Thursday, February 2, 2012




Feiris works at the maid cafe "Mayqueen Nyannyan", the same maid cafe that Mayuri works at, and is the most popular waitress there.Her real name is Rumiho Akiha, whose family owns Akihabara, her being the one suggested it become the mecca of moe and anime.Are you interested in Faris Cosplay ?

Thursday, May 19, 2011

P ko Cosplay







The character I like most is P ko!
P ko Cosplay




Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Touhou Project Character Sanae Kotiya


Sanae Kotiya (東風谷 早苗 Kochiya Sanae?, alternate spelling Sanae Kochiya)
Species: Human
Ability: Power to work miracles
Location: Moriya Shrine
Also known as: Deified Human of the Wind
Theme: Faith is for the Transient People

Stage 5 boss and priestess (miko) of the Moriya Shrine. Though she is human, she is Suwako's descendant and has the power to create miracles due to her divine blood. In the past, people began to worship her as a living god due to these miracles, despite the fact that she was the priestess of another god and most of the miracles were her god's. As the outside world changed, though, faith in both Sanae and her god Kanako declined and they chose to move their shrine to Gensokyo. Wanting to gather the faith of Gensokyo's residents, she threatened to close down the Hakurei Shrine, which resulted in a resounding defeat for her and her gods. It was then she understood that she is no longer a living god in this land of miracles, but only a normal human being.

Monday, June 11, 2007

Worldwide Alzheimer's cases to quadruple by 2050

The latest worldwide estimate of Alzheimer's disease prevalence shows that 26.6 million people were living with the disease in 2006, and researchers forecast that the number will quadruple by 2050.

The results were reported at the Second Alzheimer's Association International Conference on Prevention of Dementia in Washington, D.C. held from June 9-12.

Researchers from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health predict that global prevalence of Alzheimer's will quadruple by 2050 to more than 100 million, at which time 1 in 85 people worldwide will be living with the disease.

More than 40 percent of those cases will be in late stage Alzheimer's, requiring a high level of attention equivalent to nursing home care.