirts and coats with large rounded shoulders. The takeaway trend, though, is for a pair of wide trousers, which showed up at Givenchy, Margiela, Vanessa Bruno and Haider Ackermann to name but four. Dior’s haute denim “Bar” trouser suits came with rippling bottom halves, while Van Noten opened his show with the perfect pair of wide, grey wool trousers and mannish laceups (above)














Cocoon shoulders

Soft really is the new power shoulder. Labels from Carven to Céline and Chanel to Mugler have all favoured a silhouette that curves around the shoulders rather than jutting out from them. The Balmain show, for all its disco-meets-superhero high-energy spark, underlined that super wide jackets have no place in a modern women’s wardrobe circa 2013 – too clumpy. Meanwhile, Balenciaga’s rounded shoulder tops and jackets look likely to end up being snaffled up by all the most cutting-edge editors and stylists. Kenzo (above) also had plenty of takes on this look, from furry to golden. Modern













The 1990s

Wet-look hair and Brit-pop soundtracks have been back in the fashion frame this season, while at Colette, the cult Parisian concept store, an exhibition of Marcelo Krasilcic’s 1990s photographs is on display. But no one quite injected the spirit of Courtney Love and the grunge era with as much literal gusto as Hedi Slimane for his second women’s collection at Saint Laurent (above). Plaid shirts, slouchy cardigans, biker boots and baby doll or slip dresses all ticked the 90s box, and divided opinion. Interestingly, the grungy spring/summer collection by Dries Van Noten seems like a much fresher take on the look












Skirts

Yes, I know it sounds ridiculous, but skirts really are in next season. In London and Milan, a flippy little pleated kilt or skater number emerged triumphant (especially when worn with a jumper). A variation on this look also appeared as part of classic skirt suits at Chanel. Givenchy’s collection (above) featured hems that swish and flick – stills of this collection do not do it justice – while Lanvin offered pleats or pin-tucked hems. It was Céline’s skirts, though, ones that hugged the hips before gliding into a chic flare, that looked the most directional













Tractor-tread soles

Stella McCartney’s footwear (above), from black ankle boots to white hospital ward-style shoes, came beefed up with thick soles reminiscent of heavy-duty tyres. In fashion circles, it’s a look being dubbed “tractor soles”. In Milan, Miuccia Prada added that level of chunk to her silver or tan catwalk sandals, while her ankle boots (they’ll sell like crazy) also featured hefty treads. Carven’s shoes also towered on their Parisian catwalk. And if all this seems like too much of a balancing act, you can always plump for a flat Saint Laurent biker boot, which accessorised the whole show

Jumat, April 5

10 Most Unique and Awesome Hotels in France

France is known for fashion, culture and culinary best in the world. Regardless of all the elegance and luxury of this country, France has always been at the forefront in terms of design. Forget all the old-fashioned five-star luxury hotel in Paris, it's time to switch to design a modern, artsy, unique. Here are 6 unique and cool hotel with modern design:
1.  Le Bellechasse, Paris

Superbly designed by fashion designer Christian Lacroix, Bellechasse Hotel Paris is an amazing combination of stunning visuals 19th century with modern comfort. A hidden location on the side of a narrow street in the St Germain, Paris, this boutique looks epic.


2. Color Design Hotel, Paris

With detailed design brightly colored, minimalist white background, Color Design Hotel in Paris looks very `pop` and unique. Located in the heart of the Place de la Bastille and Gare de Lyon Station, this 3-star hotel has 46 modern rooms with affordable rents in the heart of Europe.

  
3. Hotel le A, Paris
 
 Hotel le A is a collaboration between designer / architect and artist Frederic Mechiche Fabrice Hybert, both of which underline the concept of minimalist design, but still did not eliminate the element of attractive visual appearance and inviting place to live. Hotel consists of 25 guestrooms, include 9 suites and 1 apartment is located in the corner of the Arc de Triomphe and the Champs Elysees.

4. Hotel des Academies, Paris

Awarded for being the third best hotel in Europe by TripAdvisor, Hotel des Academies with creative art design concept is located in one of the cities of art in Paris. Distinctively classic style bedroom / Art Deco, designed by artist Jérôme Mesnager and sculptor Sophie de Watrigant - naturally decorated with unique artistic touches. All this elegance is definitely a creative art 21st century.


5. Mama Shelter, Paris 
Located in a former garage, away from the tourist areas in Paris, Mama Shelter is one of the modern hotel concept that is very cheap - designers see good chances of this concept. French designer Phillipe Starcke Mama Shelter design with a brilliant idea, it creates the impression of a hip-hop style with concrete and graffiti, decorative accents and whimsical touches like a superhero mask that hung near the bed. At night, the hotel bar is crowded full of visitors and Le Fleched'Or, a music venue located across the street from the hotel Mama Shelter is a place of entertainment that interest young people.


6. Hotel Everland, Paris

Imagine sleeping on the roof with stunning views of the Eiffel Tower. That's what you'll feel when staying at Hotel Everland. With ultra modern designnya, Everland offers a full view of sensation and amazing.