Category Archives: Internet

Fandom

cosplayAs an anime fan and cosplayer, my year revolves around one major event: Ohayocon.  I have attended this convention six times now, and each year I come back home afterwards with my geekiness in full force (and my suitcase loaded with merchandise).  This year was no exception.  Back in January 2012, right on the heels of the last con, I decided on a new cosplay–Asellus from the video game SaGa Frontier–and got started.

I had an entire year to prepare for the con, but I still found myself working on my costume every spare minute I had until the night before I left for Columbus.  As I patterned and sewed my outfit, I found myself delving into other forms of arts and crafts to finish the job:  polymer clay-working and jewelry-making techniques for my accessories, and embroidery for the decorative blue stitching on my sleeves.  I even considered learning how to knit in order to make my black and white stockings!  (I ran out of time, but hey, there’s always next year!) I borrowed piles of library books as I worked to try and figure out the best way to make each piece, and I am still looking through each one for hints on future projects.

Through my experiences and talking with other fans, I learned that for many of us, loving something doesn’t stop at just watching the series, reading the books or playing the video games.  We create fanfiction or fanart to complement our favorite stories and characters, and cosplayers like me have picked up more than just a needle and thread to complete our costumes.  Thanks to the Internet, I have stumbled across other ways to show your love for a series, where people have used their skills in music, cooking, even mixing drinks, to make tie-ins for them.  My favorite of these is Final Fantasy Recipes, a blog dedicated to dishes inspired by the Final Fantasy video games.  Even if you’re unfamiliar with the series, I highly recommend giving some of the recipes a try!  Each one I’ve tried has been fun to make and turned out great.  As for me, I’ve most enjoyed looking through the Final Fantasy 9 recipes and imagining what it would be like to stop by the pub in Lindblum for lunch, or to dine with the nobles in Treno.

So, no matter what you like or how you’d like to show it, the sky’s the limit!  Try googling your favorite series and see what other people have been inspired to do with it, and maybe you’ll want to create something all your own.

Here’s some other titles with geeky themes, and check out our lists of anime and manga.  For more themed recipes, try looking through some of our literary cookbooks.

 

 

 

SYNC YA Literature into Your Earphones

2 Free Audiobook Downloads Each Week until August 17, 2011

Teens and other readers of Young Adult Literature will have the opportunity to listen to bestselling titles and required reading classics this summer.   Each week  from June 23 – August 17, 2011, SYNC will offer two free audiobook downloads.  Your downloads are yours to keep and will not expire.

The audiobook pairings will include a popular YA title and a classic that connects with the YA title’s theme and is likely to show up on a student’s summer reading list.  For example, Joseph Delaney’s The Last Apprentice: Revenge of the Witch, the first book in a popular series featuring a teen whose job is to protect ordinary folk from “ghouls, boggarts, and all manner of wicked beasties,” will be paired with the monster-slaying epic poem, Beowulf.

To find out when you can download titles to listen to on the run this summer, visit www.AudiobookSync.com or text syncya to 25827

SYNC Titles, Summer 2011

7/14/11-7/20/11
The Last Apprentice: Revenge of the Witch
by Joseph Delaney
Beowulf
by Francis B. Gummere [Trans.]

7/21/11-7/27/11
Chanda’s Secrets by Allan Stratton
Tess of the D’Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy

7/28/11-8/3/11
Ashes, Ashes by Jo Treggiari
Rescue: Stories of Survival From Land and Sea by Dorcas S. Miller [Ed.]

8/4/11-8/10/11
Immortal by Gillian Shields
Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë

8/11/11-8/17/11
Storm Runners by Roland Smith
The Cay by Theodore Taylor