P. E. T. Post at your service!!
Speedpaint with commentary is up on Youtube
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you've got mail!
looks like someone's losing the packages...
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The Post Master
Ms. PearlescentMoon, the Mail Lady
graphite pencil, sharpie, marker, colored pencil
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#TwoForTuesday + #TerrierTuesday: 2 of the goodest boys in DC!
1 Fala (Scottish terrier, d. 1952), a favorite pet of FDR. Bronze sculpture by Neal Estern at the FDR Memorial.
2 Owney (terrier mix, d. 1897), mascot of the Railway Mail Service & USPS. Bronze sculpture by Daniel C. Brown at the Smithsonian National Postal Museum.
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PET postal service crew with their matching bags
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hello hi !! i saw you opened art asks?? woahh
first off i wanna mention how much i love your hc designs. all of them. especially Etho, but that might also be because hes a comfort creator. oh well! back to the ask [your art is munchy, i love it]
maybe we could get a boat boys or PET postal? because i love Etho interacting with the other hermits so much
// Moss
Bro etho is like all I draw!!
PET Postal at your service!!
tango with fire hair is the best design choice I have ever seen ever, and of COURSE you have to roast marshmallows over a fire pit! (Is Roast the right word? Seems wrong but I cant think of a better one??)
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It's really kind of hard to talk about drag without mentioning Bugs Bunny. He's appeared in drag so many times that it's impossible to keep track of.
Officially making his debut in 1940's "A Wild Hare," Bugs first appeared in drag a year later in "Elmer's Pet Rabbit." The surrealistic and subversive nature of cartoons means that Bugs's drag could get around the Hays Code while all other forms of drag were banned from appearing on screen.
There's actually a lot of ways to look at and analyze Bugs's use of drag. One of the most notable things to take away from it is that Bugs never used drag in and of itself as a gag, it was always a clever way to get out of whatever situation he found himself stuck in.
Bugs frequently used drag as a mean of seduction and using Elmer Fudd's heterosexuality against him, but also as a way of being under-estimated. A soft, pretty woman could never be dangerous.
Bugs's most famous outing in drag, "What's Opera, Doc?" poked fun at the snobbery around opera and took "the finest art" down a notch.
However, it's worth nothing that some of Bugs's outings in drag came at the expense of marginalized people, like arctic indigenous people in "Frigid Hare"
or poor southerners in "Hillbilly Hare"
Nonetheless, Bugs's use of drag is iconic and an enduring part of his image. In 2020, the US postal service immortalized Bugs in drag by issuing two special edition stamps:
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the contrast between the incredibly complex and thought-out PET postal service and grian's completely-useless-on-purpose permit office is so funny. truly the opposite ends of the public infrastructure spectrum
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