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Halloween Apps

October 26, 2010 By: Nicky Category: Lead Exchange, Social Networking

lead exchange Halloween Apps To help get you into the spirit this year,  iphones are offering Halloween apps to make the day a little more fun. The apps range from scary to silly and a couple of things in-between. Here are a few of the apps you may want to try out yourself;

Zombie Booth: Take a picture of yourself and see it transformed into a zombie. The app is also 3D, causing your zombie self to look at you as you touch the screen.

True Blood Comics: This app offers 6 different comics based on the HBO series.

Devil Reverse: Lets you take any type of recording from songs to dialogue and plays it in reverse.

SceneIt Horror: Based on the popular SceneIt games, this app is a movie trivia game focused on details of scary/horror movies.

Halloween Postage: This app turns a photo you take into different Halloween-themed post cards.

Enjoy and have a Happy Halloween!

Leadpile Wishes Everyone A Happy Halloween

October 30, 2009 By: Mari Woods Holt Category: Lead Exchange

Ghosts and goblins are out, and kids are getting excited in anticipation for all the treats they are about to receive….. AND Leadpile Lead Marketplace is hoping everyone has a safe and exciting Halloween!
Leadpile wishes everyone a Happy Halloween
A little Halloween history from Wikipedia:
Halloween has origins in the ancient festival known as Samhain (pronounced sow-in or sau-an), which is derived from Old Irish and means roughly “summer’s end”. This was a Gaelic festival celebrated mainly in Ireland and Scotland. However, similar festivals were held by other Celts – for example the festival of Calan Gaeaf (pronounced kalan-geyf) which was held by the ancient Britons.
Snap-Apple Night by Daniel Maclise showing a Halloween party in Blarney, Ireland, in 1832. The young children on the right bob for apples. A couple in the center play a variant, which involves retrieving an apple hanging from a string. The couples at left play divination games.

The festival of Samhain celebrates the end of the “lighter half” of the year and beginning of the “darker half”, and is sometimes regarded as the “Celtic New Year”.

The celebration has some elements of a festival of the dead. The ancient Celts believed that the border between this world and the Otherworld became thin on Samhain, allowing spirits (both harmless and harmful) to pass through. The family’s ancestors were honoured and invited home whilst harmful spirits were warded off. It is believed that the need to ward off harmful spirits led to the wearing of costumes and masks. Their purpose was to disguise oneself as a harmful spirit and thus avoid harm. In Scotland the spirits were impersonated by young men dressed in white with masked, veiled or blackened faces. Samhain was also a time to take stock of food supplies and slaughter livestock for winter stores. Bonfires played a large part in the festivities. All other fires were doused and each home lit their hearth from the bonfire. The bones of slaughtered livestock were cast into its flames. Sometimes two bonfires would be built side-by-side, and people and their livestock would walk between them as a cleansing ritual.