Cleaned up a drawing I did at the Monday night artjam.
Presenting Dr Whooves. :v
(And yes, this is based on a real background pony from the show)
Yay!
BTW, you ever notice that the 'beat' of the Doctor Who theme is similar to the slowed down hoofbeats of a galloping equine? :v
Originally drawn on paper, heavily finished in GIMP.
Presenting Dr Whooves. :v
(And yes, this is based on a real background pony from the show)
Yay!
BTW, you ever notice that the 'beat' of the Doctor Who theme is similar to the slowed down hoofbeats of a galloping equine? :v
Originally drawn on paper, heavily finished in GIMP.
Category Artwork (Digital) / Fantasy
Species Horse
Size 820 x 835px
File Size 200.1 kB
Listed in Folders
Though actually,
bluesquirreldude just brought up a good point to me....if he was a unicorn, then he'd use his horn as his sonic screwdriver. :o
bluesquirreldude just brought up a good point to me....if he was a unicorn, then he'd use his horn as his sonic screwdriver. :o
TBH, I've always assumed that the console operated on some form of Douglas Adams science.
IE, whenever the TARDIS regenerates, it simply makes its console out of a random collection of controls and readouts from machines across time and space, and it's actually rather more important what the user has in mind when adjusting the controls than any one control having a particular function- after all, the TARDIS is somewhat alive, partly organic, and somewhat psychic.
I've always found it fascinating how they seem to deliberately set up the Doctor so that he operates simply by creative innovation and improvisation- IE, he just does things based on hunches and they happen to work. (Of course, this also makes it much easier on the actors and the writers!) It's coincidentally how human beings intuitively learn and create and discover, when we're not TOO busy doing things the way we were taught in school, and I think that's what makes the series so popular. :)
IE, whenever the TARDIS regenerates, it simply makes its console out of a random collection of controls and readouts from machines across time and space, and it's actually rather more important what the user has in mind when adjusting the controls than any one control having a particular function- after all, the TARDIS is somewhat alive, partly organic, and somewhat psychic.
I've always found it fascinating how they seem to deliberately set up the Doctor so that he operates simply by creative innovation and improvisation- IE, he just does things based on hunches and they happen to work. (Of course, this also makes it much easier on the actors and the writers!) It's coincidentally how human beings intuitively learn and create and discover, when we're not TOO busy doing things the way we were taught in school, and I think that's what makes the series so popular. :)
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