Life style
Saying ‘I do’ in the time of Covid-19

Weddings have become just one of the heart breaking events now with social distancing and weddings without much glitz and glamour. For many couples December is a romantic month to get married with all the the p araphernalia of flowers,candles,confetti and others.Ramani Fernando talks about the “new normal’ in the post-covid world if you were just about to walk down the aisle?
by Zanita Careem
When you’re newly engaged and contemplating what month to have your wedding. December exactly the first month that comes to mind. December generally means holidays celebrations, food and family time. But if you love all the things that make this month so special, that precisely why most people consider getting married in December.
The ‘New Normal’ for celebrating weddings in the post covid world will be difficult with social distancing becoming the norm, weddings will be smaller, more intimate with emphasis on top notch hygiene standards. The coronavirus outbreak has brought the wedding industry to a screeching halt. Now we see intimate weddings, no grandeur with no great spending.
The preparations had begun early this year for 29 old Danushka. A long guest list, multiple functions and an exotic honeymoon. But however when Sri Lanka imposed pandemic lockdowns, everything was brought to a grinding halt. Things were beyond our control echoed Danushka’s family. It was our first marriage in our family and we wanted all our friends and relations to be invited.His story is not alone, in Sri Lanka many wedding ceremonies suffered a major jolt due to the pandemic, which was witnessed a massive increase. But amidst the pandemic people are either cancelling postponing or having small gatherings.
With all uncertainty, still there are some weddings taking place in an informal manner. Five -star wedding, flower decors, beautiful thrones, rich wedding dresses, photographers and well known beauticians are still the norm of certain families. Regarding weddings I spoke to Ramani Fernando, the popular hairdresser and make -up artist who has the credit of dressing many brides in Colombo and suburbs. This is what she had to say about thier weddings , make-up and safety measures.
Ramani said ‘We have requests from many brides this month for appointments Most families are interested in planning their weddings on a grander scale and curious to know about the bridal details.
Q: In weddings,brides of any race and religion, glamour is an integral part of any bride’s dream, hair and make up is done at a closer contact? What are your guidelines to safeguard in such situation.
A: Needless to say we are taking every possible precautions to make sure the bride and bridal party feel safe, during the process of dressing. I ensure the bride and the safety of my client to the maximum We have some guidelines drawn up for the safety of our client and the staff.
Q: Could you elaborate on the safety guidelines?
A: We first check the temperature, sanitise and then prepare the client for the service.
Q: Make up is important for brides to enhanced the bridal look. How do you deal with the bride, to do the colour make -up. hairstyles and other fine details.
We try to use as much as possible disposables and advise our brides to bring in their own make up if possible. We also sanitise all our brushes and sponges and keep the place clean and tidy.
Q: What are some of the risk factors faced by you?
A: We are on high alert and everything is done with the masks, adhering to rules and regulations
Brides want to look beautiful and feel their best on their great day. It does not mean you should bid adieu to make up, because of Covid-19 It is necessary for a bride to look extra beautiful, on this special day and get the wedding pictures captured.
Q: As an experienced beautician how would you envisage a simple make up if a bride desire during this time.
A: The minimalist wedding make up has been the trend this year.
I always love to choose a style that fits the bride’s personality, truly reflecting the most beautiful version at the same time, giving a natural look,Some of the brides are radiant with heavily worked masks. this is a new trend, followed by many brides at many brides, The eyes can do the talking with fluttering lashes.
Q: What are your safety precautions?
A: Staff with cold, sore-throats. cough and fever are not allowed to come to the salon.
Q: How do you face the risk factors?
A: Our salons are very vigilant about sanitation and infection practices Aside from following strict cleaning and disinfecting protocols regulated by the authorities , hygiene and sanitation are our top priority. I am committed to continually evaluate the sanitary conditions and see what must be done to meet the needs of the bride and and bride’s party
Every single staff member sanitizes themselves before entering the salon.
All staff have to wear (PPE)- Personal Protective Equipment.
Disinfect the entire salon immediately after opening – using a suitable detergent. (includes equipment, surfaces etc.)
Clients must be informed that they cannot crowd the salon
Only clients with the appointment should be allowed into the salon.
Everybody must wear a face mask.
All clients must be checked for temperature, sanitized and taken in.
After every service, make sure everything used is disinfected before the next client is taken in.
Q What do you do with the months you can’t plan and prepare the way you expected
A I take each day as it comes, things are so unpredictable during this pandemic and its been a very rough ride. But I take up all the challenges in good stride
Q As a makeup artist, for me there is no concept working from home. When dressing a bride, I had to stand in very close proximity to clients. How do you tackle this?
I always ensure that I am wearing my PPE as it is impossible to maintain one meter distance while doing someone’s and makeup. I make sure that I and my wash my hands and sanitizer as much as possible.
Q The sanitation practices and guidelines you adopt when it comes to bride’s makeup.? A Few Top Sanitation Practices
NEVER put lashes on a client if they have been worn by another person. You cannot sanitize eyelashes.
Never double dip.
Always use disposable sponges and mascara wands.
Sanitize everything with 70% Isopropyl Alcohol.
If you have EVER double dipped into a product, throw it away to play it safe.
Use disposable brushes or clients if you can’t properly sanitize between clients.
Carry hand sanitizer in your kit. Wash your hands with soap and water between clients. This is more effective than using hand sanitizer only.
Never use lipstick from the tube on clients. Scrape a bit with your spatula onto a palette and use a brush or disposable lip brushes.
Some brides have realised an intimate affair is all they ever wanted, sometimes. As Danuksha puts it: “I don’t think I would’ve had it any other way. At the end of the day, it’s about you and the person you love. The rest doesn’t matter.” It seems, in 2020, the old-adage remains true: bigger isn’t always better.
Life style
Sri Lanka Eye Donation Society gifts sight to the world

