Showing posts with label Osuntomi Melendez. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Osuntomi Melendez. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

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*{Kiko Life}* HUGE BOGO Sale on Makeups 021 through 50, & Mens! - We couldn't resist doing it. We're announcing a delicious BOGO sale on makeups 21 - 50 and all our Mens skins! And First Release Makeups 01 - 20 are STILL 40% off. When you make your purchase, we will send you a voucher you can use to redeem product from any skin vendor in our store. If you buy two skins you get two vouchers. If you buy four skins, four vouchers. The vouchers are sent out after your purchase has been confirmed. Random purchasers will get doubled up vouchers. Yes! During the course of the BOGO sale, if you purchase three, four or more skins, you might one of the lovely Kiko Life shoppers who gets a random fatpack card! PLUS your vouchers! So have fun deciding which makeups you want and in which tones... chances are your Ls are going to stretch verrrrry far. Only at the main store: http://slurl.com/secondlife/Kiko%20Life/209/108/1505

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

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*{Kiko Life}* HUGE BOGO Sale on Makeups 021 through 50, & Mens! - We couldn't resist doing it. We're announcing a delicious BOGO sale on makeups 21 - 50 and all our Mens skins! And First Release Makeups 01 - 20 are STILL 40% off. When you make your purchase, we will send you a voucher you can use to redeem product from any skin vendor in our store. If you buy two skins you get two vouchers. If you buy four skins, four vouchers. The vouchers are sent out after your purchase has been confirmed. Random purchasers will get doubled up vouchers. Yes! During the course of the BOGO sale, if you purchase three, four or more skins, you might one of the lovely Kiko Life shoppers who gets a random fatpack card! PLUS your vouchers! So have fun deciding which makeups you want and in which tones... chances are your Ls are going to stretch verrrrry far. Only at the main store: http://slurl.com/secondlife/Kiko%20Life/209/108/1505

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

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*{Kiko Life}* HUGE BOGO Sale on Makeups 021 through 50, & Mens! - We couldn't resist doing it. We're announcing a delicious BOGO sale on makeups 21 - 50 and all our Mens skins! And First Release Makeups 01 - 20 are STILL 40% off. When you make your purchase, we will send you a voucher you can use to redeem product from any skin vendor in our store. If you buy two skins you get two vouchers. If you buy four skins, four vouchers. The vouchers are sent out after your purchase has been confirmed. Random purchasers will get doubled up vouchers. Yes! During the course of the BOGO sale, if you purchase three, four or more skins, you might one of the lovely Kiko Life shoppers who gets a random fatpack card! PLUS your vouchers! So have fun deciding which makeups you want and in which tones... chances are your Ls are going to stretch verrrrry far. Only at the main store: http://slurl.com/secondlife/Kiko%20Life/209/108/1505

Tuesday, October 6, 2009










20 New Makeups, Two New Skin Tones & Five New Basic Options! - Twenty beautiful makeups, in 8 skin tones for best possible match for YOU! Everything from a dark tan, suitable from every avatar, to a rich dark Maple that just conjures the Nubian Queen.

With new default hairbase options and plump, yummy boobs, our packages are some of the best value for money you can find in Second Life.

Our sim is one of the most unique sims devoted to ethnic avatars in SL. We provide not only some of the finest ethnic skins for men and women in Second Life but we've created a a lush upscale environment in which to shop, live, hang out with friends, and enjoy your Second Life. We also boast one of the densest concentrations of high-quality ethnic designers and fashion in SL. This is not your typical urban mall. Looking for elegance class and quality? Walk through the sim! A pleasure to the senses and eyes--you won't regret your stroll.

Join us at
http://slurl.com/secondlife/Kiko%20Life/209/108/1505

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

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20 New Makeups, Two New Skin Tones & Five New Basic Options! - Twenty beautiful makeups, in 8 skin tones for best possible match for YOU! Everything from a dark tan, suitable from every avatar, to a rich dark Maple that just conjures the Nubian Queen.

