"THE BLACKER THE BERRY THE SWEETER THE JUICE/
I SAY THE DARKER THE FLESH,THEN THE DEEPER THE ROOTS!"
TUPAC SAYS

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY SUPREME!

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY SUPREME!

"BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL" -NEW YORK CITY STREET SAYING

"BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL!
BROWN IS HIP,
PUERTO RICAN IS OKAY
BUT white AIN'T S___T!"

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY OOO!

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY OOO!

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY OOO!

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY OOO!

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY SUPREME

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY SUPREME
BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY SUPREME!

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY SUPREME

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY SUPREME

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY

Search This Blog

Pages

WE MUST HAVE A BLACK STANDARD OF BEAUTY BASED ON THE BLACK SKINNED BLACKEST WOMAN

Monday, November 24, 2014

BLACK PEOPLE! -LA TASHA CARR'S IMAGE OF BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY ON FACEBOOK!

BLACK PEOPLE!-BLACK MEN LIKE MENELIK CHARLES APPRECIATED OUR BLACK SKINNED BEAUTIES-QUEENS OF ALL THE WORLD'S BEAUTY!--"THE BLACK WOMAN'S FACE..."-FROM MENELIK CHARLES ON FACEBOOK

from MENELIK CHARLES ON FACEBOOK


The Black woman's face...
How does one say 'wow' with one's mouth agape? How does one say 'damn' when what one sees is blessed?
My point?
Many Black women are so beautiful, so erotically provocative...and so aesthetically removed from matters unclean... one can almost imagine them shitting sugar, and pissing orange juice!
Consider this...
So much emphasis is placed on the bouncy butts and buff bodies of Black women, and this is perfectly understandable. But what of Black women's faces? Yes, we do speak of its beauty.
But what other race of women could so easily illicit penile erections just by looking into their faces alone?
None.
Black women's typically sultry, come-hither, eyes, cock-teasing lips, and variety of alluring skin tones, pretty much confirms that God was having some seriously sexual thoughts when constructing these magnificent specimens
I'm just saying....

COPYRIGHT MENELIK CHARLES,2014

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

YORUBAS!- JOSEPH FAGBOLA INTRODUCES US TO POLYGAMY WITH KING SUNNY ADE AS AN EXAMPLE!-FROM FACEBOOK ATI NAIJA..COM

FROM FACEBOOK-JOSEPH FAGBOLA
SUNNY ADS ALAYA REKETE (REPETE).
I can't resist looking at the colorful pictures of King Sunny Ade and his many wives , not only because the pictures are fascinating and entertaining, but also because they remind me of my late father, Joseph Agbola Fagbola who had 6 wives and 10 concubines. That was the vogue up till the late 1950s and even early 1960s. It was a way of measuring success, and a life well-spent. Ijesa people will refer to a man with so many wives as 'ALAYA REKETE' (REPETE). This has only become inelegant in the face of improved healthcare with reduced infant mortality rate, as well as our stagnant economy with its attendant human misery of galloping inflation, skyrocketing unemployment, moral decadence and spiritual withering. But with people like Sunny Ade who is in the showmanship business, lewd and lascivious, as well as hedonistic living are all part of the trade mark of that type of occupation. An eloquent testimony to this could be found in the high velocity of divorce rate in Hollywood and Nollywood. The rate of divorce in those places is vivid in the thrilling and exciting novels of Jackie Collins, such as HOLLYWOOD DIVORCES, HOLLYWOOD WIVES-The New Generation Lethal Seduction, etc
I believe the pictures have not shown all ladies with whom Sunny Ads has relationship. Of course reference is made to all the ladies paraded here as official ones. It is like making reference to late Simbiat, late Kudirat, Bisi and Doyin as official wives of late business-mogul and ace politician, M K O Abiola. There are hundreds of other ones bearing his name today. I happen to know that the first wife of Sunny Ade, Abike (knee Akeredolu-Ale), is not shown in the pictures under reference. She and 3 of her brothers-Prof Ekundayo, Tunji, and Yomi-were my schoolmates at the Bishop Oluwole Memorial School (BOMS), Agege in the early 1950s.
Sunny Ade has not disclosed the number of his kids. This is either because the number is explosive and mind-boggling or because in Yoruba tradition 'a ki i is omo f'olomo' meaning we are forbidden from counting the number of children
SUNNY ADE ride on please!
77777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777

FROM NAIJA.COM


Photos: Meet King Sunny Ade's 7 'Official' Wives

Not many know that Nigerian musician, singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and pioneer of modern world music, King Sunny Ade has about seven ‘official’ wives.
KSA
The 68-year-old Osogbo born musician who can be classed as one of the most influential musicians of all time recently made it known that he doesn’t even know how many children he has but has decided to stop having them. This is evident, because all these ‘official’ wives have children for the Ondo-state royal blood.
sunny_kingKingSunnyAde-stargist
With insinuations that he has other wives who can be referred to as ‘unofficial’, the internationally relevant musician whose real names are Sunday Adeniyi can be said to still be in the age-long culture of polygamy.
King Sunny Ade’s musical sound has evolved from the early days. His career began with Moses Olaiya’s Federal Rhythm Dandies, a highlife band. He left to form a new band, The Green Spots, in 1967. Over the years, for various reasons ranging from changes in his music to business concerns, Sunny Adé’s band changed its name several times, first to African Beats and then to Golden Mercury.






