NEW Good Omens S2 inspired double-sided acrylic charms are now on my Etsy!! 💖✨️ Link in my bio or go to etsy.com/shop/smudgeandfrank ✨️💖
Take your favorite season 2 moments and characters with you wherever you go, and don't forget your travel sweets! 💛✨️
Narnia dæmons
The second ones for Peter, Susan and Edmund are bc their deamons are different in narnia the England
Peter - Dragon/Eagle - Harriet
Susan- Unicorn/Stallion - Clarence
Edmund - Winged snake/Bat - Elanor
Lucy - Lion- Basil
Eustace- Beetle - Anah
Caspian - Thunderbird - Belana
Purpose of your visit to the United Kingdom?
Happy Halloween!
AGATHA CHRISTIE’S POIROT (1989 - 2013)
MR. POOR-ROT
SLYTHERIN: “But the thing with life is…unlike the stories, you actually get to live the next part. The Ever-After… And as it turns out, whether or not that’s happy kinda depends on you.” –Stjepan Šejić (Mercy)
Chrys Watches Got [x] / requests for individuals [x]
Opening credits of Agatha Christie’s Poirot (1989 - 2013)
Title designer Pat Gavin created the opening sequence in 1988. It was his job to set the tone for the tv show. The neat, streamlined sequence features Art Deco iconography in flight; Cassandre-style trains, boats, and biplanes with Poirot’s name formed by the wheels. In a reference to Poirot’s most famous case, Murder on the Orient Express, the detective is glimpsed aboard the passing train.
“The idea for the titles was a portrait of a man and his time. The late Mike Oxley — or “OXO” as we called him — was the production designer and we put our heads together and found we were both thinking about Art Deco as a stylistic theme. I had some old architectural magazines with all those wonderful buildings of the ‘20s and ‘30s, with architectural plans, and that was my original inspiration. I wanted to make it all look exactly like architectural photography from that time. They had a wonderful atmosphere. But I wasn’t able to quite achieve that look, partly due to budget and partly to not having a clue! I had to find another way, so it became Art Deco–Cubism. I liked the idea of the fractured, multifaceted Cubist style because it reminded me of a puzzle and this is of course what Poirot does — he solves puzzles. Making Poirot himself a bit of a puzzle seemed to describe the man and what he does. Brian Eastman, the producer, and David Suchet, the actor who played Poirot — brilliantly, I might add — both agreed and gave me the green light. David was very helpful during the filming. He was a joy to direct.“ - Pat Gavin, artofthetitle.com interview, March 26 2013
Repost...please!
Scotney Castle in Kent, England