Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Sneak peek
Friday, January 23, 2009
Mt Kinabalu
Something that tickled me and I had never noticed before, is that Aaron eats his rice by using his knife to pile it to the back of a fork. Then he eats it. Super cute.
Sunday, January 18, 2009
Ni Hao from Singapore!
* Meeting Natalie on my plane ride from Tokyo to Singapore. Talked about Etsy and certain big name bloggers for an hour or so. So hilarious. I mean, two etsians sitting next to each other on the plane. She was super awesome and we exchanged details!
*Lost my bf at the airport (my plane was delayed and he thought my plane was at another terminal). Paged him. No answer. After a 2 hour game of cat and mouse chase, at 4.30am, I finally arrived to the hotel and he was there. What a way to kick start the holiday!
*Met up with my NZ friend Joy for a jazz night in the arab town of Singapore. It was awesome to be able to go to a local hang out and the keyboard chick was insanely creative with her music.
*Singapore zoo was filled with so many cute creatures! Aaron had a field day with his camera. We took photos with orangutans, they're so freaking cute. Did you know one adult orangutan has the strength of 9 adult human males? Polar bears are show offs, sloths and bats get along really well together and there are snakes in the bio dome! Butterflies still scare the living day lights out of me. I mean, those things are so eratic and urgh,everytime I see them, my first instinct is to bring my shoulders up to my head. Yuk.
*Aaron actually enjoyed Durian ice cream. If you do not know what a Durian is, oh, you should totally click here and if you can, find one at your asian supermarket and.. try it out. I love it but it is definitely an acquired taste!
We leave for Sabah, Borneo tomorrow and I should get back into bed, there's a kiwi in my bed.
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Um, I lied
It doesn't get any more romantic than patina and cream. The Hastings Necklace is now available at Muntedkowhai.
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Ladies, a munted review:

Ladies, you also need one. It is subtly, oh so subtly shimmery. (Note, not 1997 shimmery) It is moisturizing, NOT gooey and has awesome names like Beetroot and Thyme bud. I got thyme bud. Priced at $14.50 a tube, it is a bit on the expensive side but ... eee! No gooey lip shine!
Aveda products are available in most Dosha spa stores in Portland.
It is 10.28pm and for the past hour or so I had been a flurry of picking up, finding and packing my things into my suitcase. Remembering all my medications, mountain gear, electrical adaptors, hotel infos, presents, chargers and odds and ends. I nearly forgot my unmentionables! They were the last to go in. I think my head may implode.. or explode.. whichever one happens first.
It is so surreal to think I'll see Aaron tomorrow, I'm so happy and excited!! I get to hug and kiss him. If you're able to hug and kiss your sig other, don't take it for granted. Sometimes I forget what he looks like and I have to close my eyes shut and imagine his face from an incident that makes me smile. There, a sprinkle of his eyes and a turn of his smile, my brain is able to conjure his face again. It is a sad thing to forget what his hugs and kisses are like. So hug him, hug him close and close your eyes.
I'm signing off for now! I will be bringing my laptop with my, so will be able to upload a photo here and there to tease all of you still in winter time. Keep in touch and stay healthy, warm and happy! See you in a few weeks!!
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
In bed






Which one is your favourite? Mine is the first photograph with the old man. Look, he has a pair of wooden clogs!
Monday, January 12, 2009
Single in the city
This is my friend, Jeff Grillo. He's a local Portlander and ladies, he is S.I.N.G.L.E. That's right. How can such a fine specimen that has a job, showers and likes to smile (alot) be single? It is beyond Jeff and so he and a few other of his single friends made a video for a competition. If they win the Homeaway blog contest, they'll win a trip to Europe and what better place to shed their single status or at least escape the reality of singleness with bottles of French wine?!Please watch the hilarious video and vote for my friend Jeff. I'd like to point out that Jeff is the mullet guy and the "talk your ear off" guy. Jeff, you look great in polymer mullet.
The instructions to vote is super easy:
1. To vote visit: http://blog.homeaway.com/node/95
2. Click on “View the full post here to vote”. Above the YouTube video (very top of the page) you will see a spot to enter your email address.
3. You will receive an email from HomeAway Blog Contest asking you to confirm your vote. Please click the link in that email to confirm your entry.
The deadline to send Jeff off to chase European girls is Jan 15th! Get voting people!
Sunday, January 11, 2009
Now onto packing...
Saturday, January 10, 2009
Uniform Troll
Thursday, January 08, 2009
My immune system is kicking my butt
Also, I have heard from two people already that Malaria pills give you crazy dreams. I like crazy dreams. Awesome!
Wednesday, January 07, 2009
Muntedkowhai at MODAMUSE




