Fabulous Father’s Day gifts from Truprint

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I’ve showcased a bunch of Father’s Day gifts on this blog; from novelty items, to alcohol to chocolate. All of these come highly recommended by the daddy of this household (I mean, name a dad who would turn down beer!) but none of them would last a lifetime.

Photo gifts do exactly that. Whether it’s a mug or a placeholder, canvas or photobook, these are the pressies that really make an impact and will find themselves permanently on display, or eventually stored in a memory box, to be cherished ad infinitum.

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It might sound cliche, but a picture really does say a thousand words. This is especially true if you have children and they constantly change before your eyes; Chubby cheeks hollow out, baby curls give way to scruffy barnets, and gappy smiles are filled in with the adult teeth they’ll have forever. Hovering with your camera when they’re young is the best possible way to preserve those memories, and just flicking back through pics taken a few months before can make you well up.

We made those smiles, we made those gangly legs, we made those sticky-out ears - it’s the closest thing to a miracle we’ll ever experience

(every mum & dad I know have had this very same conversation)

Truprint have a great range of Father’s Day presents that really embrace this sentiment. Gone are the days of expensive photoshoots with professional photographers, then flicking through proofs to pick out the ones where you all have your eyes open. Nowadays, most of us have access to a digital camera or camera phone and can capture the expressions and memories that really mean something to us - that aren’t staged in a studio somewhere.

When you have the perfect snap, you can add it as a screensaver to your laptop or your phone, or go one better and get it on canvas. And for this Fatther’s Day we’ve done just that.

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This picture of Heidi is the first we’ve had blown up of her. I had a thousand to choose from, but this one means something extra special to us as it’s the first proper smile we managed to capture on camera. She was quick to do everything - crawling, walking, talking - she’s only 13 months and this little girl is well on her way to getting a masters degree. But this smile, at 4 weeks old, just melts our hearts.

CREATING IT

For a canvas project, uploading a photo is simple and there are even pop-up tips to help you get the best out of the experience. The project screen is easy to navigate with all your core options in drop downs on your left hand side and handily, your project sub total is always displayed top left so you can see what your creation costs as you create it.

Hovering over the photo, you’ll also be given the opportunity to further edit it (zoom, effects (sepia, black and white, tint etc), brightness, colour enhancement and red-eye correction). It’s a very simplistic editing suite compared to some others I’ve come across, but perfectly adequate and easy-to-use.

I have only one criticism. I opted for a sold wrap canvas rather than a gallery wrap (e.g. my canvas edges would be a block colour rather than having my photo wrap around them). This was necessary as the image I had selected was a close-up of Heidi and I didn’t want to lose some of her head. Unfortunately however, Truprint only have black available and it would have been nice to have picked out a colour contained within the image to make the edges less of a contrast.

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THE QUALITY

I’m really impressed by the quality of the canvas. it’s stretched and secured better than others we’ve come across before, with heavy duty staples that won’t scrape your paintwork. I’m also pleased with the chunky 37mm pine frame which, in my opinion, looks so much better than thinner frames we received from other printers. It also comes with wall fittings and was perfectly packaged.

The colours are great and really pop (despite this being a non high-res pic), and there’s no blurring or bleeding of the print. I’m just completely delighted with it and can’t wait to show Craig on Father’s Day.

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In conclusion, I’d happily recommend Truprint for creating canvasses. I’d always advise you shop around for the best deal but it’s always worth reading reviews too. The quality really does vary from printer to printer so if you want the best bang for your buck, make sure you won’t be disappointed by seeing what customers have to say. In this example, for the second time running Truprint have aced it.

You can stay informed about special offers and deals via Facebook and Twitter and check out all their other Father’s Day photo gift ideas on their website.


Visit the Easter Island’s myths and legends

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As a travel fanatic, I have a wishlist of places I want to see. It will take me a lifetime to visit them all, and we have an ever-growing slush fund for our adventures when our children are older and we’re retired. We’re simply not content watching Michael Palin describe the sights, sounds and rich cultural tapestry of far flung places; we want to experience this ourselves. Easter Island’s myths and legends had me gripped from that start, and is definitely on our list.

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Easter Island from the air: LosApos.com

Located within the southeastern Pacific Ocean, Easter Island (Rapa Nui) is one of the most remote inhabited islands in the world. Yet this little patch of land, thousands of miles & some 5.5 hours in the air away from the nearest continent (The only regular flights are via #LANAirlines) is steeped in mythology and folklore. It’s this isolation, and indeed the near annihilation of its natives, that has left much of its history and culture shrouded in mystery.

Where did the islands first inhabitants come from? How did they carve such intricate statues & move them into position throughout the island? And what fate befell this once thriving island?

The little we know has been handed down orally by the natives, reported by ancient visitors and has likely been embellished by the imagination of the teller or the listener. Our understanding of the island flits between reality and fantasy, and the island has been the subject of more conjecture than any other place on earth.

The Rapa Nui Legend

The island’s first settler and ariki mau (supreme chief) is thought to be Hotu Matu’a who deliberately colonized the island in or around 700 to 1100 CE. Legend has it that in a dream, he was foretold that his own island (Hiva) would sink into sea and his people would perish. Having sought advise from a wise man, he sent forth seven explorers to scour the pacific ocean for a new home for his people, and it was they who miraculously discovered Easter Island - salvation offered by the sea.

Hotu Matu’a and 100 people, later arrived on the island in two double hulled canoes (like ancient day catamarans). They found an island paradise. Yam (their main food source) already existed, huge palm trees provided shelter and wood, and there was an abundance of birds and sea-life for sustenance.

CaptureSeven Moai in Ahu Akivi; Rapa Nui: Flickr Photos Girados

The Moai

Hotu Matu’a's Polynesian colonising party built the imposing Moai that so many travelers flock to see today. It is believed these are a visual representation of the settlers belief in a symbiotic relationship with the dead. Through these offerings to their fallen ancestors, the tribesman were protected and nourished by the island, and the dead, in turn, received a better place in the spirit world. Most settlements were located on the coast and Moai were erected along the coastline, watching over their descendants in the settlements before them, with their backs toward the spirit world in the sea.

The seven Moai in Ahu Akivi are among the most iconic man-made statues in the world. It is believed they are depictions of deified ancestors, whose presence was considered a blessing over each small village. They perhaps symbolise the seven generations that inhabited the place, or maybe seven immigrant tribes, from which only one survived in order to mix with Hotu Matu’a’s people.

Rano-Raraku29Rano Raraku: Moai Excavation: Iimaginaisladepascua.com

There are some 800 Moai at Easter Island. At first it was believed they did not have bodies, making the mystery of their existence even more intriguing. In actual fact, the heads were just disproportionately large and at the time of their discovery by the westernised world in the 1950s, the Moai had not been restored to the plinths and platforms from which they’d fallen. Rather they were buried up to their shoulders on the volcanic slopes. Now, many of the Moai have been dug out and are displayed at the Rapa Nui National Park (declared a world heritage site in 1995)

The demise of the lost world

Evidenced by the Moai themselves, early centuries on the island were full of promise and the community thrived. The island became their whole world and the islanders likely believed theirs to be the only civilisation on earth. Driftwood on its shoreline was likely regarded with awe and mystery.

However, as the population grew, so did pressures on the island’s environment. 21 species of trees and all species of land birds went extinct through a combination of overharvesting/overhunting, rat predation, and resulting climate change. The islanders struggled to make spears and seaworthy vessels to hunt, and early historians pointed fervently at ecoside and famine for the dramatic decline in population.

