Tuesday, May 13, 2014

FMFA 2014 Experience: Arrival & Day 1

Last March 12, we left for Kuala Lumpur to catch the Future Music Festival Asia 2014. It's a 3-day music festival (March 13-15) with the world's best DJs and artists such as Pharrell Williams, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, Armin Van Buuren, Martin Garrix, etc. We bought tickets for the festival via Galactix Asia and it cost us around RM 348 or around Php 5,000.00.

We arrived around midnight and we headed to our hostel, which was just near Bukit Jalil Stadium, the festival venue. Finding our hostel was a disaster. But to cut the long story short, we tried searching for a new place, but after 3 hrs, we still ended on that same hostel. We're just thankful that we've met a very helpful taxi driver. And I would just like to commend him for being a responsible head of his family. He works as an employee at Petronas in the day and as a cab driver at night.

We took some rest and went out before lunch to explore KLCC (Kuala Lumpur City Center). We just went around Suria, the mall under the Petronas Towers. We had photos taken at the Petronas Towers, had lunch, and headed back to the hotel to prepare for the first day of FMFA.

 photo IMG_4148_zpsc19affd6.jpg
it just so happened that we had the same outfits :)
 photo IMG_3692_zps2ef4a60c.jpg
it was hazy so the towers were fading in the smog
 photo IMG_3691_zps0819fe6d.jpg
a mandatory tourist shot :))
 photo IMG_3698_zps6c801799.jpg
at the front side of the mall (lovin' my monopod haha)


After fixing up, we're off to the event grounds. We arrived quite late so we didn't catch the Adventure Club. It was R3HAB who was spinning when we came. The highlight of the night was when R3HAB guested Martin Garrix for a quick spin. He gave us a preview of what we should be excited about on day 3. The night was closed by Deadmau5. It was indeed a crazy FMFA Day 1. We've met a lot of fellow Filipinos from all over the world, and new foreign friends from different parts of the world.
 photo IMG_4094_zpsefb9a167.jpg
OOTD
 photo IMG_3706_zps7febf16d.jpg
Girls' OOTD
 photo IMG_4071_zps05c01cd4.jpg
Philippines REPRESENT!
 photo IMG_3715_zps9ac51cca.jpg
met a Filipino guy who's based in HK\
 photo IMG_3724_zps76943184.jpg
woohooo! R3HAB on the decks!
 photo IMG_3756_zps85ea7a99.jpg
a perfect shot indeed :)
 photo IMG_3733_zpsa28c76b0.jpg
so we found more Filipinos in the moshpit
 photo IMG_3732_zps0802cd3d.jpg
couples representin'
 photo IMG_3736_zps66a30fbe.jpg
another artsy effect
 photo IMG_3731_zpsfa5c89de.jpg
my friends just designed their own festival shirts and shades
 photo IMG_3754_zpse6d31eef.jpg
Deadmau5
 photo IMG_3771_zps83bd5961.jpg
FMFA Day 1 DONE!




xoxo,

city girl

Friday, March 28, 2014

Why I Love Shopping in Japan


Japan is my most favorite country to shop at. Yeah, Hong Kong only comes next, and Bangkok comes third. While many think that shopping in Japan is ridiculously expensive, I'm here to be a myth buster. Shopping in Japan could be more expensive than shopping in other Asian countries. However, the technique here is to know where and when to shop in Japan just so you could get a good deal, most especially for signature items.

All of my previous trips in Japan were during Spring; and as far as I can remember, I was able to catch a lot of bargain items due to the changing of the season from Winter to Spring. I remembered shopping a lot from H&M and in Harajuku. Well Shibuya 109 is their fashion center but everything there is just expensive no matter what season it is. The brands there are all local designer brands and those shops really set the trend.

