(Historical Notes: Okay, I don’t blame Past Me for getting bored with putting disclaimer text on top of EVERY page, but dropping the act completely isn’t a good idea either. This is NOT a continuation of the previous scene, even[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…
Posts Tagged Alphonse
(Historical Notes: Why is Tabitha keeping her mouth out of sight? What possible dialog could she have to say in this situation? Anyway, this is the end of this particular stretch of un-themed-but-mostly-Caligari-related Incentives. Up next comes what is honestly[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…
(Historical Notes: Alphonse equals Schroeder. Also, that snippet of music up top is from Claude Debussy’s “Claire de lune,” a version of which just so happens to be on his character soundtrack that patron got a link to way back[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…
(Historical Notes: Another event that more or less wound up happening for real in the comics a while down the line. And it’s really really weird when I can somehow find a way to even draw STILEZ looking too skinny.)
(Historical Notes: Another really cute picture where I’m all distracted by some minor artistic quibble. Normally I complain that one of the kids looks too small in comparison to one of the other characters because I lazily drew them according[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…
(Historical Notes: This one really should have come BEFORE the pop-up book one, not after. You’d almost think I was just making these up as I went along or something.)
(Historical Notes: No, seriously, they DOMINATED these things for a while. And yeah, Alphonse is very much early to bed and early to rise, while Bridget opperates on what could charitably be referred to as “cartoonist time.”)
(Historical Notes: Yeah, we are deep into the era when the Caligari family just straight up OWNED the Incentives, aren’t we? I like the idea of this one a lot, even if the details of the pose kind of got[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…
(Historical Notes: Pretty sure the comment for this one was “Why do we even HAVE this book?” Incidentally, I think I read, like, three or four pop-up books in my entire childhood, yet there’s still something intrinsically funny to me[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…