With new default hairbase options and plump, yummy boobs, our packages are some of the best value for money you can find in Second Life.

Our sim is one of the most unique sims devoted to ethnic avatars in SL. We provide not only some of the finest ethnic skins for men and women in Second Life but we've created a a lush upscale environment in which to shop, live, hang out with friends, and enjoy your Second Life. We also boast one of the densest concentrations of high-quality ethnic designers and fashion in SL. This is not your typical urban mall. Looking for elegance class and quality? Walk through the sim! A pleasure to the senses and eyes--you won't regret your stroll.

Join us at
http://slurl.com/secondlife/Kiko%20Life/209/108/1505

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

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20 New Makeups, Two New Skin Tones & Five New Basic Options! - Twenty beautiful makeups, in 8 skin tones for best possible match for YOU! Everything from a dark tan, suitable from every avatar, to a rich dark Maple that just conjures the Nubian Queen.

With new default hairbase options and plump, yummy boobs, our packages are some of the best value for money you can find in Second Life.

Our sim is one of the most unique sims devoted to ethnic avatars in SL. We provide not only some of the finest ethnic skins for men and women in Second Life but we've created a a lush upscale environment in which to shop, live, hang out with friends, and enjoy your Second Life. We also boast one of the densest concentrations of high-quality ethnic designers and fashion in SL. This is not your typical urban mall. Looking for elegance class and quality? Walk through the sim! A pleasure to the senses and eyes--you won't regret your stroll.

Join us at
http://slurl.com/secondlife/Kiko%20Life/209/108/1505

FROM THE SUITCASE--Oliha Yiwama

Africa! Yes, you probably have surmised it already, it is the birthplace of music. Feet stomping. Hands clapping. Voices heralding both physical and spiritual sounds. And the mulitdue of instruments, marimbas, balofons, flutes, koras, horns, and, of course, drums.

Drums are a universal symbol of Africa. Even the youngest of children associate drums with Africa, as well as they should. Africa has a variety of drums. They can often mimic the languages of many ethnic groups, if the language is tonal.

Nowhere else is this more evident than in Nigeria. In traditional Nigerian groups, drums are played in a ensemble. The ensemble is arranged around the concept of the family: there is a mama drum, a papa drum and a baby drum. The mama drum is usually the biggest drum and has the deepest tone. The papa drum has a higher tone than the mama drum, but is lower than the baby drum, which has the highest of the tones. Each drum is regulated to a particular rhythym, and the entire ensemble is played in a call-and-response manner.

Similar to real life, the mama drum makes the call to the papa and baby drums, and the they must respond to the mama drum with the appropriate rhytym.

The call and response method evolved into many aspects of drumming. One of the most prominent examples is that of Yoruba drumming. Yoruba drumming can be categorized as sacred and secular, for the sake of convenience. However, even in the latter, the feeling of sacred is always lurking in the background.

In Yoruba Orisa worship, the drums are played to invoke different deities. Sacred rhythyms are played to invoke the Orisa on a certain frequency or energy field. It is believed that each Orisa has his or hers own frequency. Once the drummers have reached that energy field through music, the Orisa is brought down to the congregation of worshippers through trance possession. The person possessed then becomes the vehicle of the Orisa. The Orisa speaks of predictions for many of the initiates, while the rhythymic drums are playing.

One of the reasons that drummers are held in such high regard is for that ability. Yoruba drummers usually accomplish this task through the sacred bata drums. The bata drums are played in threes and consist of the iya, baba, and omo drums. The head drummer is called the Olubata, and plays the Iya drum that calls out to the other family members. Through these drums, additional worshipping is accomplished through dancing and singing.

In Africa, drummers are held in high regard for the many services they provide. From sacred to secular situations, drummers provide inspiration. Drummers call the many deities to the initiates, provide announcements and provide entertainment.