The best time to shop in Japan is from mid-December to mid-January. This is when you see the SALE sign everywhere! One weekend in December, we went to Yatsugatame Resort Outlet (outlet shops of local and foreign brands) and we've gone crazy shopping at Coach Factory where we shopped for an hour. We got 2 wallets, 3 bags, 2 bangles for just 100,000 yen or less (around Php 40,000). The Japanese people are too shopaholic that there are a lot of outlet malls/parks all over Japan. The biggest of which is the Mitsui Outlet Park Shiga Ryuo in Kyoto with 237 stores. The one we went to was the nearest to our place (less than an hour drive), located at 4000 Kobuchizawa-machi (town) Hokuto-shi (city), Yamanashi-ken (province).

 photo 1531807_10152321708351369_544038538_n_zpscc5e50d6.jpg
 photo 1237081_10152321705906369_1629554833_n_zpsb79bf474.jpg


The craziest shopping day is the New Year's Day! Yeah, what a way to spend so much on the first day of the year haha! Every New Year, most of the shops, most especially the local brands are preparing HAPPY BAGS. Each happy bag is filled with an entire set of outfit or multiple random items from a store and it's available on promo price. The usual price of a "happy bag" is 10,000 yen or Php 4,300. But its content is actual worth more than that. However, the catch here is that, you don't know what exact items are inside -- the style, design, color. What you only know is the size and the actual worth of all the items inside. Well, I've seen some that displayed the actual content of the bag but they're more expensive than the surprise ones. I watched in the news that there's this shop wherein a lot of people have already lined up at dawn to get HAPPY BAGS worth 10,000 yen each but are filled with items worth 100,000 yen or Php 43,000. Can you just imagine how awesome of a bargain that is?!? (I actually took photos of the happy bags but I lost them 'cause I failed to sync them to my laptop before deleting them)

 photo ScreenShot2014-03-28at13410AM_zpsdc7c8b90.png

So on New Year's Day, I went shopping in Tokyo with my cousin and aunts and I spent 2 hours in H&M because there were a lot of ridiculously discounted items and a lot of customers as well. I bought 10 items for only 5,000 yen of Php 2,200. That's a mix of dresses, shorts, tops, and skirts. I could've bought more but I limited my spending and my family has been waiting for me for so long at a resto across H&M. haha!

 photo 1383793_10152322637446369_1213746937_n_zps15c948b1.jpg
H&M Harajuku
 photo 1148791_10152322636006369_472084088_n_zps071f6550.jpg
 photo 1920585_10152322635776369_1416481536_n_zps5b0a43d8.jpg
at the roof deck of Tokyu Plaza (Harajuku)
 photo 1959471_10152322638161369_489575187_n_zpse7720cc6.jpg
will never get tired of shopping for bargain finds


In Japan, we live in the province but we're just a minute or two away from boutiques and department stores. I think we go shopping like at least twice a week. On weekends we go to the malls in nearby cities such as the Aeon Mall in Kofu (Yamanashi), Don Quijote (Matsumoto, Nagano), etc. Imagine how much this trip damaged my pocket. But still, I was thankful 'cause I got a lot of free shopping from my aunt, uncle, and cousin.

 photo 1978852_10152322639001369_1786111662_n_zps2ff1ae02.jpg
my cousin is my forever shopping buddy

Friday, March 7, 2014

Hardware Zone Magazine Philippines Holiday Gift Guide 2013/2014

This is a super late post. Sorry, it almost slipped my mind. But hey, better late than never.

Last October, I got invited by Hardware Zone Magazine (HWM) Philippines to be a part of the style team of their Holiday Gift Guide 2013/2014. It's like a catalogue of products (not only gadgets but even apparel) that serves as a source of gift ideas. It was actually out in the market from December 2013 to February 2014.

Our models were Angelia Ong, Ladylyn Riva, and Farah Ramos. And I co-styled the wardrobe and the hair of the models together with Shiela Del Rosario. The shoot coordinator was Darlene Sasan of HWM, and hey, they're all my friends. It seemed like a "barkada" project for us.

The themes were: couch potato, adventurous/explorer, and party animal.

Here are the final output:

 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-2014_zpsb94a7d59.jpg
Lady on the cover wearing Solari Clothing's "Lush" dress
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-20146_zps41a38ed8.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201458_zps0108c9d2.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201470_zpsdea44b4e.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201452_zps9bf40507.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201464_zpse6b0da5b.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201426_zpsc696152f.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201430_zps5ac10d5a.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201420_zps96fa2f91.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201416_zps959e2b40.jpg
 photo IMG_2339copy_zps9e93f13d.png
 photo IMG_3664copy_zps7d3d2554.png
 photo IMG_7849copy_zps5edc38a3.png

Here's our team:

 photo 1379331_10151984183751369_1103586964_n_zps9ed5b3ec.jpg


And we're about to work on the HWM Summer Gift Guide 2014. Stay tuned!:)


xoxo,

city girl

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Japanese New Year: Oshogatsu Festival 2014

The New Year celebration in Japan is called the Oshogatsu Festival. It's more solemn and traditional as compared to that of the Philippines, and other Western countries.