The islanders stood accused of having over-exploited their natural resources to build the Moai - eroding volcano banks and slashing and burning the trees to pave the way for transporting them. After all some Moai traveled some 9 miles to their final resting place on the island with their pukao (hats) alone weighing several tonnes. It was imagined the natives created a crude pulley system from felled logs, building huge roads that traversed the rugged island landscape. Food grew scarce, rumours of cannibalism followed and confidence in the old religion was lost - reflected partly in the ruins of Moai that appear to have been toppled by human hands.

easter-island-statues-moved-by-rocking_55437_600x450 The transportation of Moai: anthropology.msu.edu

Yet the Easter Island ecoside narrative has been hotly contested. New evidence suggests that some of the Moai were moved vertically by ropes via brute strength and sheer determination. They walked that journey to their plinths by the sea - a majestic sight and feat of superior engineering well before its time. As regards the toppled Moai, the fact their noses remain intact, suggests they were gently lowered to avert their gaze rather than carelessly pushed over.

Moreover skeletal remains reveal the islanders did not die as a result of inter-community violence or famine and a new narrative was born. Historians now believe foreign explorers brought disease to the island. Much diminished as a result of tuberculosis and plague, the island was then raped by slave traders (known as blackbirding), undermining the islander’s belief systems and paving the way for the Birdman cult, and ultimately the Catholicism that still exists today.

What we can say with certainty is that Easter Island’s population did plummet. By the time of European arrival in 1722, the island’s population had dropped to 2,000–3,000 from approximately 15,000 just a century earlier. Those European diseases and Peruvian slave raiding in the 1860s further reduced this number to just 111 inhabitants in 1877.

The Tangata Manu (“Birdman” Cult)

As disaster beset the island a new religious ideology grew in stature. The island was a wasteland, the eroded soil barely producing enough food for the meager population to survive. The islanders maintained that, although the ancestors still provided for their descendants, the medium through which the living could contact the dead was no longer statues, but human beings (leaders) chosen through a grueling competition.

And so, 1000ft above sea level on the rim of the crater Rano Kau, the ceremonial village of Orongo (built to worship the god of fertility, Makemake) became the site of the annual Birdman competition.

CaptureMakemake: Flickr Ryan Tomko

Contestants, all men of importance on the island, were revealed in dreams by ivi-attuas or prophets. Each contestant would then appoint a hopu (man of lesser status) who would compete in their honour. Leadership of the island was determined by the first hopu who could scale down the vertical slopes, swim out to one of three small islets in shark-infested waters, and bring back the egg of the nesting sooty tern unbroken. The one who did this successfully elevated their sponsor to Birdman of the year and was bestowed with special honors and privileges.

These competitions for Bird Man started around 1760, after the arrival of the first Europeans, and ended in 1878, with the construction of the first church by Roman Catholic missionaries who formally arrived in 1864.

A modern day paradise for today’s explorers

A firm favourite for photographers, the Moai can be visited for free and are mostly found along the coastline of the island. Each village typically had an ahu (a stone tablet on which the statues were placed) and several Moai.

Otherwise there are the volcanic craters of Rano Kau and Rano Raraku, the quarry of the latter being where most of the Moai were carved out of tuff (a compounded volcanic ash). Here, you can see various stages of the carving, as well as scattered partially-finished figures.

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There’s also an extensive cave system on the island. As well as official caves, you’ll also find several near Ana Kakenga off the beaten track. The most frequently visited of the caves is the ominously named Ana Kai Tangata (Eat Me Cave) which features sophisticated rock art on its ceiling and walls.

For archaeology and ecology buffs there’s also rich evidence of the Rapa Nui stewardship of the island; mini walls gardens and shallow caves provided micro-climates for crop-growing, and ancient water trenches were discovered earlier this century - yet more evidence of the creativity of its people.

Moreover, during the first two weeks of February there’s also the Tapati Rapa Nui festival which sees the island separated into two teams (each part representing the ancient races of the island) and competing for the honour of the island.

TapatiTapati Rapa Nui Competition: Iimaginaisladepascua.com

Finally, for the less intrepid, there’s an imposing and stunning coastline.