Saminaka will be holding an African Festival from Oct 1-4 and will include music that will heavily emphasize drumming. Saminaka wil also provide drumming circles in the near future for those who wish to experience the African drum and participate in a virtual world.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

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20 New Makeups, Two New Skin Tones & Five New Basic Options! - Twenty beautiful makeups, in 8 skin tones for best possible match for YOU! Everything from a dark tan, suitable from every avatar, to a rich dark Maple that just conjures the Nubian Queen.

With new default hairbase options and plump, yummy boobs, our packages are some of the best value for money you can find in Second Life.

Our sim is one of the most unique sims devoted to ethnic avatars in SL. We provide not only some of the finest ethnic skins for men and women in Second Life but we've created a a lush upscale environment in which to shop, live, hang out with friends, and enjoy your Second Life. We also boast one of the densest concentrations of high-quality ethnic designers and fashion in SL. This is not your typical urban mall. Looking for elegance class and quality? Walk through the sim! A pleasure to the senses and eyes--you won't regret your stroll.

Join us at http://slurl.com/secondlife/Kiko%20Life/209/108/1505

Monday, September 7, 2009

***ADVERTISEMENT***










20 New Makeups, Two New Skin Tones & Five New Basic Options! - Twenty beautiful makeups, in 8 skin tones for best possible match for YOU! Everything from a dark tan, suitable from every avatar, to a rich dark Maple that just conjures the Nubian Queen.

With new default hairbase options and plump, yummy boobs, our packages are some of the best value for money you can find in Second Life.

Our sim is one of the most unique sims devoted to ethnic avatars in SL. We provide not only some of the finest ethnic skins for men and women in Second Life but we've created a a lush upscale environment in which to shop, live, hang out with friends, and enjoy your Second Life. We also boast one of the densest concentrations of high-quality ethnic designers and fashion in SL. This is not your typical urban mall. Looking for elegance class and quality? Walk through the sim! A pleasure to the senses and eyes--you won't regret your stroll.

Join us at http://slurl.com/secondlife/Kiko%20Life/209/108/1505

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

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New MAKEUP! 20 new makeups released, with five basic options: black and brown eyebrows, with and without hairbase, and a neutral makeup. YES, FIVE skin options in every makeup pack! Add new cleavage and what you get is one delicious AV!







Monday, August 10, 2009

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New MAKEUP! 20 new makeups released, with five basic options: black and brown eyebrows, with and without hairbase, and a neutral makeup. YES, FIVE skin options in every makeup pack! Add new cleavage and what you get is one delicious AV!



Monday, August 3, 2009

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With immense pleasure we have opened the Kiko Life sim to the general public. Our gorgeous new city, with well laid out streets, pocket parks tucked away in corners, and the stunning density of diasporic designers, offering some of the finest shopping for ethnic avatars in Second Life. This not your typical 'urban' mall. Looking for elegance, class and quality? Walk through the sim! A pleasure to the senses and eye, you won't regret your stroll.

Monday, July 27, 2009

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It is with immense pleasure we have opened the Kiko Life sim to the general public. Our gorgeous new city, with well laid out streets, pocket parks tucked away in corners, and the stunning density of diasporic designers, offering some of the finest shopping for ethnic avatars in Second Life. This not your typical 'urban' mall. Looking for elegance, class and quality? Walk through the sim! A pleasure to the senses and eye, you won't regret your stroll.

Monday, July 20, 2009

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Our massive grid-wide 40% sale is winding down! You know what that means? New sim! New make up! Fabulous new shopping experience. Once we move, all our make ups go back to full price, so be sure to get in on it. Last call ya'll!

Monday, July 13, 2009

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*{Kiko Life}* Massive 40% Off Moving Sale! ALL LOCATIONS!!

We're moving our mainstore, and had so much fun with our 48-hour Fire sale, we're EXTENDING IT BIG TIME! MASSIVE 40% reduction on ALL our skins/makeups, shapes and complete avatar packages for both MEN AND WOMEN @ all our locations! Buy fatpack cards, and get even MORE great deals! Special gift for the person who 'stocks up the most'! :) (You will love it!)