For the New Year's eve, we travelled to Tokyo to celebrate it with my Japanese uncle and his mother. But before heading to their house in Tokyo, we stopped by Hachioji to shop for food at Costco. There were so many shoppers getting ready for the NYE.


When we arrived at my uncle's house, we cleaned it up a bit then we headed to the onsen (public bath). There were actually a lot of customers that night. After that, we picked up my cousin and aunt's bestfriend at the bus station and we went to Don Quijote to go shopping. Imagine, it's around 10pm and we're still shopping on NYE.


We all went back to the house and got ready for the NYE dinner (Media Noche in Pinoy culture). We had a very simple NYE dinner. The staple food for NYE dinner in Japan is the soba. After dinner, we headed to the Jindaiji Temple. It's a tradition in Japan to visit shrines/temples on NYE. There were a lot of people lining up to throw coins and pray or make a wish. Surprisingly, I saw a lot of groups of young people at the temple. While some were at the New Year countdown at Shibuya crossing and in some clubs/bars, there were still a long of youngsters who still celebrate the NYE traditionally. 



 photo IMG_1402_zpse2777c8e.jpg
year of the horse
 photo IMG_1401_zpsea2ba788.jpg
wine
 photo IMG_1399_zpsc2395501.jpg
food!
 photo IMG_1404_zpsf273b397.jpg
small temple
 photo IMG_1407_zpse415ff15.jpg
main temple (while we were in line)
 photo IMG_1406_zps6782c0dd.jpg
that's a small fountain
 photo IMG_1328_zps091d25b8.jpg
while waiting for our turn
 photo IMG_1408_zps1d66e9f4.jpg
where people get their omikuji
 photo IMG_1333_zps37fc3557.jpg

The next day, we had brunch. We shared the "osechi", a set of traditional Japanese New Year food in a special box called, "jubako". Each food symbolizes something, such as health, wealth, and good fortune. After brunch, we hit Harajuku area for shopping. New Year's Day shopping is probably the craziest shopping day of the year in Japan. I'll be making a different post about it, as this post focuses on Japanese New Year.


 photo IMG_1409_zpsd95d3cda.jpg

Anyway, the next day, my aunt's friend gave me an "otoshidama" or New Year money, along with an "omikuji", a piece of paper that talks about my fortune. Unfortunately, I got bad fortune, or "kyo". I must get at least a "kichi" or blessing. To reverse the bad fortune, we went to Suwataisha Temple and tied the piece of paper containing bad fortune at the temple. Then I picked a new number. When I got the piece of paper, it read "kichi", or blessing. Finally! Well, you can check Wikipedia on their meanings.


 photo IMG_1504_zps1c276944.jpg
really bad fortune (1st omikuji)
 photo IMG_1450_zps3859ebef.jpg
Suwataisha Temple
 photo IMG_1453_zpsbc97b405.jpg
me and my aunt
 photo IMG_1456_zpsadf23379.jpg
Onbashira
 photo IMG_1459_zps52be0324.jpg
big Japanese drum
 photo IMG_1463_zpsb1150453.jpg
people waiting for their turns to pray
 photo IMG_1466_zps4a1cfd88.jpg
must let go of the bad luck by my first omikuji
 photo IMG_1472_zps1730e543.jpg
getting a number (it's written on a stick)
then there's a corresponding omikuji for the number that I got
 photo IMG_1474_zps500ac009.jpg
 photo IMG_1477_zps4255be9c.jpg
it's their version of holy water
 photo IMG_1479_zps7072b6c7.jpg
the main entrance
 photo IMG_1485_zpsd937e437.jpg
tried it for the first time
 photo IMG_1489_zps51197631.jpg
traditional Japanese house

So that's the traditional Japanese New Year. Far from how I usually celebrate it in the Philippines, but this experience has been really worth it.



xoxo,


city girl


Tuesday, May 13, 2014

FMFA 2014 Experience: Arrival & Day 1

Last March 12, we left for Kuala Lumpur to catch the Future Music Festival Asia 2014. It's a 3-day music festival (March 13-15) with the world's best DJs and artists such as Pharrell Williams, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, Armin Van Buuren, Martin Garrix, etc. We bought tickets for the festival via Galactix Asia and it cost us around RM 348 or around Php 5,000.00.