Whiiiiiiiiiiiiit!
In the first episode where Whitney asks a friend " I just don't know why Alex would want to get into my business" (ok so that is not word for word), I so wanted her friend to say " Because he wants to be on MTV!!!!" Also, Jay's position on the L word only says alot about his past experience and current feelings for Whitney.
Rules of engagement on dating such as waiting how many days to call, how many months till you should say I love you is ridiculous. Having said that, it probably does take the average person around 2-3 months of dating to get to know the partner enough to know if they've crossed the border of infatuation and love. However, I would be quite taken back if someone dropped the L bomb two weeks into dating. Maybe I'm not very romantic at all but I can't see myself saying those words in a span of 2 weeks. I most definitely would not have gathered enough signals to equate to 3 months worth of getting to know someone. That being said, one couple's three months can equal to another couple's 2 weeks. It all depends on how the couples connect. In the context of J and W, it just seems that he hasn't met that person where he breaks the rules of engagement. It's kinda like me when I was 21. I said, I'm not having any kids, ew kids, I'm going to adopt. Oh boy, only 6 years down the track and now I have changed my story. The moral is, things change and time will change it for you.
Wait this is deeper than any The City rant should be. Sorry.. and stuff.
Also, I like how Olivia has nothing better to do than create a position of new yorking Whitney.
Tuesday, January 06, 2009
My boyfriend rawks
Monday, January 05, 2009
It's been a while...
I finally finished my a wholesale order from Singapore the other night so now I can get back to track to creating new designs. I've been experimenting with different types of chains and I'm in love with the thick copper chains as of late. The second last necklace is a piece I have had in my mind for a while but I am not sure about how it is executed. It is crochet cable pattern but it does not show up too well as cable when crochet with nylon cords. These new necklaces are not yet available on Etsy but should be up later this week. Happy Monday everyone!
Saturday, January 03, 2009
12 more days:
Chinese, Tiffany, Scientist, Awkard
"Go to back to school. Then you'll learn some English and understand what I'm saying."
A man said this to me the other day, with absolutely no provocation.
I’ve been spoiling for a fight ever since. Normally I can ignore the “Ni hao” and the “Can you speak Asian?” (I’m sorry, no, but do you speak Caucasian?) and the times my best friend’s boyfriend would call me flat-chested and say “I smell spring rolls— oh wait no, it’s just Cass here.”
Rolling with my friends’ ethnic jokes? I can do that. Sometimes. But right now I’m fighting a sugar hangover and hating on the heteronormative paradigm, and there’s too much cranky in my system to play nice. The next bigot who incorrectly assumes I’m an international student, and therefore easy prey, will find me getting ghetto Asian gangster on their ass. And then I’ll correct their grammar."
I immigrated to NZ from HK when I was 7 years old. I was fairly young and growing up in NZ, I was always aware of my skin colour. I'm talking about the type of awareness that caves into a sense of inferiority and a total downsize on the old self esteem. Looking back, I can't contribute these feelings to the racial tension because as a child, I was insanely shy and insecure to begin with and to be honset, I find it hard to remember any specific racial incidents that made me feel this way. I moved with my family to Oregon when I was 17 and I did my undergrad there for 4 years and worked for another and it was here, in the States that I shed my shyness, grabbed a bit of the american assertiveness (a good thing for me) and quickly became unaware of my race in a way that once impedded me. To you, this might sound bad, to forget that you're what ever ethnicity you are but to me, it is not all black and white. To me, I am not forgetting that I'm chinese. I know fully who I am but being chinese should not take over who I am. I'm not sure if readers can relate and that is fine if you can't but it is hard for me to judge how far I need to explain myself.
I never knew how much I've changed in Oregon until I moved back to NZ for my Masters degree. It was a double culture shock. There is something about NZ that I can not explain. It is as if I've acquired a bit of my old insecurity and my new self is battling with the old. I am again, aware of my race and my outgoing side has been sucker punched in the face, twice. The social contrast is so big that now I thought of how I never felt a racial divide on my own part when I was in Oregon. I was Tiffany, loud, scientist and Chinese. Now, I saw myself as Chinese, Tiffany, Scientist, awkward. Some times I'd like to think it's all me but I can't help to think the environment affects me. It does. It totally does. Don't get me wrong, my kiwi friends are insanely awesome and I love them to death but you do have to make more of an effort to become friends than you would in my American experience. An american friend of mine, whom I met in NZ was working in the same city I was living in. He has since moved back to Portland as well and we talked about this very topic. To my relief, it was not just me. He's an American caucasian and he said that it was so difficult for him to make any friends, he found NZers to be more conservative socially despite them being "friendly". I agreed with him and sometimes think that people would think that we're crazy for contradicting ourselves in one whole sentence.
Whilst in Dunedin, NZ, I recieved two different types of bigotry. One was the outright "Go home you asians!" screams out of driving cars, the usual bottle throwings, the pumping of the gas to threaten to run you over when you're legally walking across the street. The other is more subtle, it has good intentions but is not considered PC. This type irks me but the good intentions over ride their narrow mindedness. These type of irks include " Your english is good!", "Konnichiwa!" (This one can be used in the outright way, of which I have experienced) and "Hooow doo youu like Newww Zealand?". The latter sent me crying to a bathroom. My last two year stints in NZ has made me come to terms with the fact that there will always be a small percentage of people that are like this, even though I have not encountered such experiences in Oregon, it does not mean they do not exsist. I'm lucky enough to have experienced both sides to know not to be bitter, scared or angry. (I am sometimes but not for long, for it is not I with the small capacity to accept diversity) It also makes me so very thank ful for all the lovely friends that I have made in NZ that proves to me that my new self is still very much intact.
This concludes this month's heavy post.
Friday, January 02, 2009
Friday's Navy blues and blacks
Double tasking: Camwhoring and brushing my teeth. Talent? Mostly God's gift.
It's Friday and when the holiday hits, all the days are blurred and it doesn't really feel like anything in particular. I have an experiment to finish and analyze so my urges to stay at home and finish a wholesale order is being suppressed.
P.S Yes, I'm wearing my Diesel boots for the third day in a row. Oh gosh, how I love you so.
Meatloaf on served Doilies
Thursday, January 01, 2009
Munted Musers
From top left to right: Yawn brooch, I Do wedding bands (when asked by priest if you do, you could just do what the teenagers of Captain Planet do, look at each other, right arm extended with I Do rings facing upward and go "I DO!" and the priest will go "Captain Planet, he's our hero.." Sorry totally off track, WOW brooch and a giggle necklace.


























