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Friday, May 13, 2022
Complete List Of Filipino Athletes To The 31st Southeast Asian Games
Wednesday, April 27, 2022
Miss Universe Philippines 2022: WATCHFUL EYES Top 15 Favorite National Costumes
"ILOY CANDELARIA (Mother of Candles)"
Dorothy Gemillan | Iloilo City
It takes one flickering candle to light the darkest of these nights.
It takes one faithful heart to determine one's prayer. It takes a woman to encapsulate the true meaning of storge love. This is “Iloy Candelaria” Our Lady of Candles enshrined from the romanesque revivalist architecture, the Jaro Metropolitan Cathedral from the district of Jaro the land of the faithful, the fabled and the formidable, ILOILO CITY.
HEAD DESIGNER: Tata Blas - Pinuela
Assisted by the following people in making this national costume come to life!
> Sarah Mae Sulit
> John Ryan Pinuela
> Paulyn Acolentava
> Kirt Marvin Balgos
> John Paul Custodio Conte
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Director | HMUA: Malick James Hilado of The Face Mantra : Make-Up Artistry
Video: Kim Bryan of KB Productions and Joshua Bobadilla Studios
Photo: Aj Laylo | Aj Laylo
Assisted by: Geremy Barceliano | Rapsie R. Mallorca | Guen Quinlat Yntas | Jul Cudias
Creative Consultant: Joemar J. Sustento | Rheno Mar Segura Soqueño| Ron Matthews Espinosa
Studio: The Face Mantra Studios
Hair: Elitista Salon Lipa Branch by Brew Alcazar
Nails: Pinky Swear Nails
A “manugtubok” is an artisan from Panay Bukidnon, the Indigenous Peoples of Calinog, Iloilo who creates hand embroidery called “panubok,” the only living ancient needlecraft heritage in the Philippines. Through their artistry, the national costume is adorned with Indigenous designs like bulak ka labog (flower of vegetables), bulak putik (wild flower), pako pako (fern), matang punay (eyes of a bird), sikag sikag (mid-rib), and binalagon (wild vine) that showcases the inspiration of the Panay Bukidnons’ creativity and ingenuity and the living witnesses of the Panay Bukidnons’ rich culture and traditions. Their embroidery echoes the cultural beliefs, practices, and world views of Calinog’s Panay Bukidnons--- the same town where I am from.
A “manughabol” is a weaver of “habol”, a hand-woven fabric made of fibrous natural materials endemic in the Province of Iloilo like jusi from banana fiber and piña from pineapple fiber or made of polyester yarn indigenous to the towns of Oton and Miag-ao, Iloilo. The quality handloom fabrics that come out from what is considered as one of the oldest surviving crafts in the Philippines once made Iloilo Province the Textile Capital of the Philippines. Featured in the national costume is patadyong, a muti -colored handloom cotton, with patterns of stripes and plaids that intersect in bright colors, and a take on the teral (wooden loom) which is also made of interlacing colors of thread and handloom frays made of abaca fibers.
Manugtubok x Manughabol reflects the unseen labor, world-class local fabrics, and generational craftsmanship found in various communities of Iloilo Province--- a living testament to the silent strength that comes from its people, the Ilonggos. In honor of the Ilongga hablon weavers and Panay Bukidnon culture bearers who worked together with fashion designer Hector “Totong” Gellangarin in the creation of this national costume, and to uplift the thriving and sustainable glocal treasure and ecosystem of the promising textile economy that Iloilo Province offers, we present to you “Manugtubok x Manughabol.”
Saturday, April 16, 2022
Filipino Cinema, Celebrities, Actors and Actress Trivia Part 7
The Filipino film version of the Middle Eastern folktale made it to the screen in 1946 with Jaime de la Rosa as Aladin several decades earlier than the animated version was released by Walt Disney Pictures only in 1992 with Scott Weinger behind the voice of Aladdin and Robin Williams behind the voice of Genie.
Friday, April 15, 2022
Filipino Star Of The Silver Screen: Atang de la Rama
Saturday, April 9, 2022
Person Behind The Camera: Albert Yearsley
Behind the scenes of the film La Vida de Jose Rizal (1912)
Films have been made and produced in the Philippines since the early 1900s with the arrival of foreign films making documentaries and short films about life and culture in the country just a few years after the first few films shown in Manila in the late 19th century. The following year a Spanish army officer named Antonio Ramos documented through film some scenes in the city. He is credited to be the first film producer in the Philippines. Other foreign filmmakers followed suit documenting their travels in the country including Burton Holmes and Carl Frederick Ackerman (aka Raymond Ackerman). By 1909, the Philippines already had three (3) film studios and two years later, a board of censorship and an association to oppose censorship. Some foreign filmmakers and travelers make short films of different scenes in the country in the early 1900s starting in 1905 until 1911.
One of the early filmmakers in the Philippines is Albert Yearsley. If Jose Nepomuceno is often credited as the "Father of Filipino Cinema Industry", Yearsley along with Harry Brown, Edward M. Gross, and some other foreign filmmakers were credited as the founding Fathers of Philippine Cinema hence they are the "Father of Philippine Cinema." Yearsley shot Rizal Day celebration in 1909, the Manila Carnival in 1910, the eruption of Mayon Volcano in 1911, and the first Airplane Flight over Manila by Bud Mars among others.
Albert Yearsley along with Harry Brown and Edward M. Gross made the first feature-length film in the Philippines named La Vida de Jose Rizal (The Life of Jose Rizal) by Edward M. Gross and El Fusilamiento de Dr.Jose Rizal (The Execution of Dr. Jose Rizal) by Albert Yearsley in 1912 and were released within one day of each other.
Not much is known about the pioneering filmmaker Albert Yearsley except that by making one of the first feature-length films in the Philippines he solidified his name and claim to fame as the "Father of Philippine Cinema Industry" (not to be confused with Father of Filipino Cinema Industry).
Source:
http://www.filmreference.com/encyclopedia/Independent-Film-Road-Movies/Philippines.html
https://sinesiyasat.tumblr.com/post/33309289442/the-earliest-rizal-films-were-part-of-the-american