Founded by the late Dr. Hudson Silva, the Sri Lanka Eye Donation Society (SLEDS) which is nearing 65 years is the first of its kind in the world to provide corneas completely free of charge to locals as well as foreigners through its International Eye Bank. Among the donors of eyes are several Presidents and Prime Ministers of the country. The other affiliated bodies of SLEDS are the Dr. Hudson Silva Memorial Eye Hospital and the Human Tissue Bank which provide a yeoman service to the public.
BY RANDIMA ATTYGALLE
At age 18, Eranga Madushan’s future looked bleak with keratoconus (a disorder of the eye that results in progressive thinning of the cornea) claiming both his eyes. Thanks to his physician’s recommendation for a corneal transplant, Eranga was fortunate to have received suitable corneas from the Eye Bank of the Sri Lanka Eye Donation Society which were successfully transplanted at the Kandy National Hospital.
Now 22-years old, this young man from Minipe has successfully finished his education and is employed. “I even passed the vision test and got my driving license – all made possible thanks to the noble service of the Sri Lanka Eye Donation Society,” says Eranga.
His is one of thousands of such success stories. These exemplify the thought-provoking discourse of Sivi Jathaka story delivered by the Buddha when, in one of his Bodhisathva’s births, he gave away his eyes to a blind beggar. There cannot be a better living testimony to this concept of dana than the Sri Lanka Eye Donation Society (SLEDS), now approaching 65 years.
Giving life to a dead eye
In 1958 Hudson Silva, a medical student started a campaign under the banner, ‘Give life to a dead eye,’ to popularize the donation of eyes after death to obtain corneas for the Colombo Eye Hospital which had long waiting lists for eye replacements but without sufficient donors. Eyes at this point were obtained only from those who died without custodians in hospitals and homes for the elders and executed prisoners.
With the help of newspaper articles and public meetings, Hudson Silva’s campaign continued. By 1961, he had qualified and appointed a resident surgeon at the Colombo Eye Hospital. SLEDS got underway officially in a very small scale on June 11, 1961 at Dr. Silva’s Ward Place home in Colombo. Among the 40 founding members of the Society was Dr. Silva’s mother who pledged her eyes to be donated after death. When she died shortly thereafter, he himself grafted her corneas on the eyes of a poor farmer and thereby restored his sight. In 1965, Prime Minister Dudley Senanayake presiding at the official opening of the International Eye Bank, pledged his eyes after death. After his demise in 1973, his wishes were fulfilled.
With the objective of extending this service to foreigners awaiting eye replacements, Dr. Silva started connecting with senior eye surgeons from various parts of the world. In 1964 he dispatched his first eyes overseas – flying three set of donor eyes packed in dry ice to Singapore’s Government General Hospital. Thus commenced the country’s international eye donations on a Vesak Poya Day when five Singaporeans regained their sight.
Following the wide media coverage this attracted the world over, SLEDS was able to open its doors to the entire world. In the late 70s, on government-donated land on Vidya Mawatha in Colombo 7, SLEDS’ headquarters along with its Eye Bank were relocated and the present building was built with the help of Japanese funds. It was opened by the then Prime Minister R. Premadasa in 1984.

President William Gopallawa at the event of donating the the land at Vidya Mawatha, Colombo to set up SLEDS
Global demand
Globally, at least 2.2 billion people have a near or distance vision impairment, according to the WHO statistics. In at least one billion of these, vision impairment could have been prevented or is yet to be addressed. The leading causes of vision impairment and blindness at a global level are refractive errors and cataracts.Vision impairment, according to the WHO, poses an enormous global financial burden, with the annual global cost of productivity losses estimated to be US$ 411 billion.
The demand for corneal transplants (keratoplasty) is on the rise with increasing prevalence of eye diseases and the rising elderly population. “Global statistics indicate that over 12.5 million people worldwide are waiting for corneal transplants. We are committed to bridge this gap every year by donating corneas and to date our International Eye Bank had donated 95,151 corneas to foreigners from 57 countries. In addition, nearly 60,000 locals including many soldiers injured in combat, have received corneas,” says the Senior Manager of the SLEDS’ International Eye Bank, J.S. Matara Arachchi.
Donor registration
Having ‘grown’ with the institution since he was recruited in 1979 by the founder himself, Matara Arachchi says that the Eye Bank has decentralized its operations today with 150 branches island-wide enabling more people to become potential donors. The online consent registration facility is also available now on the SLEDS website. “We see an overwhelming interest among youth registering themselves with us to donate their eyes which is very encouraging,” says the official noting that many Sri Lanka Presidents and Prime Ministers have donated their eyes. “A cornea taken from President J.R. Jayewardene was split in two and grafted on to two Japanese patients and his other cornea was grafted onto a local patient,” he says.
Potential donors need to be excluded from certain diseases for them to be eligible donors. Apart from registered donors, corneas from the dead are also donated by surviving family members. The youngest such donor was a four-year-old whose parents offered to donate their deceased child’s eyes to help another regain vision.
Harvesting of the eye needs to be done within four hours of a person’s death and the cornea itself has to be used on a patient within 14 days explains Matara Arachchi. “We hardly have any corneas left beyond the shelf life given the big demand for them. In case any are not grafted, they are often used to practice surgery and research purposes.” Donation of eyes does not cause any disfiguration to a body of a deceased, says the official who reiterates that the process enables the donor to look natural.
Preserving a single cornea cost about USD 300- 450 says the official. Corneas are donated to patients operated in both the state and private hospitals without discrimination. The institution, he says, is run on donations made by individuals and organizations. “Although we do not charge foreign recipients, many of them come forward to assist the institutions as means of expessing goodwill and appreciation.”
Free eye care
The eye hospital founded by Dr. Hudson Silva in 1992 at the Vidya Mawatha premises, was named in his honour after his death. It is committed to make eye care available to local patients at an affordable price aligned with the vision of its founder. The hospital is equipped with a fully-fledged operating theatre and an OPD with state-of-the-art equipment. Dr. M.H.S Cassim, a former consultant at the National Eye Hospital serves as the Medical Director of the SLEDS and Dr. Shamintha Amaratunge serves as consultant surgeon. “The hospital performs nearly 1,200 cataract surgeries per year and the patients are provided with lenses completely free of charge. In addition, we also provide spectacles to needy people,” says the Eye Hospital’s Manager, H.D.A.J Abhayawardena.
He adds that island-wide eye camps at village and school level are conducted by them to make eye care more accessible to people. The contact lenses laboratory is another ambitious initiative of the SLEDS which is planning to expand its work says Abhayawardena. “With the help of Japanese technology, we set up our own production plant to manufacture contact lenses locally- the first of its kind here at home. This venture can save a lot of money spent on imported lenses.”
Human Tissue Bank
Following the passing of the Human Tissue Transplantation Act in 1987, Dr. Hudson Silva succeeded in establishing the Human Tissue Bank of SLEDS in 1996 enabling Lankans to donate human tissue and limbs in addition to the eyes. “Only people under 70 who are free of certain diseases are eligible to donate tissue and limbs after death and we need to obtain the tissue within 12 hours of a person’s death,” says the Manager of the Tissue Bank, T.B Prabath.
Many orthopedic, plastic, cardiac, neuro, eye and maxillo-facial surgeons have successfully grafted these tissues. During the time of the war, many in armed forces have benefited from the Tissue Bank, says Prabath. “There is an overwhelming demand for tissues for patients involved in motor traffic accidents and those who have sustained burn injuries,” says Prabath urging more people to come forward to pledge their support.
Fashion
Mythical Ceylon Collection by CHARINI

By Zanita Careem
CHARINI is a well-known brand renowned for its bold yet elegant statement designs and unique concepts. This season,popular designer CHARINI will be presenting a collection that gives Sri Lankan traditional art a contemporary twist, bringing the mythical creatures of Sri Lankan history to life, beautified with floral elements from ancient paintings.
Each element has been meticulously hand-drawn with intricate details, staying true to the rich heritage of Sri Lankan artistry. These hand-drawn illustrations have then been carefully transformed into artworks, which are printed onto fabric to seamlessly blend tradition with modern design. This fusion of craftsmanship and innovation brings a unique depth to each piece in the collection. This is… the Mythical Ceylon Collection by CHARINI.’’
Life style
Experience a memorable Iftar at Sheraton Kosgoda Turtle Beach Resort

This Holy Month, Sheraton Kosgoda Turtle Beach Resort invites guests to gather in the spirit of Ramadan and indulge in a sumptuous Iftar dinner buffet at S Kitchen, during this month of Ramazan said a press release.
The release said to begin the evening, guests can break their fast with a thoughtfully curated selection, including dates, kanji or soup, dry fruits, and a choice of four refreshing beverages. Light hot appetizers such as samosas, spring rolls, fish rolls, fish buns, mini pizzas, cutlets, mini hot dogs, and satays, along with fresh salads and assorted sandwiches, ensure a nourishing start to the meal.
Following the breaking of fast, guests can then indulge in a lavish Iftar dinner buffet, featuring a rich international spread crafted by our culinary team. From Middle Eastern delights to Sri Lankan specialties and a variety of global flavors.
The Iftar dinner buffet also offers a special promotion, where when you ‘Reserve For Five, One Dines Free’, making it the perfect way to celebrate together with family and friends.
At Sheraton Kosgoda Turtle Beach Resort one can enjoy a truly heartwarming Iftar experience, blending tradition, community, and world-class cuisine in an elegant setting said the release.
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