Monday, June 28, 2010

PUBLIC FIGURE: KIMORA LEE



Kimora Lee Hounsou (born Kimora Lee Perkins on May 4, 1975) is an American fashion model, author, and the president and Creative Director for Phat Fashions. Formerly the Creative Director of Baby Phat, Simmons became CEO of Phat Fashions. In 2007 she produces a reality television show, Kimora: Life in the Fab Lane focuses on her life as a mother and CEO of Phat Fashions. She has also appeared in music videos and was a judge on the first season of America's Next Top Model.
Unfortunately all her triumph didn’t come running to her. It certainly shows that all her hard work, sweat, and blood were not in vain. Her ‘fabulosity’ today mirrors the pain and stumbling block she went through in the past. Now she is deliberated as a fashion setup machine 24/7. She had always been a dominant role model to everyone all over the world; ever seem she became a business magnate or perfectly saying ‘an entrepreneur’.
Personally for me; I think she is a very creative person because she ‘sets the trend and not follow the trend’. Besides, she has her own clothing, jewel, and ext. brands furthermore, she’s a brand herself. I personally think that she has all the quality and personality which a creative person should have. She have always want thing to be different and over the top then everyone else. If we follow the radical growth of her; we are able to notice that she always thinks out of the box and sets the fashion trends for others. She would be the first one who implements new stuff. Whatever she does will definitely be extra-ordinary rather than just ordinary.

Her creativity can be easily seen when she’s at the Red Carpet or Vanity Fair or more obvious at her own fashion runway shows. She rapidly turns-up with such a gouges outfit, which is mind-blowing and simply effortless. Her brain can be renamed as a creative detector; where she’s able to see different things, do things differently than others, getting things done her way and whole lot more you can say. For a mogul like Kimora; every solitary thing is possible. There’s no such thing as impossible in her dictionary.
‘Words are more than just words’. Kimora Lee Kounsou is equals to Novelty, Creativity, Innovative and Inventions.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Creative Thinking With Leonardo da Vinci

Leonardo's Legacy
Leonardo Da Vinci left us a code of four principles to stimulate and encourage creative genius:

1. Study the science of art.

2. Study the art of science.

3. Develop all your senses especially your ability to see.

4. Study all the above in the light of the idea that everything connects, in some way, to everything else.

Creative Ability

Creative people are typically at least above average in intelligence, but not necessarily extraordinarily so; other factors are as important as their IQ—especially the ability to visualize, imagine, and make mental transformations. A creative person looks at one thing, and sees modifications, new combination, or new applications. For example, a creative product developer for a candy company, wandering through a supermarket's fruit aisle, will visualize new candy flavors, sizes, shapes and even audiences. A designer of educational software strolling through a video arcade might imagine combining two or three games into an effective drill-and-practice spelling game.

Analogical thinking is central to creativity. The creative person "makes connections" between one situation and another, between the problem at hand and similar situations.

Another important talent for creative problem solving is the ability to think logically while evaluating facts and implementing decisions. Sometimes it is even necessary to “find order in chaos.” For example, a creative supervisor grappling with high absenteeism and turnover might go beyond employees' superficial excuses to discover that the true problem is repetitious, meaningless work, and that the best cure is job rotations, modest profit-sharing, or giving workers a greater understanding of how the task fits into the company and the community.

By,
Dr. Davis, professor of educational psychology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is author of Creativity is Forever (3rd ed., 1992), Kendall/Hunt Publishers, Dubuque, Iowa.