We arrived around midnight and we headed to our hostel, which was just near Bukit Jalil Stadium, the festival venue. Finding our hostel was a disaster. But to cut the long story short, we tried searching for a new place, but after 3 hrs, we still ended on that same hostel. We're just thankful that we've met a very helpful taxi driver. And I would just like to commend him for being a responsible head of his family. He works as an employee at Petronas in the day and as a cab driver at night.

We took some rest and went out before lunch to explore KLCC (Kuala Lumpur City Center). We just went around Suria, the mall under the Petronas Towers. We had photos taken at the Petronas Towers, had lunch, and headed back to the hotel to prepare for the first day of FMFA.

 photo IMG_4148_zpsc19affd6.jpg
it just so happened that we had the same outfits :)
 photo IMG_3692_zps2ef4a60c.jpg
it was hazy so the towers were fading in the smog
 photo IMG_3691_zps0819fe6d.jpg
a mandatory tourist shot :))
 photo IMG_3698_zps6c801799.jpg
at the front side of the mall (lovin' my monopod haha)


After fixing up, we're off to the event grounds. We arrived quite late so we didn't catch the Adventure Club. It was R3HAB who was spinning when we came. The highlight of the night was when R3HAB guested Martin Garrix for a quick spin. He gave us a preview of what we should be excited about on day 3. The night was closed by Deadmau5. It was indeed a crazy FMFA Day 1. We've met a lot of fellow Filipinos from all over the world, and new foreign friends from different parts of the world.
 photo IMG_4094_zpsefb9a167.jpg
OOTD
 photo IMG_3706_zps7febf16d.jpg
Girls' OOTD
 photo IMG_4071_zps05c01cd4.jpg
Philippines REPRESENT!
 photo IMG_3715_zps9ac51cca.jpg
met a Filipino guy who's based in HK\
 photo IMG_3724_zps76943184.jpg
woohooo! R3HAB on the decks!
 photo IMG_3756_zps85ea7a99.jpg
a perfect shot indeed :)
 photo IMG_3733_zpsa28c76b0.jpg
so we found more Filipinos in the moshpit
 photo IMG_3732_zps0802cd3d.jpg
couples representin'
 photo IMG_3736_zps66a30fbe.jpg
another artsy effect
 photo IMG_3731_zpsfa5c89de.jpg
my friends just designed their own festival shirts and shades
 photo IMG_3754_zpse6d31eef.jpg
Deadmau5
 photo IMG_3771_zps83bd5961.jpg
FMFA Day 1 DONE!




xoxo,

city girl

Friday, March 28, 2014

Why I Love Shopping in Japan


Japan is my most favorite country to shop at. Yeah, Hong Kong only comes next, and Bangkok comes third. While many think that shopping in Japan is ridiculously expensive, I'm here to be a myth buster. Shopping in Japan could be more expensive than shopping in other Asian countries. However, the technique here is to know where and when to shop in Japan just so you could get a good deal, most especially for signature items.

All of my previous trips in Japan were during Spring; and as far as I can remember, I was able to catch a lot of bargain items due to the changing of the season from Winter to Spring. I remembered shopping a lot from H&M and in Harajuku. Well Shibuya 109 is their fashion center but everything there is just expensive no matter what season it is. The brands there are all local designer brands and those shops really set the trend.

