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Messages - Geo Holms

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136
Art Gallery / Re: Cartoony Drawings
« on: November 06, 2009, 08:09:17 AM »
Mmm...seems like Virmir is stuck in 'taur at the moment.

*badumTISH*

Sorry.

137
Good 'gates we've been waiting forever for this moment! SHE'S BACK! Ur...well, she's been there...but...well...our guesses have finally been confirmed!

138
Art Gallery / Re: Precipice
« on: October 29, 2009, 08:11:30 PM »
Testing with the inking and coloring in Sai. Tis quite interesting so far. Shall poke it more this weekend. Used kitty for practice. Don't ask about the umbrella.  ]:P


139
Ooo, thanks for asking this stuff Lloyd, it saves me from inquiring the same things.  ]:P I'm usually a casual "ink by paint tool" fellow (and ink by Photoshop's Ink Pen with the mouse) but I shall have to look into this strange land of vector. Either with SAI...or the fancy Illustrator CS4 the college compys happen to have. Been wondering how Virmir got thos fancy (and crispy) lines.

140
Art Gallery / Re: Precipice
« on: October 28, 2009, 02:30:16 PM »
And, since I have this thread just sitting here...I'll just post the recent fruits of that sketch thingamagum here. Thanks fer those that randomly threw suggestions my way. I hope to do this again sometime.


141
Game Room / Re: Earth Eternal Character List!
« on: October 10, 2009, 11:36:54 PM »
Finally got to Level 6.

Trax Northlake - Knight.

142
Random Insanity / Re: In this thread: We make lame threats!
« on: September 30, 2009, 07:15:46 AM »
"I shall torture ye with the fury of a million plush hamsters!"

143
There will be grand adventurous fuzzy swashbuckling hijink on multiple levels of coolness.

Or...is that a given?

144
Writer's Guild / Re: Shades of Cineroargenteus
« on: September 28, 2009, 02:36:06 PM »
Ooo, this actually seems to be something to look into, because it seems you hinge on that nice writing style that is casual and focuses on the wonder of transformation rather than the...well...other sectors of tf fiction (the same reasons I like Virmir's work actually). From the snippets I read in poking about the site, seems like you're on a nice path to some quality fiction endeavors.

So yus, just lending a note of support and best wishes. Looks to be fun  site to follow.  ]:) (and have to add that the website design looks very snazzy and well laid out. Very user friendly and cozy and to the point.)

145
Epic Battle / Re: Epic Battle (comic)
« on: September 21, 2009, 05:28:00 PM »
Oh heck, I wouldn't mind a cameo at all. Any comic that has "death by pie" is auto-win right there...once spent half a podcast ranting about it...ah, pie, certainly is one of the most under-rated of weaponry in this day and age.

Lo, how far we have fallen.

By the way, the sound-effects are quite Amusing.

146
Art Gallery / Re: Precipice
« on: September 14, 2009, 11:54:43 AM »
Long Delayed Thanks. ^^

Ah, in retrospect, should have added the extended edition of this drawing. But you know how it goes.  ]:P
 


As for other drawings that pop up, usually full of odd humor and fuzzy stuff, they be all aboot the ol' deviantArt account.

147
Writer's Guild / Re: The Swoopiness of Ferrets, Genetics and Time
« on: July 03, 2009, 12:38:23 AM »
Posh. Any critique is welcome and I will admit this goes a little over the top in the random quotient to such a point that either the humor just raises a confused brow or causes a slight snicker or two. It's become my habit to use flourished vocabulary and its something I ought to reign in at some point. Yus.

In any case, I'm glad the random humor came through, though this tale did have a deeper meaning under its facade of randomness. Basically its chasing that dream of being in another world but seeing that fantasy world for what it really is. I've thought many times what it would be like to be in another world either of fuzzy creatures or otherwise, but there is still the debate that if I actually left the world and went to that other so-called 'better' world, would it really be any better?

When fantasy becomes reality it turns into just that: reality. You would most likely be lured to dreams of your original life.

Though if a large ferret did appear in front of me with this possibly, I'm not sure I would remember that.

Thanks all around for both the advice and bein' amused.

148
Writer's Guild / The Swoopiness of Ferrets, Genetics and Time
« on: June 24, 2009, 01:27:16 AM »
Meant to put this here a good while ago. Have /also/ meant to read and comment on some of the stories that have been flowing through here. Alas, time is short in summer...or at least my distracted nature is still pullin' me tail. In any case, I've posted this aboot and I thought it might amuse 'ere.

