As a kid, when our boys group went on campouts, our Sunday lunch was called “Soup Kettle”. Every kid brought a can of soup and they were all poured in together into a pot over the campfire. No matter what you poured in, it always ended up being vegetable soup in tomato broth. Always.
The only soup you weren’t allowed to bring was split pea soup, because adding it to the pot would turn the soup battleship gray. Yummy! 😀
Oh Yeah. Vegetable BEAN soup on kiddie campouts with later reminders while in sleeping bags and in small crowded tents. Ah good times, let the farts, gasps and laughter ensue.
Pete… Any barf?
brig… Any fart jokes ever appear in your strip, yet?
I always starte a painting with an Underpainting… it takes away that annoying “white canvas”… so you can work!
I love “recycled” food… leftovers thrown together can sometimes be better than the original din-din. BBQ chicken or turkey in a southwest burrito… or a stew or mash… mmmmm.
Pete… Hmmm… I’m not much on tomato-based products… so I’d definitely go with the pea soup (once you get used to Guacamole being green… anything is edible… even battleship gray). Anyhow, sounds like fun camping trips…
No fart jokes…yet?! Great. Haven’t missed any. Thought Clive would have let one loose. Surprised he didn’t. Looking forward to the first. Oh the pain of the built up laughter just waiting to escape. pfff–BRAAAACK. Oops, some just vented. Ah, feel so much better.
I too was not aware of underpainting. My d&d lead figures had primer, basecoats, shading, ink washes, details, drybrushed highlights and clear coats, but no underpainting. They were tiny afterall. None needed in ballpoint stick figures now, but if/when I get around to making big painted versions (and I hope to)…I’ll know who to call. Anyone have Randie’s number?
Sort of like leftovers stirred up in a blender.
Reminds me of Calvin mixing all of his crayon colors together; Hobbes’ reaction: “Wow! Perfect barf!”.
Why would anyone waste perfectly good paint?
As a kid, when our boys group went on campouts, our Sunday lunch was called “Soup Kettle”. Every kid brought a can of soup and they were all poured in together into a pot over the campfire. No matter what you poured in, it always ended up being vegetable soup in tomato broth. Always.
The only soup you weren’t allowed to bring was split pea soup, because adding it to the pot would turn the soup battleship gray. Yummy! 😀
I had to look up “underpainting.” That’s how much I know about art.
Oh Yeah. Vegetable BEAN soup on kiddie campouts with later reminders while in sleeping bags and in small crowded tents. Ah good times, let the farts, gasps and laughter ensue.
Pete… Any barf?
brig… Any fart jokes ever appear in your strip, yet?
Hmmm… no fart jokes that I can remember, Stick.
I always starte a painting with an Underpainting… it takes away that annoying “white canvas”… so you can work!
I love “recycled” food… leftovers thrown together can sometimes be better than the original din-din. BBQ chicken or turkey in a southwest burrito… or a stew or mash… mmmmm.
Pete… Hmmm… I’m not much on tomato-based products… so I’d definitely go with the pea soup (once you get used to Guacamole being green… anything is edible… even battleship gray). Anyhow, sounds like fun camping trips…
Dada… barf… it’s what’s for…. I love C&H.
No fart jokes…yet?! Great. Haven’t missed any. Thought Clive would have let one loose. Surprised he didn’t. Looking forward to the first. Oh the pain of the built up laughter just waiting to escape. pfff–BRAAAACK. Oops, some just vented. Ah, feel so much better.
I too was not aware of underpainting. My d&d lead figures had primer, basecoats, shading, ink washes, details, drybrushed highlights and clear coats, but no underpainting. They were tiny afterall. None needed in ballpoint stick figures now, but if/when I get around to making big painted versions (and I hope to)…I’ll know who to call. Anyone have Randie’s number?
I am glad that this strip is somewhat edumacational.
Octarine, perhaps? The color of magic?
/Terry Pratchett reference