HAWKING IN THE MARKET--SAMINAKA COMMERCIAL NEWS


This past week Saminaka's been concentrating on altruistic ventures. But there are still developments on the commercial front!

***Osuntomi Melendez of Saminaka's Kiko Life, we applaud your progress! Your main store did so well at your homestead that you are about to open a newer and even more splendid version on a full-prim sim! Congratulations! Readers, there will be new skins and further treats ahead at Kiko's!
***Yes, the stalls are still coming up on Saminaka, as are more African men's clothes--next week, perhaps?

***There IS a new commercial venture on Saminaka this week--the bookstore aspect of Slates, Scrolls & Sticks is selling books by Tamsin Barzane, as well as featured Amazon titles

THIS WEEK IN SAMINAKA--JULY 12 to 18

TUESDAY, JULY 13, 6pm SLT. Weekly meeting of Egbe Akowe Writers Group at the new (and probably still unfinished till its Wednesday opening) Slates, Scrolls & Sticks, Saminaka's library cum bookstore. Join the group and receive its missives by hitting the Subscribe-o-Matic (doesn't add to group count) at the meeting location http://slurl.com/secondlife/Saminaka/174/194/30 or the Manatee Lookout Palm Wine Joint on Tarkwa Beach. Critique/sharing the first hour, then writing fun afterwards for the lingerers. Prepare to use BenGay--Acu Watanabe will split your sides with her wisecracking!



WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, 6pm SLT Official opening of States, Scrolls & Sticks, the first African library/bookstore on SL! Nigerian books, SL books, RL books, cozy spots to talk to friends or watch videos about Nigerian culture--oh, yes, eventually other African countries, too. What will the opening entail? Well, maybe even non Writers Group members will receive a coveted, resizable cap textured with a manuscript from the Gambia! http://slurl.com/secondlife/Saminaka/174/194/30



ONGOING UNTIL JULY 19 Saminaka's first photo contest is underway and there's still plenty of time to participate. Take a photo on Saminaka of yourself, a friend, an animal, a bit of landscape, and post it on the photo board. Then invite your friends to come vote for you! The grand prize winner receives 2000L cash, five free skins from Kiko Life, a photo session with spirit Wingtips, and an assortment of other goodies from Saminaka shops. And every photographer who participates gets at least ONE item currently sold for over 200L. So everyone's a winner! Some beautiful photos up--come and see and add your own. At http://slurl.com/secondlife/Saminaka/136/213/28


ONGOING UNTIL JULY 18 The Saminaka booth at the "Show Me the Green" Expo highlights potential cooperation between Africa and the West, as well as plenty of info about sustainable practices and a free T-shirt, as well as specially-priced products: adorable eco shoes, a green cap, a sexxxy bamboo cloth outfit, and a lovely hemp jacket. The Expo has 15 booths extolling sustainability--well worth a visit! Go to http://slurl.com/secondlife/Saminaka/136/213/28


MIDDLE PASSAGE EXPERIENCE heldover at new venue. Because of Treet.TV's interest in the Middle Passage Experience, it is going to be displayed on their grounds for another month. See it or send your friends to this new venue: http://slurl.com/secondlife/Northpoint/71/68/23

Monday, June 29, 2009

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Our Complete Avatar packages are the best value for money in Second Life. In any package purchased you get a shape, a set of eyes, a pair of eyelashes and a collection of manicure/pedicure options and a voucher so you get the exact makeup you want in your favourite tone. We spoil you for choice, since we offer you 180+ skin options in our gorgeous tan and ebony tones and 30 Complete Avatar packages. Demos are always free, and we encourage you to come into any store and try one or all of them out!