The Swoopiness of Ferrets, Genetics and Time


If something blows your mind enough, there is not a sense of being scared, for there is a limit to being scared. When the level of fear plateaus only a level of wonder remains. Dumb, unadulterated, wonder.

Of course, many get killed in this state so it’s not advised that you enter it often. Running and fleeing don’t help much either. However just standing there while there’s some beast frothing overhead is not to be recommend if you want to breathe just a few more breaths. There is always the chance this will bring a cleaner - aka blunt - end, but why throw naïve, desperate hope out the window?

There is always the faint probability however, that whatever causes this wonder is not consciously capable of causing chaotic carnage. Or if so, they may choose not to bother because that expression on the human face is so gosh darn classic. Some take photos to kill the effect.

Sometimes, those are the most dangerous of all.


The ferret lowered the camera. Wright saw this through a pink haze of inverted colors - the aftermath of the camera’s flash. The word monster does not often accompany the creature jokingly known as a ‘carpet shark’ except in the most mischievous terms. To understand a ferret in general is not easy. A body of sinew, arched back, a plethora of whiskers on a decidedly grizzled maw. Beady eyes alit by an inner predatory instinct of bygone generations. They do not walk anywhere. Ferrets scamper, skitter, slip, slide, romp; they do not walk.

Wright knew this from experience as a pet ferret owner. Discovering that there had been three ferrets in the cage, riddled with chew toys and hammocks, had been the start of the problem. When the third ferret had somehow grown into a five-foot-tall monster, dressed in a loose jean jacket with a flatcap tilted up on his head and no pants, Wright became somewhat concerned. His awe faded and vision returned to normal. The word monster didn’t quite fit. Despite the fact that the ferret had rippled into a larger form, clothes included and camera in paw, it was still in every detail just a ferret. The only exception was that it could stand nose to nose with Wright..

The ferret hung the camera from its neck and proceeded to stretch itself, muscle by muscle. Forelegs - arms, perhaps, Wright decided - hind legs stretched out to crack each part of its spine. It yawned. Wright was reminded of how wicked a ferret’s teeth looked. It took the time to curve its body and carefully smooth out its twitching tail. Finally, its attention turned back to Wright. The whiskered muzzle broke into a grin.

“Hi-o, Wright. How are you on this fine morn?”

Wright still had not moved; not through the transformation, through the flash of the camera, through the systematic stretching. By this point, he failed to see the motivation. Fleeing would do no good now. He figured that if he had gone insane, there was really no point in panicking about it. Even if he had always been curious about straight jackets.

“I’m doing fine.”

The ferret scampered over to the counter populated by remnants of Pop-Tarts, dirty dishes, and debris from last month’s meals. The odd animal movements of the smaller editions remained in this big one, even with the ferret walking on two legs. It reached a paw into the pile, and pulled out a slightly bruised orange. “Mind?” The ferret didn’t wait for an answer but gnawed off a bite of the orange, skin and all. Juice trickled out of the sides of his mouth and dripped off his fuzzy white chin. It took another bite; it was a strange image of reflective debate while chewing. The ferret kept dark eyes on Wright. “Ah, orange. Brilliant fruit. Just one of those things you miss the organicness of. Mostly synthetic now. Well, there, actually. Here, only slight dashes of genetic infringement.” The ferret put the last bite in, licked each of his claws and let his tongue wrap around his muzzle to catch every orangey drop. It closed eyes in relish. “Citrus, how I’ve missed ya.”

It took a final swipe with its tongue, then turned back to Wright. The pet ferret owner was still standing there. “Well. Now that I’m properly replenished after the transfer, allow me to introduce myself … Harper, at your service.” The ferret held forth a paw. Wright thought it was to shake. A little different, but it was so obviously a ferret paw. He could see the five claws, the pink paw pads, the delicate digits, the dark glossy fur. He took the paw. Before he could protest, he was pulled forward and the ferret had nuzzled noses with him.

“ARGGGH!”

It was one thing having a large five foot ferret appear. It was quite another to have that ferret nuzzle noses with him. Wright became aware, after the fact, that the nuzzle had not in itself been scarring in the least. There had been something comforting about being rubbed by the pink nose, ticked by the whiskers, hearing the characteristic ‘d’k’ from the large ferret’s maw. The estranged yell had been some remnant of the first impression; a little reaction that had straightened out, stalled, been lured away by conflicting orders, wandered in the plain of procrastination, then stumbled in at about the same time as the nuzzle. It really couldn’t be helped.

It did startle the ferret however, who stumbled backwards into a chair, over the chair, across the kitchen table - filled with odds and ends of job applications and receipts - and back to the floor, a flipping long body of flailing limbs and tail.

Despite the absurdity, Wright was quick to be at the ferret’s side. “Oh, sorry, sorry, I … I … didn’t expect that. No excuse. So sorry. Anything I can do?”

A peculiar smell filled the air.

The ferret grumbled. “Ah, typical. My glands went off.”

~ 0 ~

Ferret shampoo only did half the job. The other half of the ferret had to make do with berries and cream. The smell of it made Wright choke more than former stench of musk; or perhaps it was a mix of the two. At the least, the ferret seemed appreciative of it after he turned off the shower.

“There’s a certain sensibility in using one’s own tongue to bathe, but to deny the cascade of hot water on the hide … ” The ferret paused to rub himself vigorously with a floral towel. “D’k d’k d’k d’k … sorry.”

The ferret’s whiskers dripped as he grinned down at Wright. The expression to capture his feelings had not quite caught up with Wright. He even had to remind himself to blink. Each time he let himself, the ferret remained. He couldn’t help imagine this fellow attempting to slither into his sweatshirt - though probably only the muzzle would fit, which would add to the odd quizzical nature the ferret naturally possessed.

The ferret placed the towel over his shoulders. It fell off. Ferret shoulders weren’t made for that. “Any questions?”

“Hmm?’

“No, who am I? Where am I from? How am I speaking? Why am I not wearing any form of lower garments?”

“You’re not wearing anything now.”

“Yes, but when I was, I was lacking pants.”

“Was that important?”

“Humans appear to be more attached to their pants. I was uncertain if there were some moral standards that I needed to upkeep.”

Wright would have noticed an absurdity in this conversation if his normal level of absurdity hadn’t been trounced twenty-six minutes ago. He had also given up any hope of encountering a hint of his lost sanity. These were bygone points. He sighed and sank down onto the closed toilet and leaned back against the cool porcelain. Wright watched as the ferret stuck a toothbrush in his ear. He made a vague note that it was his toothbrush.

“Since you’re obviously not going to humor me and play your part in this unusual circumstance, I shall use this ever useful paw puppet.”

“It’s a toilet brush.”

“You’re offending Scrubby.”

“Dook!” Scrubby exclaimed.

“See?”

“Dookdookdook!”

“Why yes, I am a ferret. I come from another world, or rather, from the future world, and, to repeat,  my name is Harper.”

The ferret, Harper, provided the voice the toilet-brush-puppet from the side of his maw.

“Doooook.”

“I know. Isn’t that impressive? I am from a line of intelligent creatures who have developed from the time of humans into an entirely new society and …”

“Dook!”

When a cue card appeared in the ferret’s other paw, Wright decided it would best to accept the delusion for the heck of it. He  interrupted the already absurd speech.

“Why?” Wright asked.

“Ah, now that’s a vague question I don’t think Scrubby would have considered.”

“Dookdook.”

“Shush. Back to the frothy muck from which ye came.”

Wright rose so the ferret could pick up the toilet lid and stuff the brush in. Scrubby produced one more gargled “dook” before falling silent.

“I could give you some spiel about life and death and the shiny bits of technological development. There would ooos and awws and general bemusing debate, but past all that, it’s all pointless.” Harper had draped an arm over Wright’s shoulders, and was practically cheek to cheek with him. The semblance of a personal bubble obviously had no meaning to Harper.

“I can say that the world is a fluid place, full of unfettered possibility that bubbles up with the surface with a click of the claws.” Harper clicked his claw, as if to prove the point. Wright didn’t see anything different.

“I don’t see what you…”

“Behold.”

Wright looked into the bathroom mirror, hung cockeyed above a dripping fauceted sink. A foggy mass stared back. Harper wiped the steamy glass with the back of his paw. Wright went slack jawed. He had more jaw to go slack.

“I have a suggestion of what to say,” Harper whispered. “Come, come, repeat after me. ‘I appear to be an impeccable example of the vulpine persuasion.’”

“I appear to be an impeccable example of the vulpine persuasion.” Wright said, making the large red fox with slightly raggled fur, left ear tilted at an angle and wearing Wright’s clothing, say likewise.

Wright held his paw up in front of his face. The paw was a characteristic dark foxy shade. With claws.

“Urm …”

“There be an entire genetic grimmery. No needs for wires and elixirs. Reality is a gooey mass to be poked and prodded. We have discovered that laws of mass, matter and genetics exist, but are a bit more detached from their prior restrictions. Don’t get me started on the law of gravity …”

Wright was a little distracted by the existence of an extra limb. Rather, an extension of an existing bit that had no function. He curiously rubbed his own tail in non-responsive daze, until Harper noticed. ”…and it’s just a matter of contact points and voilà.” He vaguely felt Harper’s claws dance along his neck, and suddenly the tail was ringed, the paws were decidedly more hand-like and black; the fur was straggled gray.

“Perhaps raccoon would be a better starter species for you. Get ye into the feel of a new body before leaping into carnivorous tendencies. Omnivores are rather mellow.”

Wright rubbed the mask around his eyes. “Better starter species … for what?”

“For insertion into my world, of course. Could be a human shape, but that would just lead to awkward questions and stares and you wouldn’t like that. Plus this brings with it tendrils of instincts that …”

“No.”

The word faded into the steamy clutches of the recent shower.

Still in raccoon form, Wright exited the bathroom.

~ 0 ~

“Why are you lying on the floor?”

“Well, I would have been lying on the back lawn but I assume that the neighbors would call animal control if they saw a massive raccoon sprawled out among the weeds. I decided that carpet would be the best substitute.”

“Ah.”

“However, it would have been just a little bit fun to mess with those animal control guys by use of whipped cream and that old elephant gun that I inherited from my grandpa.”

The large ferret settled down on the carpet next to the raccoon.

“I think the fact that you’re 5’10 would have freaked them out alone,” the ferret observed.

“It’s the details that count, Harper.”

The ferret sighed. Wright could literally smell the confusion rolling off the mustelidae. Wright picked at his teeth. He’d taken the opportunity to have a peanut butter sandwich. His tongue kept licking, not only his inner jaws but all about his muzzle. Odd sensation.

“The world is amazing where I’m from. So many bright and swoopy things. Just a kaleidoscope of oddness smooshed into a fuzzy society.”

“Sounds fun.”

“When the leeways between time and space opened, it only made sense to scamper to and fro. Led by the crystallized trails to imaginative souls; those that dream of a better place. That’s why I’m here, Wright. All those times you looked out at the landscape and saw possibilities you just can’t touch - dreams that you can’t follow. Wouldn’t it be all much better if you could be part of those impossibilities?”

The ferret raised a paw. The ceiling cracked open. Not by means of a bathtub falling through, the light fixture and debris crushing them. No, it wrinkled open; a seam pulled out so that the things Harper talked about could be seen. Creatures mulled about in a world that contained sights that shouldn’t exist, a menagerie of dreams incarnate; close enough to poke.

“Come on, Wright … you know you want to.”

“No,” Wright said. The world sealed itself up. “The mere idea that such a place exists is enough for me. Gives me a new point of view. If I went there, and found it was exactly what I imagined it would be, it would take all the magic away from my heart. And though it would be there to feel and touch and live, I don’t think it would quite be the same. You know how dreams are never as cool if you try to describe them aloud? I think the same would happen if I gave up my life here to become a fox … or a raccoon or …”

“A marmot.”

“… or a marmot in another world. Seems like cheating, really.”

“Not so. There’s also tubes you can slither through.”


Wright made Harper a toasted cheese and bacon sandwich and sent the ferret on his way.

“You’re certain?” Harper said through a full muzzled bite of the sandwich, “The opening is still available.”

Wright, back to his human self, bit his lip. At last he shook his head. “Maybe for a vacation - spring break. If I could be a pine marten, of course. Thanks, Harper.”

The ferret gave a devious bacon-bit grin and saluted. “Sounds good, Wright. Oh, and one more thing, the genetic stuffs. Has some side effects. Don’t be too distraught if you find yourself eating a moldy half of a sauerkraut sandwich from the garbage. That’ll be instinctual remnant.” He turned to leave. Then, ferrety tail twitching, Harper turned back before scampering through the crack of time and space. “And at all costs, avoid hamsters.”

149
Art Gallery / Re: June - Sketch Month!
« on: June 11, 2009, 06:31:54 PM »
 That's utterly awesome, dude. Gotta luff the additional tooth and everything else. ]:) tnx ye.

In other words: ooo, shiny. *scampers forth and gnaws on sketchy*

150
Art Gallery / Re: June - Sketch Month!
« on: June 09, 2009, 01:56:32 PM »
Ah. I know that all too well. I love having a little coffee with my French Vanilla creamer.

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