Whether you enjoy hiking, biking, surfing, diving, horseback rides or simply relaxing, you’ll be surrounded by an aura of haunting sadness and heartbreak, yet people who remain wonderfully inspiring and optimistic about their islands future. Although, there’s just one little town to welcome the 85,000 tourists each year, and much of the resources they need arrives by air, they maintain they could survive alone on the island once again. It’s a true bucket list experience.

 


Ordinary Moments: #SecondTimeLucky

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When Ocean Finance recently got in touch to ask if I’d like to enter their exclusive blogger competition, Second Time Lucky, I had to really wrack my brains to think of something. The winner scoops an amazing £300 to put towards re-creating, or indeed creating, a dream that just hasn’t worked out for them so far.

I guess I’m pretty lucky as there really isn’t anything that I haven’t achieved in my life. Okay, Craig and I didn’t have many dates on our own before I found myself pregnant with the little dude, and he might have proposed but he’s yet to replace the Hula Hoop he slipped on my finger with something infinitely more shiny, but I’m pretty happy with my lot. I’m totally smitten with my guy and the kids (rightly) have the ability to make me melt and want to dive head first into oncoming traffic - I’m not one to regret things, and I’d struggle to find anything to seriously moan about anyway.

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So when I put the question to Craig I was expecting his eyebrows to meet in the middle a little, much like mine did. I naively thought he’d say his life was perfect in every way too. Irritatingly though, he rolled off several things. It was a little like the world’s most expensive Generation Game.

The thing is, many of the things he listed were totally impossible to bring to life. He totally missed out on Heidi’s first steps, Dexter’s first attempt at Tree Fu Tom’s dance moves, and the first time he managed to use the potty without tipping its contents onto the carpet (don’t ask. Just don’t ask).

I hadn’t realised Craig felt so put out by this. I always text him the moment things happen, then pester the kids all evening to perform their latest trick for daddy in the evenings. Of course this rarely goes to plan - I wouldn’t advise encouraging your child to do a roly poly after plying him with lasagne for example - but they’ll inevitably pull off the same clumsy stunt at the weekend for him.

But I guess it’s not as cool if you missed it the first time.

Still, there’s little I can do about it, right?

Well no.

It got me thinking that if I had a video recorder to capture all the antics, as they happen, then Craig can see the day through our eyes (and maybe appreciate he’s a lot better off sat in his van at work rather than knee deep in nappies and Lego). Now I can just hear you all scoffing “Why don’t you just use your iPhone? You stupid bint“, but unfortunately my other half had a bit of a mare and got me one with the most pathetic memory known to man - on contract. Seriously, I have to delete an app just to take a photo. With a year and half left to go on this contract, there’s no chance of an upgrade either. Yes, he’s nagged at least a million times a night about this oversight.

On the rare occasion, I have whipped it out, I manage to get a thumb in the shot, or shoot it in the wrong orientation. Needless to say, I’m pretty handy with my Canon, but a right disappointment with my iPhone.

So Ocean Finance, in order to help me share precious memories with the hardest working man in Britain, I fancy one of these…

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Smart, sexy and looks great against any outfit (enough about me), this Canon LEGRIA HF R606 would allow me to take videos and post them to YouTube without people leaving comments to wish me all the best with my Parkinson’s Disease. More importantly it’ll allow me to make my other half smile more than he already does - I can’t think of a better dream to fulfill than that. I can’t make up for all the moments he’s missed, but I can make sure he doesn’t miss any new ones.

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For an opportunity to win your own dream, head on over to Ocean Finance where you can submit your own entry or vote for other people to win theirs. Whether you regret that low key first birthday party for your child, have relatives in Australia you’ve never seen, or you fancy a career change and want to take a Open University course to make it happen, just tell Ocean Finance what you’ve missed out on to see if they can make it happen! The comp runs until the 11th May and one winner will scoop £5000 towards that dream (with 7 people awarded spot prizes of £300) Enter HERE

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* This is my entry into the Ocean Finance Second Time Lucky campaign for bloggers*

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