Monday, June 22, 2009

THINKING ABOUT THE MIDDLE PASSAGE... Tamsin Barzane

Well, the Middle Passage Experience has been up for a little more than a week now, and this exploration of the African side of the transAtlantic slave trade is making me think. Its visitors are substantial in number, but they can't compare to the treasure hunt that just ended. Those who come often return, but many put themselves on pause, promising they'll do it "later."
Why? It's just too painful! Depersonalizing the slave trade was a convenience for textbook writers, but it also makes life a little easier for all of us by shoving history further into the closet. Who wants to think about the pain their ancestors went through, whether it be the Middle Passage, the Holocaust, the Armenian Massacre, or those who suffered various indignities because of poverty or wrong affiliations throughout the world? It certainly can't be classified as entertainment.
That's what I thought myself a few years ago, when I visited DC's Holocaust Museum. Not entertainment--and why do we human beings put ourselves through associated experiences in real life--and even pay to do so! The Holocaust Museum was so popular that we waited outside for well over an hour to get in, just in order to weep. Well, not just to weep. To feel a deep empathy, a sense of humanity, a tie to the small girl from the Polish ghetto, the skinny bridegroom from Berlin, the sophisticated matron from Budapest. Their photos, their stories--whether humble or dramatic--made history more than history. I was glad we went, despite my initial reluctance. I thought because I knew the history of the Holocaust, had read the books, seen the newsreels, visited sites in Germany and Hungary and Holland, there was no need to visit a museum composed mostly of text and photos. But there was. The building itself--a masterpiece of architecture matching function--gives you the feeling of crowding, of being herded, shuffling in the dark. Your senses, not just your intellect or emotions, get involved. It becomes visceral.

It inspired the Experience, and I hope some of the residual feelings it provided me will also stay with visitors. That, in its small virtual way, it will give a face (albeit partially fictionalized, as far as the African individuals are concerned--but fictionalized along accurate lines) to those who left Africa's shores. That it will give back some of their personalities, circumstances, even the landscapes of the past. Because these were people who came FROM someplace before they reached the United States and other diaspora points. They had families, they were bad-tempered, they were kind, they stole from the market, they created fabulous artworks, they were good cooks and bad laundresses--every possible combination one can think of. They were not faceless masses, but met their fate as we, with our many individual resources and weaknesses, might--or as many Iranians are doing right now.

Their lives didn't begin in the New World. And as such, they faced nearly insurmountable challenges of language, intolerance, strange foods and wicked expectations. Yet they managed, some even triumphing (see Olaudah Equiano upcoming talk below).

I sometimes think about little aspects of their lives. The woman who sadly realized her child could never have a naming ceremony because no one else around her spoke her language. The man who realized in horror his son could not be circumcised like all in his line had been--because there was no one with that expertise. The skilled herbalist who risked being called "witch." The expert warrior who would never again be allowed to touch a weapon. The drummer living under a law where drums were forbidden. The man who knew how to prevent smallpox by rubbing cowpox pus into an incision, because his cattle rearing people had done it for centuries, ridiculed by the ignorant around him. The pretty girl whose torso scarifications marked her as desirable receiving nothing but ridicule and mockery. The woman who wanted to teach her son to honor his ancestors, but could not--since the boy's father was also his owner and would never acknowledge paternity.

We know little about them because we skate away from the pain. Few popularly available sources except for Roots and Sankofa and Amistad have tried to give them a voice, though scholars find out more information day by day--Emory University, in conjunction with Harvard and several other institutions, has created an amazing database of all known ships, their ports, their slaves' origins and names if recorded. See it at: http://http//www.slavevoyages.org/tast/index.faces. As our knowledge of history is ever more tied to public entertainment (as our schools slip into quicksand), we need more novels, more films, more programs that examine the real and fascinating stories of those who wrested a life out of misery.

When building the Experience, I discussed the idea of shackles with Oliha. I didn't want to put them in--he felt I had to. I compromised, and stored them in an optional box on their own, rather than in each character's identity kit. I have never seen any visitors wear them, though Eladrienne Laval did, in character as the Kongo woman Nzinga, and blogged about it to great effect here: http://http//elinsl.blogspot.com/2009/06/remembering-middle-passage.html06/remembering-middle-passage.html
She shot this great photo of herself facing the Porte de Non Retour monument, which I take the liberty of reproducing here. It gave me chills that equaled my reactions to the most critical of photojournalist images. I talked over her article with Osuntomi Melendez, who said, "She echoed my own trepidation. I want to come and do it, but I find it unnerving to contemplate."

Cymindra Deschanel, a Saminaka resident, told me she found the Experience intensely moving. She went through it as Omo, the young Yoruba woman from Nigeria, but would like to go back again and experience the other characters, "just for deeper insight." Some visitors go to every packet, collecting not only the clothing, but the stories. A number of strangers have IMed me and their appreciation, despite the picking of the scab, means a lot. One commented that she had a rl ancestor who was on the first boat to Jamestown; his name, like Nzinga's, spoke to Central African ancestry.

I am going to gather the slide show into a Hippobook for Saminaka's bookstore. And I am going to think about the next experience, which I think may attract more avatars, for it lacks the tragic turn of the Middle Passage--the story of those who returned to Africa in the 19th century, to Liberia, to Sierra Leone, Nigeria and Benin Republic.
The Middle Passage Experience can be viewed through June 30. Do read the notecards in both the beginning and the ending boxes, even if you cannot walk the path of these giants, who had to make sense of the senseless world they were shoved into. We can all profit from their survival, as all of us here in the United States do, as do those in the many lands where their subsequent influence has reached.

My experience of the Experience recalled my reaction to a book title I read a few years ago--something along the lines of "How the Irish Conquered the World." I laughed aloud, for I'm mostly a Celt, and had heard plenty of tales of squelching, squashing and victimhood, in both the old days of the U.S. and the British Isles before that. But then I thought about it--the potato famine's dispersion of the Irish spread their culture (and genes!) around the world.

It applies to the Middle Passage, as well. The worst of incidents, the most heartless and inhuman behavior, the most devastating pain--all these can produce wonders and enormous impact.
Africa is conquering the world, too, though we may not yet realize just how completely its culture has spread and continues to affect and shape us. And as it does, it is those Middle Passage survivors who gaze at us from the world of the ancestors and smile. May we do as well as they in meeting what life metes out, and may they protect us from the worst of possible horrors.

UNDER THE MANGO TREE--Tamsin Barzane

She'd been wheedling for months, throwing free trials my way. And yesterday it built to a head! "Now what you need," said she, "Is a really fly ass makeup to like, set it off--make it POP off!" That was after complimenting my dress, one of my own creations.

Was my skin so very bad? Admittedly it was a freebie, but I'd always been told it was an accidental freebie, launched on SL by a major skin artist, and I had grown attached to it. So attached that I clung to it for nearly three years! I didn't WANT to change--I loved my Tammish self. And yet....I longed for makeup variety. Couldn't she just have a sharper version, for special events? But one that kept her adorable features (based on my own, of course!)?

Yes, Kiko Moleno, alt to Osuntomi Melendez, had caught me at a vulnerable moment. It was Makeover Time! Just like countless preteen slumber parties and Glamour magazines.

She circled me, sizing me up. "Hmmm, Butterscotch." Although my conditioned response to the word "butterscotch" was to start salivating for candy, I already knew Kiko's skins were named as deliciously as they look--toffee, cocoa, tea, caramel--but would they look tasty on me? My alt had already enjoyed many compliments in a Kiko skin....so I bit my lip and clicked!

And was delighted! I was still Tam--I know it's the shape that makes the features, but still was afraid I wouldn't recognize myself. My structural integrity was intact, but my complexion bloomed, my lashes lengthened, I had scads of new looks for new moods!

That's what it's all about for Kiko/Tomi--the freedom to indulge in variations, even if you aren't so shape-shifting you want a new skin every month! The 6 skin tones have 30 makeup possibilities, as well as a choice of black or brown eyebrows. And there's an eyepack, too, and shapes, and..... "A woman without options is a slave," Kiko declared.

After my frenzy of trying one makeup after another--some subtle and natural, others dramatic for parties, or bright and professional, a Goth/fantasy or two slipped in--I settled in to ask some questions of the creator.

