WINNER, 2012 BEST GIF!
Legitimately obsessed with this brilliance.
Reblogging for the third time because this is excellent.
(via nooby-banana)
I think I just accidentally created a robot sitcom :/
NQN’s loverly version of humanoid-Wheaters is still my official headcanon.
“Sherlock’s Theme/Taxi Chase (violin) ~ BBC Sherlock” by ViolinistBAKA
Today’s #the sounds of baskerville theme: Fans on strings
Omg, I could watch this forever.
(via yamyams)
Aaaaaaaah I just sent the storyboard tests back to the company this is scary I hope that I zipped the files properly I’ve not done that before and
they were actually kind of fun to do
oh no
I actually really want this job now
oh no now it matters
oh no
oh bother
oh no.

Uhhh…
maybe
idk
maybe when he turns up in the comic? Which won’t be for a long time ahahaha oh gosh.
Shut up it’s not because it’d be hard to draw and it sort of creeps me out having to draw him like that anyway never mind on a huge scale.
The Brocken Spectre, here seen in Poland, is an optical phenomenon in which the observer’s shadow appears to be magnified on clouds or fog below. The Spectre can be observed from mountaintops when the sun is low and behind you, and there’s dense fog or clouds below. It is often accompanied by a glory, a rainbow-like halo that can also be observed when one is between the sun and a layer of clouds, and the movement of the clouds plus the apparent magnification can give the impression of a supernaturally tall ghost being walking the mountain.
The phenomenon is named for Brocken, also known as Blocksberg, a mountain peak in northern Germany long associated with witches and devils in local lore and literature. Another place to see it is the Scottish mountain Ben MacDhui, a frequently fog-shrouded peak where legend has it an unusually tall “Grey Man” resides. It isn’t hard to image how a lone mountaineer—halfway lost and hearing his own footsteps oddly distorted in the mist—could conjure up mythical beings when faced with a ghostly giant in the distance.
As rioters smashed and tore through hundreds of stores, looted them clear of all valuables and fought with police in Camden Town, Philippa Morgan-Walker, 25 and her husband, Jonny Walker, 31, made and distributed tea for the police who were protecting their streets. Some of the officers had been on duty for more than 30 hours.