It's so funny being a shipper when you're aroace it's like you're an anthropologist, like hey fictional blorbos who live in my head let me study your bonds under a microscope and take notes on what happens when I throw Valentines Day into your enclosure
he’s got that previously neglected shelter dog rizz. he looks like he wants to quietly sit next to you on the couch while you watch TV
At grocery store 🛒🍝
John Watson as stressed boyfriend
⭐️ please don’t use my art without my permission
Ok you guys are going to think I'm making this up as a joke, but I've genuinely been trying to troubleshoot this for the past hour.
I've programmed Holmes and Watson to walk to these coordinates and sit down
And in my game development engine, I have tested what this will look like by manually moving the sprites to those exact coordinates.
It should look like this:
But whenever I run the game and test it they keep sitting like this:
I swear I'm not making it up, "Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson keep kissing and I don't know why" is a genuine game development conundrum that I am dealing with.
Most know the Criterion Bar as the place where Dr. John Watson met his young friend Stamford on that fateful night before being introduced to the one and only Sherlock Holmes, the man who would be the star of Dr. Watson’s writings.
What is not commonly known or spoken about is the Criterion Bar’s Victorian history…
That of being a Victorian Gay Bar.
Now official ‘gay bars’ were not exactly a thing in the Victorian Era due to anti-LGBT laws (including Criminal Law Amendment Act 1885). That said, the Criterion Bar was known (when the stories were written) as a meeting point for gay men in the Victorian era.
‘A New City of Friends’: London and Homosexuality in the 1890s
By Matt Cook
“..Ives noted that the Criterion Bar on Piccadilly Circus was ‘a great centre for inverts’ until it closed in 1905 .”
The Inverted City: London and the Constitution of Homosexuality 1885-1914, M. D. Cook
https://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/jspui/handle/123456789/1620
The Criterion Bar is spoken about by George Cecil Ives, an LGBT advocate in the Victorian era and leader of the secret LGBT society, the Order of Chaeronea.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_Chaeronea
George Cecil Ives was also friends to both Oscar Wilde and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and George Cecil Ives were friends and cricket teammates on the team “Allahakbarries”, which, at the time, they thought meant ‘Heaven Help Us’.
When it comes to Sherlock Holmes, of all the bars within London that could be chosen for Dr. Watson and Stamford to meet, and for Watson to be lead from to be introduced to Holmes, Sir. Arthur Conan Doyle chose to use -that- one.
(Special thanks to @ImaBretthead for pointing out the bar’s past.)
“ Willie Hornung, the brother-in-Law Of ACD, was a friend of George Ives. He used him as the model for the gentleman thief Raffles, in his series of books. Sir Arthur was also acquainted with Mr. Ives.
Cafe Royal, The Langham Hotel, The Criteron Bar…These are not coincidences.”
- @ImaBretthead
Its Buff French Sherlock Hound™ for your viewing pleasure
I definitely bought this for the label, but now it’s reminding me of a fic in which Sherlock and John enjoy reading the blurb on wine bottles.
The wine is not helping me remember what it’s called though.
*releases pack of dads into home depot* go……be free
Holmes throwing his newspaper because Watson isn't giving him attention:
(Also I had to add Watson's little head bobs at the start)
im not really sure what im gonna post here probly just random art and stuffs
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