Halloween 2019 Theme ~ Pop Funko #8

Gage and Church, from Pet Sematary, plus my nosey cat, form the eighth post of my Halloween 2019 Pop Funko theme. I used the garlands of hop I harvested from our garden for Halloween decorations as a background for the pic.


"Sometimes dead is better"



Halloween 2019 Theme ~ Pop Funko #7

Billy, from the Saw movie franchise. I had to warn my cat never to play with him lol!


Sooshing the pwscat away from danger, I managed to rig up the following shot of the evil puppet for my continuing Halloween Pop Funko theme:

"I want to play a game."

Halloween 2019 Theme ~ Pop Funko #6

The Seer, the mytical and scary soothsayer from Vikings, part of my Halloween 2019 Pop Funko project:
"And so it has come to pass. The future foretold. The dark raven,
the eagle, and the wolf have laid bare the bones of corpses.
Here is the story of the world. Make what use of it you can."

Sunday CatchUp

With an afternoon to spare, I managed to catch up with with writing schedule today. I am happy to report that the final draft of Chapters One and Two of Berserk! have now been completed. :)




My youngest cat concluding the days's writing
schedule by sitting on my work book

Raindrops and Sunshine on My Writing Shed Door

Halloween 2019 Theme ~ Pop Funko #5b

Managed to rustle this image up whilst the cats were distracted with some Dreamies lol:

"The power of Christ compels you!"


Halloween 2019 Theme ~ Pop Funko #5a

As I hinted in this post the other day, my cats seldom let me take any photographs in the house without wanting to get in on the act. This afternoon, the pair of furry rascals made me fail miserably in getting a scary shot of my Regan (The Exorcist) Pop Funko this afternoon:


Strangely, I also found out that they love the taste of mushy peas lol:



I will try again tomorrow...

Halloween 2019 Theme ~ Pop Funko #4

I used my autumn-themed woodland nitelite holder as the background for this photograph of the demonic goat, Black Phillip, from the fantastic movie The Witch:

"Wouldst thou like to live deliciously?"

Berserk! Draft 3. Deadline in Jeopardy :(

Working on the third and final draft of Berserk! Looking at the number of changes I have made to just the second page of text (all the handwriting on the left page are amendments additional to the scrawling changes I have made on the right hand typed page!), I am starting to wonder if I will miss my December 31 publication date deadline :(


Halloween 2019 Theme ~ Pop Funko #3

Continuing this month's Pop Funko Halloween theme, today it's the turn of this creepy duo to make an appearance:

Psycho Norman Bates with his creator, Alrefed Hitchcock
"We all go a little mad sometimes."

Halloween 2019 Theme ~ Pop Funko #2

Second up for my Halloween 2019 Pop Funko themed project is The Invisible Man!

"I shall kill you even if you hide in the deepest cave of the Earth.
At ten o'clock tomorrow night, I will kill you!"

And, as usual, my youngest and nosiest cat just had to check out what I was doing lol:


"What the hell are you doing photographing toys!"

Halloween 2019 Theme ~ Pop Funko #1

Well, October is now well and truly upon us. And to celebrate the month of Halloween I thought I would post some photographs of my horror Pop Funkos :) To kick things off, here a few images of my Pin Head Hellraiser Pop Funko:

"The box. You opened it. I came. Now you must come
with me, taste my pleasures"

"I have such sights to show you!"

"I'll tear your soul apart!"

"This isn't for your eyes"

Berserk! Cracking On With Draft 3


Lengthening Shadows

The lengthening of the shadows are really starting to be noticeable as Autumn tightens its grip:


Gower ~ Fading Light #12

Arthur's Stone, Cefn Bryn:

Gower ~ Fading Light #11

Broad Pool, Cefn Bryn:

Gower ~ Fading Light #10

High tide on the salt marshes of Penclawdd:

Gower ~ Fading Light #9

Rhossili Bay and Worm's Head

Gower ~ Fading Light #8

Part of my Fading Light project, this image of a fisherman at sunset was captured at Broughton Bay:

Gower ~ Fading Light #7

A puddle in a car park overlooking the Burry Estuary, Penclawdd:

Gower ~ Fading Light #6

Storm over the Bristol Channel, photographed from Penmaen:


Gower ~ Fading Light #5

Horton

Gower ~ Fading Light #4

The bare bones of the Helvetia shipwreck, which ran aground on the sands of Rhossili Bay in November 1887 (part of my Fading Light photography project):

Gower ~ Fading Light #3

A teepee standing proud on the northern shores of Llanmadoc on the Gower Peninsula. Part of my Fading Light series of photographs:

Gower ~ Fading Light #2

Another image from my forthcoming photography book - Gower ~ Fading Light, featuring Rhossili Bay and Worm's Head

Gower - Fading Light #1

I love this set of two photographs, taken atop of Rhossili Cliffs, looking towards Worm's Head. This atmospheric diptych will appear in a forthcoming photography book, entitled Gower ~ Fading Light:



Reading... 1984

Christmas Ghost Story 2020. Draft 1. Chapter One.

Getting a few more words down on my 2020 Christmas ghost story...



Running Like Clockwork

Spent the morning in the writing shed trying to fix the clock there. Managed to get the mechanism to work again :) and to put the thing back together. The chimes were a quarter of an hour out but thanks to Youtube, I've sussed out how to fix that too :) Just a matter of letting time pass now and rejigging the pendulum so the thing runs precisely like clockwork (lol).


Also did a bit of a clean in the shed then, and gave the door a fresh lick of paint, under the dutiful eye of my youngest cat.


Time

My next writing shed task is to fix this grandmother clock!

Reading...

Pinnochio

This book has been with me since the day I was born and has followed me from house to house ever since:


This particular edition of The Adventures of Pinocchio was published in 1961 and originally belonged to my uncle, who lived in the same family home as myself at the time. And despite being in a pretty grim state after all these years, the book remains one of my most treasured possessions. That said...

The original version of The Adventures of Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi is far removed from the tale told in Walt Disney's re-imagining of the story. It is a far darker beast and this edition of the book really used to give me the creeps. For starters, it is illustrated with some pretty macabre-looking drawings. Take the cover of the book for instance. Just who, or what, is that sinister silhouette watching proceedings from beneath the archway?

A creepy something or other watches the macabre wood-spirit
take the form of a free-walking marionette.
If anything, the black and white illustrations withing the covers of the book appeared even more eerie:

A grizzled, threadbare old man, looking like he is a 120 years
old, decides to help a mischievous wood spirit by carving the
wood it haunts into a marionette. In the picture above, the
guy even teaches the thing to walk!
The plot of the book runs like a folk horror classing - having discovered that a plain-looking piece of wood is inhabited by a rather belligerent wood-spirit, an aged and extremely poor woodcarver, Gepetto, decides to animate the creature by carving the wood into a marionette! Why would anyone in their right mind do such a thing?

Whilst the artwork in this particular edition of Pinocchio is creepy, the actual text itself is hardly designed to give children happy dreams. Remember good old Jiminy Crickket from the Walt Disney version of Pinocchio? Well, in the original text, it doesn't take very long for Pinocchio to take offence at the creature, and to actually kill the cricket!

Pinochio kills the cricket!
Of course, this being a supposedly children's book, children, or strange spirits disguising themselves as human children, must be punished for naughty behaviour. And Collodi makes certain that Pinocchio gets his fair share of suffering for his continued antagonistic behaviour. For example, check out this instance of sadistic retribution meted out to him:

burning feet text

In his story of Pinocchio, Collodi wanted to show that children should be good at all times and to always do what their parents expected of them. If they were naughty, they should expect severe punishment and misfortune in return. Collodi therefor inflicted this rather grim retribution on his character:



This was how Collodi originally ended his children's tale, which Pinocchio swinging dead from a noose in a severe gale!

Pinocchio was originally published in serial form in an Italian children's magazine in 1881. Its editor, not to mention its readers, were none too pleased with this dark denouement to the tale and demanded a happier fate for the puppet who wanted to be a real boy. And so, a few months after Pinocchio's melodramatic death, Collodi brought the marionette back to life to give the wood spirit the 'happily ever after' ending his audience clamoured for.  In my edition of the tale, however, the illustrator  concluded his series of eerie drawings with this one, which really creeped me out as a child: