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The first video I saw for Krisia is her cover song for “Simply the best” for Tina Turner. It is just amazing how well she has performed the song. I simply can’t believe that a 9 years old could sing this well. Even after watching all her videos, this video is still by far her best in my opinion. Kirsia Todarova is a Bulgarian child prodigy. She was born in Varna on 1 June 2004. According to Kirisia’s profile on JuniorEuroVision TV, Kirsia Todarova started studying music when she was six years old and is currently studying music at the “Centre for work with Children”. Krisia gained national popularity with her participation in Slavi’s show on bTV on 30 December 2013; Krisia later became part of TV show. On her first public appearance, Krisia performed “Listen” by Beyoncé. The first copy of her video is currently at 14 million views and counting. Here is a “better” copy of the same performance mentioned above: In November 2014 Krisia represented Bulgaria at Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2014 in Malta with her song Planet of the Children.

She finished in second place with a total of 147 points, just twelve points behind winner – Italy.
chandeliers wiganKrisia was subsequently received by president Rosen Plevneliev and was given an honorary distinction.
chandelier autocad 2d Here is the song called “Planet of the Children”
chandelier cervix Finally, here some of my favorite videos out of Kirsia’s many performances Krisia Todorova performing My Heart will go on for Celine Dion Krisia Todorova performing All of me for John Legend Krisia Todorova’s rendition of Dream a little dream of me for Mama CassUsing the service was interrupted due to technical reasons. Please try again later.WIMBERLEY, Texas, June 17, 2016 /PRNewswire/ -- London's premier design and architecture magazine and host of the International Product Design Awards (IPDA), design et al, have shortlisted central Texas artist Jason Lawson for his Crystal Antler Chandelier.

Lawson's chandelier is among a handful of products from around the world to be represented in London during Design Week in September. The IPDA's are among the most prestigious and sought after awards in the luxury goods industry. "The Crystal Antler Chandelier came about as a result of working with a client that wanted a contemporary take on the traditional antler chandelier. I designed and produced the chandelier utilizing hot glass sculpting techniques, as well as, employing cast bronze. The antlers are internally lit with LEDs tucked inside the base. This technology has giving birth to a new era of lighting design. The small size of the light source allows for many applications within fixtures that traditional lighting could never offer. It's a very exciting time to be a part of this industry" - Born in Dallas, in 1973, Lawson began to show an interest in visual art from a young age. Growing up in the suburbs in the eighties, as well as his travels throughout the Southwest and Europe, helped forge the vision for his creative drive.

Discovering the craft of glassblowing changed his life forever. The immediacy of the material, along with the rhythm of the process, harked back to his years of skateboarding. He has now been working in glass and design for close to 20 years. An accomplished glass artist, he has worked on hundreds of projects for hundreds of clients including universities, hospitals and hotels all over the world. As his career pushes forward he finds more and more satisfaction collaborating and working with fellow craftsman to realize timeless designs for the modern era. Residing in the Texas Hill Country, Jason and his team of expert craftsmen coax molten glass into a variety of forms while expert sculptors and metal-smiths are employed to create molds, pour bronzes, patine and assemble all structural elements for each new design. All pieces are made in limited editions, signed and numbered by the artist.In the heart of Helsinki, in the old Kamppi cemetery, also called Vanha kirkkopuisto (Old Church Park) stands the Old Church, completed in 1826.

It is decorated with simple pillars in the Doric style, gables and a delicate bell tower. The movables of the Ulrika Elonora church, which was demolished to make room to the Cathedral, were moved to the wooden church, which was meant to be temporary. Only the pulpit still exists. The Old Church was designed by the creator of the Empire era centre of Helsinki, Carl Ludvig Engel. The church was meant to be temporary when the Ulrika Elonora church at the current Senate Square was condemned to make way for the construction of the city centre. The church, which was funded with the salt duty money granted by the Czar, was completed by Christmas 1826. Movables left over from the auction of the Ulrika Eleonora church were moved to the church, for example, an altar frame, organ, chandelier, benches, and the still used pulpit decorated with gilding. Helsinki Cathedral (earlier also known as St. Nicholas church and Great Cathedral) was already under construction, but was only completed a quarter of a century later.

Due to its temporary nature, the Old Church was built of wood and no bells were acquired for it. Later the bells were been replaced with electric clockwork. The Rococo style flagon (1760) in the Old Church also comes from the Ulrika Eleonora church. The historic articles of the church include a communion cloth embroidered with angels, dating back to the 18th or 19th century. Even restoration has not fully removed some old wine stains from the silk fabric. In place of the altarpiece, there was at first a wooden gilded cross on a sky blue background, designed by Engel. Court painter, Robert Wilhelm Ekman's, work, Jeesus siunaa lapsia (Jesus blessing children) (1846-1848) was originally meant to be the altarpiece of the current Cathedral, but on the orders of the representative of the ruler, it was placed in the Old Church in 1854. The organ of the Ulrika Eleonora church was replaced with an organ made by Per Larsson Åkerman in 1869. It has 32 stops. According to Sakari Topelius, even as late as the 1860s the most notable wedding couples were wed and the most redeemed deceased were buried in the Old Church.

The Old Church is still one of the most popular wedding churches in Helsinki. The Old Church is surrounded by the Old Church Park, which was already a cemetery before the Old Church was built. People began to call it Ruttopuisto (plague park) when victims of the plague epidemic that killed two thirds of the city residents were buried there during the Greater Wrath in 1710. The park gate, designed by Carl Ludvig Engel, includes a memorial plaque of the fatal year. In the north-eastern corner of the cemetery are the crypt of merchant, Johan Sederholm, and monument of H.C. Reuterskiöld, also designed by Engel. The last people buried in the old cemetery were those killed in the occupation of Helsinki in 1919. The Old Church was thoroughly renovated under the supervision of the National Board of Antiquities and Historical Monuments in 1988-1990. The church is used by the Helsinki Cathedral parish. Members of the church can organise a baptism, a wedding or a funeral free of charge in the church.