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Clearing out the backlog

Tue Sep 15, 2009, 4:31 AM
One of the hazards of my avocation into Poser art is that I get too much stuff in my memory--some of it is scribbles, some of it is stuff I would NEVER post anywhere.

But the end result is the same...Memory Loss. Computer memory gets used up QUICKLY when doing graphics. So if you're waiting (read Sharon and Gytalf) I haven't forgotten. But stuff that I could whip through in 30-40 minutes is now taking 2-3 hours to set up and I have a short attention span. (Was that a chicken?)

They ARE coming--I appreciate the patience. Starro Month is over now--and while not a howling success, I'd hardly call it a failure. Look for the next challenge to be coming soon.

Chris

  • Mood: Amused
  • Listening to: The Sounds of Silence
  • Reading: Sherlock Holmes again...
  • Watching: coffee swirl
  • Playing: hooky from work
  • Eating: breakfast
  • Drinking: aforementioned coffee

Starro the Conqueror Month!!

Sun Aug 9, 2009, 11:15 AM
[link]



Or actually until Labor Day...just shy of a month....

Show us Superheroines in peril, menaced or controlled by Starro the conquerer. Its a back to the beach, back to school blast. It doesn't matter if the heroines are DC, Marvel or your very own--Just they have to be menaced (or controlled) by Starro.

For three d artists--Starro is a freebie and can be found here
[link]

Info about the character is here...

[link]

enjoy! Lets control us some heroines!

Zammo!

  • Mood: Amused
  • Listening to: Reds Baseball
  • Reading: Common Sense
  • Watching: clouds
  • Playing: PS 2
  • Eating: nothing
  • Drinking: coffee

Essay on Independence Day

Sat Jul 4, 2009, 5:05 AM
(Lifted from the Glenn Beck Show transcript 3 July 2007)

July 2nd, 1776. Continental Congress votes 12-0, New York abstains. July 4th, the Declaration of Independence drafted by Thomas Jefferson and heavily edited by congress adopted without dissent. July 8th, the Declaration was publicly proclaimed in Philadelphia. On the 9th it was recited before General George Washington and his troops in New York City. On July 15th congress learns that New York has decided to endorse the Declaration. On August 2nd, a parchment copy presented to the Congress for signature. Most of the 56 men who put their name on the document did so that day. And then what? Well, we tend to forget that to sign the Declaration of Independence was to commit an act of treason and the punishment for treason was death. Signing was a move fraught with danger, so much so that the names of the signers were kept secret for six months. The signers were risking everything. They were risking everything, and they knew it. That's the meaning of the Declaration's last sentence: And for the support of this declaration with a firm reliance on the protection of divine providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.

Most of the signers survived the war. Several went on to illustrious careers. Two of them became Presidents of the United States. Among the others were future vice presidents, senators and governors. But not all were so fortunate. Nine of the 56 died during the Revolution, never tasted American independence. Five were captured by the British. 18 had their homes, great estates some of them, looted or burned by the enemy. Some lost everything they owned. Two were wounded in battle. Two others were fathers of sons who were killed during the war. Our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.

You know, we all recognize John Hancock's signature, but whoever notices the names beneath his? Like William Hillary, Thomas Nelson, Richard Stockton, Francis Lewis. Most of us, we hear these names and they have no meaning, but they each represent a real human being, some of whom paid dearly for the support of this Declaration and American independence. Louis Morris of New York, for example, must have known when he signed the Declaration that he was signing away his fortune for within weeks the British ravaged his estate, destroyed his vast woodlands, butchered his cattle and sent his family fleeing for their lives.

Another New Yorker, William Floyd, he was forced to flee when the British plundered his property. He and his family lived as refugees for seven years without any income. The strain tolled on his wife. She died two years before the war ended.

Carter Braxton of Virginia, he was a planter who had invested heavily in shipping. He saw most of his vessels captured by the British Navy, his estates largely ruined. By the end of his life, he was a pauper. Our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor.

Thomas Nelson, Jr. of Virginia raised more than $2 million for the patriots cause on his own personal credit. The Government never reimbursed him, and repaying the loans wiped out his entire estate. During the battle of Yorktown, his house which had been seized by the British and occupied by General Cornwallis, Nelson quietly urged the gunners to fire on his own home. They did so destroying it. He was never again a man of wealth. He died, was buried in an unmarked grave. He stopped in a New Jersey Supreme Court, betrayed by loyalist neighbors. He was dragged from his bed, thrown in prison where he was brutally beaten and starved. His lands were devastated, his horses stolen, his library burned and his family lived on charity for the rest of their lives. And then there was John Hart, the speaker of the New Jersey assembly. He was forced to flee in the winter of '76 at the age of 65 from his dying wife's bedside while he hid in forests and caves. His home was demolished, his fields and mill lay waste and his 13 children put to flight. When it was finally safe for him to return, he found his wife dead, his children missing, his property decimated. He never saw any of his family again.

The men who signed that piece of parchment in 1776 were the elite of their colonies. They are men of means and social standing but for the sake of liberty they pledged it all: Their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor.


Chris' Comments...

Remember how much was asked of those men, how many more sacrificed their last full measure to bring about our Independence. Yeah July 4 is all too often a day to party down. But its a good time to remember where we as a nation came from.

LONG LIVE THE REVOLUTION!!! "Jefferson Survives--Independence Forever!"

  • Mood: Amused
  • Listening to: The Bard's Tale
  • Reading: Foundation's Friends
  • Watching: Blue Jays and Fireworks
  • Playing: Patriot
  • Eating: Breakfast
  • Drinking: coffee

Back in the Saddle...

Tue Jun 9, 2009, 2:41 PM
3 years of Superheroine peril and Sci Fi Fun!

The graduations are over, the weekends and other obligations are done and longer...

Sooooo.....

I'm opening commissions once more.

Basic Rates
$25 page (roughly 1024 x 840 or 840 x 1024)
Payments can be through Money Order or Paypal

Now's your chance to get a Zammo Original....

thanks....

  • Mood: Cheerful
  • Listening to: The Reds on the Radio
  • Reading: "And You Know You Should Be Glad"
  • Watching: cumulous clouds (is that a duckie?)
  • Playing: Professional Artist again...
  • Eating: Pork Chops, Potatoes and green beans
  • Drinking: Diet Orange Crush

Moving Day...

Tue Jun 2, 2009, 6:46 PM
3 years of Superheroine peril and Sci Fi Fun!

No not for me. But for the last four years I had a 360 page at Yahoo. It wasnt much, maybe I updated between 7-10 times a year. But darnit, I had a good time with it, and met a lot of friends (online) thru the site.

But Yahoo is closing down the 360 and going to a new social network thru their profile pages--Frankly being a curmudgeon, I'm not happy with the new options.

So I moved.

I'll be honest, I've been hesitant about letting my hair down here,(What hair I have anyway) and letting you all see the OTHER side of Captain Zammo--the author side--the one who writes stories.

I have a website--but I haven't updated it in a while. But I still write, and tend to have stories going almost all the time.

So...since I've met so many new friends here, I'll post the link for both the website and the blogsite. ]

blogsite here...[link]

website here...[link]

  • Mood: Cheerful
  • Listening to: The Reds on the Radio
  • Reading: Pulp Culture
  • Watching: the Lightning
  • Playing: big time author
  • Eating: nothing
  • Drinking: Coke Zero

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