Die gute Tat wird oft falsch verstanden...
A spontanous idea resulting in this pencil sketch about a lizard guy, who has been tied up and gagged and then a strange creature resembling an anthro whale comes by. The whale only want to free the captive, but the captive thinks, he is now going to be eaten.
Category Artwork (Traditional) / Bondage
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1412 x 1027px
File Size 447.8 kB
Oooohh, the lines do imply steam or fire, in general heat! Since I haven't fully woken up but am awake for the most part - uuuhhhh...it...it looked like a cartoony footprint with the lizard in the middle, with the tongue cartoonishly sticking out...
But I did in fact put together that is is not that, it's a fire-roasted lizard on a stick! Too many lines of varying lengths and waves, everything needed to see it is not a footprint!
But I did in fact put together that is is not that, it's a fire-roasted lizard on a stick! Too many lines of varying lengths and waves, everything needed to see it is not a footprint!
Not sure if you’ve ever seen Klaus, but it’s sort of a novel retelling of the Father Christmas mythos.
To sum up the scene as briefly as I can while still giving you context, Jesper (who has reluctantly taken up the position of postmaster for the town of Smeerensburg- tasked with posting six thousand letters within a year lest he be disinherited) has happened upon the titular Klaus chopping wood in a nearby clearing. Since their previous encounters had been on a less than auspicious footing (Jesper had previously been trespassing in Klaus’s workshop on one of his attempts to get a letter delivered, and after finding a note from one of the local boys, Klaus pressured Jesper into helping deliver a wooden toy to said child’s house- which involved getting past some traps and a rather savage guard dog- long story involving two feuding clans), Jesper’s understandably on edge, and so when Klaus brusquely hands him a length of rope that just happens to end in a loop, the poor lad comes to the conclusion that the massively-framed woodsman intends to string him up. Imagine his relief and embarrassment when Klaus retrieves the rope from him, fixes it to a birdhouse he’d finished whittling (latest of a long line he’d crafted in memory of his late wife), and tosses it over the tree branch.
To sum up the scene as briefly as I can while still giving you context, Jesper (who has reluctantly taken up the position of postmaster for the town of Smeerensburg- tasked with posting six thousand letters within a year lest he be disinherited) has happened upon the titular Klaus chopping wood in a nearby clearing. Since their previous encounters had been on a less than auspicious footing (Jesper had previously been trespassing in Klaus’s workshop on one of his attempts to get a letter delivered, and after finding a note from one of the local boys, Klaus pressured Jesper into helping deliver a wooden toy to said child’s house- which involved getting past some traps and a rather savage guard dog- long story involving two feuding clans), Jesper’s understandably on edge, and so when Klaus brusquely hands him a length of rope that just happens to end in a loop, the poor lad comes to the conclusion that the massively-framed woodsman intends to string him up. Imagine his relief and embarrassment when Klaus retrieves the rope from him, fixes it to a birdhouse he’d finished whittling (latest of a long line he’d crafted in memory of his late wife), and tosses it over the tree branch.
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