The best time to shop in Japan is from mid-December to mid-January. This is when you see the SALE sign everywhere! One weekend in December, we went to Yatsugatame Resort Outlet (outlet shops of local and foreign brands) and we've gone crazy shopping at Coach Factory where we shopped for an hour. We got 2 wallets, 3 bags, 2 bangles for just 100,000 yen or less (around Php 40,000). The Japanese people are too shopaholic that there are a lot of outlet malls/parks all over Japan. The biggest of which is the Mitsui Outlet Park Shiga Ryuo in Kyoto with 237 stores. The one we went to was the nearest to our place (less than an hour drive), located at 4000 Kobuchizawa-machi (town) Hokuto-shi (city), Yamanashi-ken (province).

 photo 1531807_10152321708351369_544038538_n_zpscc5e50d6.jpg
 photo 1237081_10152321705906369_1629554833_n_zpsb79bf474.jpg


The craziest shopping day is the New Year's Day! Yeah, what a way to spend so much on the first day of the year haha! Every New Year, most of the shops, most especially the local brands are preparing HAPPY BAGS. Each happy bag is filled with an entire set of outfit or multiple random items from a store and it's available on promo price. The usual price of a "happy bag" is 10,000 yen or Php 4,300. But its content is actual worth more than that. However, the catch here is that, you don't know what exact items are inside -- the style, design, color. What you only know is the size and the actual worth of all the items inside. Well, I've seen some that displayed the actual content of the bag but they're more expensive than the surprise ones. I watched in the news that there's this shop wherein a lot of people have already lined up at dawn to get HAPPY BAGS worth 10,000 yen each but are filled with items worth 100,000 yen or Php 43,000. Can you just imagine how awesome of a bargain that is?!? (I actually took photos of the happy bags but I lost them 'cause I failed to sync them to my laptop before deleting them)

 photo ScreenShot2014-03-28at13410AM_zpsdc7c8b90.png

So on New Year's Day, I went shopping in Tokyo with my cousin and aunts and I spent 2 hours in H&M because there were a lot of ridiculously discounted items and a lot of customers as well. I bought 10 items for only 5,000 yen of Php 2,200. That's a mix of dresses, shorts, tops, and skirts. I could've bought more but I limited my spending and my family has been waiting for me for so long at a resto across H&M. haha!

 photo 1383793_10152322637446369_1213746937_n_zps15c948b1.jpg
H&M Harajuku
 photo 1148791_10152322636006369_472084088_n_zps071f6550.jpg
 photo 1920585_10152322635776369_1416481536_n_zps5b0a43d8.jpg
at the roof deck of Tokyu Plaza (Harajuku)
 photo 1959471_10152322638161369_489575187_n_zpse7720cc6.jpg
will never get tired of shopping for bargain finds


In Japan, we live in the province but we're just a minute or two away from boutiques and department stores. I think we go shopping like at least twice a week. On weekends we go to the malls in nearby cities such as the Aeon Mall in Kofu (Yamanashi), Don Quijote (Matsumoto, Nagano), etc. Imagine how much this trip damaged my pocket. But still, I was thankful 'cause I got a lot of free shopping from my aunt, uncle, and cousin.

 photo 1978852_10152322639001369_1786111662_n_zps2ff1ae02.jpg
my cousin is my forever shopping buddy

Friday, March 7, 2014

Hardware Zone Magazine Philippines Holiday Gift Guide 2013/2014

This is a super late post. Sorry, it almost slipped my mind. But hey, better late than never.

Last October, I got invited by Hardware Zone Magazine (HWM) Philippines to be a part of the style team of their Holiday Gift Guide 2013/2014. It's like a catalogue of products (not only gadgets but even apparel) that serves as a source of gift ideas. It was actually out in the market from December 2013 to February 2014.

Our models were Angelia Ong, Ladylyn Riva, and Farah Ramos. And I co-styled the wardrobe and the hair of the models together with Shiela Del Rosario. The shoot coordinator was Darlene Sasan of HWM, and hey, they're all my friends. It seemed like a "barkada" project for us.

The themes were: couch potato, adventurous/explorer, and party animal.

Here are the final output:

 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-2014_zpsb94a7d59.jpg
Lady on the cover wearing Solari Clothing's "Lush" dress
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-20146_zps41a38ed8.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201458_zps0108c9d2.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201470_zpsdea44b4e.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201452_zps9bf40507.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201464_zpse6b0da5b.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201426_zpsc696152f.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201430_zps5ac10d5a.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201420_zps96fa2f91.jpg
 photo HWM-Holiday-Gift-Guide-201416_zps959e2b40.jpg
 photo IMG_2339copy_zps9e93f13d.png
 photo IMG_3664copy_zps7d3d2554.png
 photo IMG_7849copy_zps5edc38a3.png

Here's our team:

 photo 1379331_10151984183751369_1103586964_n_zps9ed5b3ec.jpg


And we're about to work on the HWM Summer Gift Guide 2014. Stay tuned!:)


xoxo,

city girl

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Japanese New Year: Oshogatsu Festival 2014

The New Year celebration in Japan is called the Oshogatsu Festival. It's more solemn and traditional as compared to that of the Philippines, and other Western countries.