He has worked with foreign music stars and has gained an unquestionable ground internationally. Here are photos of the ace musician’s seven ‘official’ wives:
wives KSA10
Meanwhile, at the beginning of another round of tour of the United States and Canada, Sunny Adé was appointed a visiting professor of music at the Obafemi Awolowo University Ile-Ife. In July the same year King Sunny Adé was inducted into the Afropop Hall of Fame, at the Brooklyn African Festival in the United States. He dedicated the award to the recently deceased Michael Jackson.
Follow NAIJ.COM on Twitter!
JiJi.ng – Sell phones, cars, clothes, furniture to real people
Write review and get real money – Tips.naij.com

BLACK PEOPLE!-YORUBAS!---BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY NIKE DAVIES-OKUNDAYE IS SAVING ADIRE FROM EXTINCTION IN YORUBALAND!-FROM OKAYAFRICA.COM

T

FROM OKAYAFRICA.COM

Inside The Yoruba Textile Art Of Adire With Chief Nike Davies-Okundaye

BLACK SKINNED BEAUTY NIKE!
Chief Nike Davies-Okundaye is one of Nigeria’s most renowned visual artists and cultural icons. Born in Ogidi, Kogi State, to an artistic family with a long history of textile craftsmanship, the 63-year-old designer and painter spurred the contemporary revival of traditional textile production in Nigeria. Each piece over the span of Davies-Okundaye’s four-decade career has been imbued with her keen eye for dynamic composition and her vivid imagination which draws heavily on themes from both Yoruba folklore and her own life experiences.
In addition to her work as a cultural preservationist, Davies-Okudaye is a social entrepreneur, philanthropist and artistic matriarch. Since 1983, she has established museums, vocational arts training institutions, and textile design centers in Nigeria. Her work is currently on display in a retrospective at London’s Gallery of African Art(through November 22nd). Okayafrica caught up with Davies-Okundaye at her workshop and cultural center in Osogbo, Nigeria, where she shared a few thoughts with us on Yoruba textile design and her work in the revitalization of the genre. Read the full Q&A below and click through the gallery above for a preview of the London exhibition and photos from our trip to Osogbo.
Okayafrica: Where does your process come from, traditionally and historically?
Nike Davies-Okundaye: Batik is a process which can be found all over the world. In Nigeria, traditionally, we practiced ‘Adire’ with cassava paste. I discovered batik by accident; while lighting a candle the melted wax fell on the adire eleko I was working on.  After dyeing the fabric, I discovered the color was bright and I started to experiment from there.
OKA: How are you involved in keeping these traditional practices alive?
NDE: I have a workshop in Osogbo where people can train free of charge. I also have another workshop in Kogi where they practice traditional weaving and adire. At our Lagos branch we have school children, companies or just groups of friends that book sessions to learn the different textile processes. I try to keep the textile alive not only through batik and adire but by incorporating the textile patterns as part of my paintings. We have a lot of part and full time students from all over Nigeria from who come to the workshops to learn batik, reverse applique, quilting, embroidery and painting.
OKA: Why do you believe it’s important to do so? 
NDE: Our culture is dying off with young people no longer interested in learning and preserving culture and heritage. I’m passionate about preserving this culture and I do that through my arts and paintings. I also organize free workshops to teach young people how to make adire. Moreover, our cloths are the closest items to our skins and by extension to us which is why I try to use the Adire cloth to ensure that our culture and art is always around and with us. [Nowadays] young people are beginning to find traditional designs trendy, and are using them to make amazing designs from shoes, cloths, bags , earrings, bangles etc.
Chief-Nike-Davies-Okundaye-adire-patterns-yoruba-textile-art
Davies-Okundaye also provided us with this handy stylesheet outlining some popular Adire patterns and meanings
OKA: Can you tell us some of the meanings of the various Yoruba symbols from the Adire cloth – you use them in your paintings as well. For example, one looks like a spiral, one is the “talking drum”, and then there are flowers, the net or wire,etc?
NDE: Cowries represents money. It also represents power. Money is seen as a symbol of power. Our culture reveres and respects individuals who have money and these individuals seem to have automatic power over those who don’t have as much as they do. Cassava leaves in the design represent life, and the talking drum isthe constellation of tradition.
OKA: Can you explain the basic processes for creating the batik-style T-shirts?*
NDE: Each one-of-a-kind batik shirt is created by heating wax on a hot plate, then applying the melted wax with a foam sponge on the shirts into the design of choice. Once the wax resist outline is completed, the shirts are immersed for 3-5 minutes into large pots containing natural dyes mixed with hydrosolvent and caustic soda. The process is then repeated until the desired effect is achieved.
*Shirts and scarves, crafted by Osogbo workshop leader Yomi Tiamiyu using traditional Yoruba methods are part of the Okayafrica Adire Collection. These one-of-a-kind items are walking, wearable art and come in highly limited quantities. Purchasebatik shirts and indigo scarves in our online store.

COMMENTS

- See more at: http://www.okayafrica.com/news/chief-nike-davies-adire-yoruba-textile-art/#slide1