Tuesday 2 June 2015

Natural Hair Dye - Indigo & Henna Powder


Niilas
Natural Hair Color


You are having grey hair, and fear about chemicals(PPD, Ammonia,  Etc) in hair color products available in the Market. We have a good news for you. We introduce a product without chemical, 100% Free Natural hair color from HENNA and INDIGO plants.

HENNA AND INDIGO
Henna leaves powder and Indigo leaves powder are generally considered safe for people. Who are allergic to chemical dyes.
This kit has absolutely no synthetic Dyes of Synthetic Chemical
of any kind. It has only Natural Plant powder
  • NO AMMONIA
  • NO PPD(Para Phenylene Diamine)
  • NO CHEMICALS

TWO STEP DYEING PROCESS
Step : 1 Henna
Mix Henna powder with water to make a paste and keep it in 
room temperature for 8-12 hrs. then apply henna paste on your 
Grey hair and leave if for 2-3hrs, then wash with normal water 
you will get Reddish Brown hair


Step : 2 Indigo(Black)

Next day or same day you can apply indigo.
    Mix Indigo Powder with water to make a paste then immediately 
you have to apply on henna dyed hair, leave it for 2 hrs, then 
wash with normal water. After Oxidation of 6-12hrs. You will 
get soft black hair color.

Note : Do not Use Shampoo for 24-48hrs 
after applying our product.

Review: Demonte Colony is a gripping tale of horror



Director Ajay Gnanamuthu’s Demonte Colony is a crisply written, well executed horror thriller that will keep you glued to the screen, says S Saraswathi.
After a slew of romantic comedies, Tamil cinema seems to have turned to horror films for entertainment. 
Horror liberally laced with comedy has been the biggest attraction, drawing in the family crowd, making the films instant successes. 
However, Ajay Gnanamuthu, a former associate of A R Murgadoss, has chosen to stick to pure horror for his directorial debut, Demonte Colony.
Arulnithi, who was last seen in Chimbu Deven's Oru Kanniyum Moonu Kalavaanikalum, plays the lead. 
The film is inspired by real life events centred around a supposedly haunted colony in Chennai called De Monte Colony. 
For more than a century, this colony at the heart of the city has been deserted owing to the many strange tales surrounding its tragic past.
The colony is supposed to be haunted by its previous owner, a rich Portuguese businessman by the name of De Monte. 
It is believed that De Monte's wife was mentally unstable and his only son died under mysterious circumstances.  Director Ajay adds some salt and spice to these incredible rumours to concoct a gripping tale of horror.
One rainy night, after some heavy drinking and fun at a bar, four friends - Srinivasan (Arulnithi), Vimal (Ramesh Thilak), Raghavan, and Sajith - decide to visit the De Monte Colony for some thrills.
The place is dark, deserted and spooky and after some goofing around, the four return home.
Though the visit seems harmless enough, one of the friends, Raghavan, has an ulterior motive. 
He has knowledge of a unique gold chain with precious stones made by De Monte for his much-loved wife that is believed to be somewhere in the ruins of the colony. 
When he shows the expensive jewellery to his friends the next day, they are stunned. They agree to help him sell it and share the money. 
But De Monte wants his precious possession back.  The thrilling second half is all about whether Srinivasan and his friends can survive.
The film moves at a slow, deliberate pace, keeping you involved with the characters and their predicament throughout.
Arulnithi gives a good performance and Ramesh Thilak adds a tiny bit of humour, but what stands out are the excellent writing skills and narrative technique of the debutant director. 
He is well supported by a superb technical team comprising Santhosh Sivan's assistant Aravind Singh and a stunning background score by popular guitarist Keba Jeremiah.
Almost entirely shot in a single room with no gruesome ghosts or unnecessary build up, the director has skilfully created the eerie atmosphere, with incessant rain, a subtle aura of menace, unsophisticated characters and underlying hint of truth. 
The film is undoubtedly a fine attempt by the debutant director. 
Definitely worth a watch. 

'Masss' Movie Review

Director: Venkat Prabhu
Rating: 2.5/5


Suriya is no do-gooder in the film as he possesses the embodiment of a Venkat Prabhu hero. Then what does he do with Prabhu’s regular Premgi? Suriya and Premgi, for the first couple of minutes, invest their screen time on cheating people (mostly outlaws). The first twist is established when a crippling assignment goes awry. This is where the supernatural element kicks in. The supernatural bits are funny to a point, where even when they get monotonous, the laughs come out naturally. But too many elements used to concoct the screenplay of ‘Massu Engira Masilamani’ puts a dampener on the proceedings.
Somewhere in the middle of the director’s orchard, Suriya finds time to fall in love with Nayanthara, escape death twice, crack jokes with his best friend Premgi and shake a leg to Yuvan’s music. If ‘Mankatha’ had Ajith Kumar playing a villain, who didn’t give a hoot about his persona; in ‘Massu’, Suriya plays a man who transforms from being a cheat to a man of dedication. Suriya’s double role adds to the jingle in the narration. Subtle changes in the facial features of the two roles, played by Suriya, definitely work in the favor of the film.
There’s a fundamental mistake in ‘Massu’ which could have easily been avoided had the team peeked into the screenplay before turning on the camera. There are a handful of dead people whose souls have lost the sense of touch, yet the bunch of lost souls begin to scare the hell out of living people by shaking up the interiors of their houses. In one scene, two ghosts move a chapati roller and in another scene a ghost cannot touch money. This idea wouldn’t have sounded intelligible on the paper itself. How did this angle go up on the screen?
Prabhu’s twists pop out at regular intervals. Nayanthara and Pranitha have just a little more than their names to contribute to the film. Samuthirakani and Parthiban try to do justice to their roles within the squares drawn by the director. Karunas, Sriman and the rest of the ghost gang are funny indeed. While at some places the director takes all the time in the world to draw a few laughs (conversation at the bar); in some places like the ending, it seems rushed.
Though, there are several things happening in the movie, the setup of this supernatural thriller gets shrunken by inches as it tries to play to the gallery, in various places.