The rl Kiko/Tomi first wanted to be an anthropologist surrounded by dirt and dusty tomes, but she was steered into writing at about age 18. She rapidly became an accomplished columnist, writer, web publisher and businesswoman, working in both the West Indies and London. Her forays into this world forced her to conquer graphics, and her legacy--mom is a painter, dad was a sculptor--had already familiarized her with color and form.

But skins are no piece of cake--unless, perhaps, you label a tone "Devil's Food Cake." Despite familiarity with Photoshop and a good eye, the transition took time. But it was a mission.

Kiko/Tomi had been on SL since 2006 and wasn't happy with the skin tones being produced for the diaspora. Many looked lifeless, probably because their makers never paid close enough attention to the undertones and the rainbow of shades in the diaspora. She started by trying Elo Elliot's templates, spending three weeks working on her first set, with nary a salvagable skin to show for her labors.

She didn't like the shapes either--nor the end results of tinted European faces on bodies that sometimes had booming bosoms and buttocks, but lacked reality or subtlety. Beginning with shapes, she decided to launch Kiko Life to market them in March 2009. Thirty shapes are now available. As we were talking, a customer gushed about a recent purchase: "Just bought Zaila shape - I love it, I've never looked so good!"

Skins were still getting under her skin, however, despite the shapes' success. More improved versions were showing up on the market, but not with the exact look she sought. Plus, she knew how many possibilities were possible. "How on earth could a redbone, red haired child like me grow up in the Caribbean--BARBADOS of all places--and NOT be conscious of skin tones?" So, it was back to the drawing board, fired up and ready to paint after two months of stalled frustration.

Things flowed! But the computer crashed and her new files were lost. Undaunted (she is a heroine, after all!), her zeal glued her to her seat and she started yet again. Now a new skin takes a few hours. The makeup is available suited to every tone; all the skins sell well, and makeups 04, 16, and 27 are particularly popular. Some additional ones are in the works.

She does some photosourcing, but blends that with her own handpainting for a fantastic and original result, beautifully highlighted and shaded. I particularly like the makeups with little eye doodads, which Kiko said had mostly featured in fae and other less worldly skins elsewhere on SL. Not socko-pow like Mike Tyson's neo-Maori facial tattoo, they are delicate and sexy, making you wish you had a personal maid to paint one over the crow's feet each morning (oh, I'm not talking about MYSELF, you understand!).

The male skins are particularly welcome, along with less hulking musclebound shapes than those dominating SL. (Oliha is a Kiko, and gets constant compliments.) Kiko says of the male skins, "They were less fun because they were like waaaayyyy harder. The muscle. And with the men the shapes and proportions are a lot larger than women, so [the skins] needed to accommodate a lot of stretching."

Kiko/Tomi has big plans--the sim will expand, and so will her product lines. Besides her main store, she usually has about 15 satellites (Saminaka included!). It's now looking as if thisingle mom might make a rl living at sl, Photoshopping as her son happily pulverizes his Fruit Loops. Part of it the brand's success is due to her marketing skills, as well as the excellence of her products. She does her own photos and ads, and uses her group effectively to give out freebies and trials.

Her website, http://www.kikolife.com/index.php?option=com_wordpress&Itemid=106, proclaims on its banner "How to look great in minutes, not months," and she is ultrakind to noobies who have lots to learn.

So some hints on the upcoming items? Well, some new shades, some new men's shapes, and some new products--I promised mum's the word on the last, but they are very exciting directions! And I'm trying to get her to promise and do some African scarifications exclusively for the Saminaka store...

See more of the skins on Kiko/Tomi's Flickr site: http://www.flickr.com/groups/1030431@N21/

Enough of writing--I must change my makeup and be off to troll the clubs, picking up hapless men in my new improved self. Kiko had the last word: "I dunno Tam. You look like you--but more you than I've ever seen you. I will BITE you if I see that old skin again--EVER!" She won't--and nobody better try to take the Butterscotch away from this baby!