For the New Year's eve, we travelled to Tokyo to celebrate it with my Japanese uncle and his mother. But before heading to their house in Tokyo, we stopped by Hachioji to shop for food at Costco. There were so many shoppers getting ready for the NYE.


When we arrived at my uncle's house, we cleaned it up a bit then we headed to the onsen (public bath). There were actually a lot of customers that night. After that, we picked up my cousin and aunt's bestfriend at the bus station and we went to Don Quijote to go shopping. Imagine, it's around 10pm and we're still shopping on NYE.


We all went back to the house and got ready for the NYE dinner (Media Noche in Pinoy culture). We had a very simple NYE dinner. The staple food for NYE dinner in Japan is the soba. After dinner, we headed to the Jindaiji Temple. It's a tradition in Japan to visit shrines/temples on NYE. There were a lot of people lining up to throw coins and pray or make a wish. Surprisingly, I saw a lot of groups of young people at the temple. While some were at the New Year countdown at Shibuya crossing and in some clubs/bars, there were still a long of youngsters who still celebrate the NYE traditionally. 



 photo IMG_1402_zpse2777c8e.jpg
year of the horse
 photo IMG_1401_zpsea2ba788.jpg
wine
 photo IMG_1399_zpsc2395501.jpg
food!
 photo IMG_1404_zpsf273b397.jpg
small temple
 photo IMG_1407_zpse415ff15.jpg
main temple (while we were in line)
 photo IMG_1406_zps6782c0dd.jpg
that's a small fountain
 photo IMG_1328_zps091d25b8.jpg
while waiting for our turn
 photo IMG_1408_zps1d66e9f4.jpg
where people get their omikuji
 photo IMG_1333_zps37fc3557.jpg

The next day, we had brunch. We shared the "osechi", a set of traditional Japanese New Year food in a special box called, "jubako". Each food symbolizes something, such as health, wealth, and good fortune. After brunch, we hit Harajuku area for shopping. New Year's Day shopping is probably the craziest shopping day of the year in Japan. I'll be making a different post about it, as this post focuses on Japanese New Year.


 photo IMG_1409_zpsd95d3cda.jpg

Anyway, the next day, my aunt's friend gave me an "otoshidama" or New Year money, along with an "omikuji", a piece of paper that talks about my fortune. Unfortunately, I got bad fortune, or "kyo". I must get at least a "kichi" or blessing. To reverse the bad fortune, we went to Suwataisha Temple and tied the piece of paper containing bad fortune at the temple. Then I picked a new number. When I got the piece of paper, it read "kichi", or blessing. Finally! Well, you can check Wikipedia on their meanings.


 photo IMG_1504_zps1c276944.jpg
really bad fortune (1st omikuji)
 photo IMG_1450_zps3859ebef.jpg
Suwataisha Temple
 photo IMG_1453_zpsbc97b405.jpg
me and my aunt
 photo IMG_1456_zpsadf23379.jpg
Onbashira
 photo IMG_1459_zps52be0324.jpg
big Japanese drum
 photo IMG_1463_zpsb1150453.jpg
people waiting for their turns to pray
 photo IMG_1466_zps4a1cfd88.jpg
must let go of the bad luck by my first omikuji
 photo IMG_1472_zps1730e543.jpg
getting a number (it's written on a stick)
then there's a corresponding omikuji for the number that I got
 photo IMG_1474_zps500ac009.jpg
 photo IMG_1477_zps4255be9c.jpg
it's their version of holy water
 photo IMG_1479_zps7072b6c7.jpg
the main entrance
 photo IMG_1485_zpsd937e437.jpg
tried it for the first time
 photo IMG_1489_zps51197631.jpg
traditional Japanese house

So that's the traditional Japanese New Year. Far from how I usually celebrate it in the Philippines, but this experience has been really worth it.



xoxo,


city girl