Winnie The Pooh - Tumblr Posts
These are my three: Iâm a nerdy badass filled with anxiety!
Feel free to repost with your own characters!
I blame Winnie the Pooh movies for me thinking honey is way more good then it actually is
I couldnât resist drawing my favorite sketch of Ernest H. Shepardâs illustrations from A. A. Milneâs second Winnie-the-Pooh book, The House at Pooh Corner. When I was looking at Shepardâs drawings online I found that he also did the illustrations for The Wind the Willows, which was (and still is) one of my favorite books since early middle school. I wish that childrenâs books today had this level of quality in their illustrations. You would think with the advent of technology that we could produce high quality illustrations like this in an even shorter amount of time, but I keep seeing these really cheap looking books that saddens me to no end.
K: A remarkable scene.
It's incredibly, incredibly, incredibly sad, but the scene at the end of Third Star?
O: A movie from your childhood.
Winnie the Pooh's Grand Adventure. Still makes me cry.
ooooh my god that shot of leaves falling into Pooh's arms is core memory af to me. one of the first occasions I remember really appreciating animation. lovely to see again after so many years.
Autumn đ is here !!
Hello Autumn đđ
character keychains, part 4 by winterrkatt
But wait, I have more.
Moodboard for Hodor!! Heâs been helping me through things lately. Lol I added Isa (the lizard) to help me remember his rune đ„°âïžâïž
For Hestia!!!! She got me out of paying a huge fee while traveling đ„°đđž
Winnie the Pooh
In Which We Are Introduced Lillian-May And An Adventure BeginsâŠ
Series: The new age
Word count: 1,566
Characters: Madeline, Ms. Robin, Pooh and Friends
Warnings: Fluff, and brother sister bonding
Notes: So I wrote this for a school project. We had a small word limit and little time to complete the project so the ending it muddled and a bit rushed. The original idea was to add character that would give some life to the the lifeless 2018, Christopher Robin movie.
âââ
Here is Lillian-May, looking up at the sky now, watching the world pass her by. âThat one looks like a duckling,â she thought, âthat one a slithery skake.â
She laid in the middle of the bench, in the middle of her familyâs rear garden, alone. Stretching her arms out she dug her fingers into the ground, getting dirt stuck beneath her nails. She pulled up and released what grass she held into the breeze. Quietly she watched it go. Swirling this way and that. She watched it until it disappeared over the fence, into the yard.
âWhere does the wind take such small thing?â She couldnât help but wonder.
Sheâd seen the wind take leaves in the fall, and the white fluffy wishlings the summer.
Lillian-May smiled as a grand idea, came to mind. She was quite tired of doing nothing. For you sheâd done nothing all morning and now it was early afternoon. Sometimes doing nothing could be quite boring, if done for long enough.
She sat up swinging her legs over the side of the bench. Only something fun could cure her great boredom. Perhaps an adventure was what she needed. An adventure for what, she didnât quite know. Just an adventure through the wood to find something. Something had to be better than nothing.
âI suppose I should start my searching,â she decided, rolling over onto her stomach, she got to her feet, and said her last goodbye to the duckling cloud. The skake got nothing more than a curt wave and rude raspberry.
She hopped up the steps, one, three, one, two, three, four, five, for to her there was no other way of going up the steps. She always forgot step two, then decided perhaps if that step had feelings she did indeed hurt them by skipping them over. So she goes back to start from the beginning, making sure she does indeed do step two.
Lillian-May open the door quietly, peaking her head through, she looks around ensuring no one is around to notice her, then slips through the small opening.
âLillian-May, is that you darling?â Called her mother.
âNo, mummy itâs not me,â answered Lillian-May.
The mother, her mother is a lovely womanâthe loveliest, the very best at kissing booboos, and giving hugs, and singing lullabies. Her mother is the best mother in all of London, she has to be, as it says so on the card Lillian-May and her older sister made for their motherâs birthday earlier that year.
Her mother was an architect or at least thatâs what Lillian-May was told, she couldnât quite remember a time when her mum was anything except her mother. She sometimes finds herself thinking maybe it was a time before she was born if only she could remember such a time.
With those few words, she went on through the house, up the stairs, to the room she shares with her sister.
She canât say she is close to her sister, not in the way she wants to be. For her sister, Madeline is a girl with a very big brain. Which is why Lillian-May found it odd that her sister understands very little.
She crouches on her knees before her bed, looking at the clutter underneath. As Lillian-May would explain there needs to be a underneath her bed, the mess keeps the monster happy, and the monster beneath the bed protects her from the snufflegrump in the closet.
âThere you are,â said Lillian-May pulling out her hat of adventuring, itâs the only hat one can wear when good adventuring is to be done. For one cannot explore without the proper cap.
âWhat are you up to now?â Asked Madeline in a somewhat annoyed voice.
Lillian-May smiled mischievously, placing her hat of adventuring upon her small head. âWhy canât you tell?â Asked Lillian-May. âThere is adventuring to be done. You, of course, are welcome to come. One can get the job done, but two makes it twice as fun.â
âI have work to do,â said Madeline, sitting at the one desk in their room.
Of course, he has work to do, people with very big brains always have work to do. They work so very hard to understand the very hardest things there are to understand.
Lillian-May always promised to keep her brain very small. For the work, her brother did never did seem like fun, like the small things that popped into her very small brain.
âThatâs okay,â said Lillian-May, âI shall enlist my friendâs surely they will go adventuring.â
âYour animal friends?â
âYep,â said Lillian-May popping the âpâ.
Thatâs how it was and thatâs how it always had been between the two siblings. Madeline, a girl with many responsibilities that she gives to herself. And Lillian-May, a child with her head up in the clouds.
After leaving her brother to his work, she hopped on down the steps, careful in not forgetting step two. She never forgot step two on the way down, that would just be silly.
âMummy where are my boots?â Yelled Lillian-May the moments she reaches the base of the stairwell.
Lillian-May parades into the living room where her lovely mother sits, stitching up a quilt sheâd made for her eldest child in her younger years.
âMummy, do you know where my boots are?â Asked Lillian-May, âI canât possibly go adventuring without them.â
âOf course you canât. Whatâs a good explorer without her boots?â Asked her mother. She picks Lillian-May up, sitting her daughter on her lap.
âThey arenât under the bed, or at the base step like the ought to be.â Said Lillian-May in a sort of worried tone. Surely her boots didnât walk off, they knew better than to run off without her.
âDid you look beneath the table?â Asked her mother.
âWhy would they be there?â Lillian-May asked confusedly. Perhaps her boots had gotten hungry, as everything inevitably does, but then again they only eat mud and dirt.
âI do believe I recall a certain little girl leaving them there before dinner,â her mother said kindly.
Lillian-May grinned sheepishly, she had almost forgotten. Often times her adventuring days ended at the dinner table, and in her excitement, she forgot to check her boots at the door.
âOh right, in all my forgetfulness I had forgotten.â Said Lillian-May.
With these words she slid off her motherâs lap, after saying one last thank you, she ran into the next room, the kitchen. She came to a stop before the table, bending over to see what lied beneath.
There she saw her boots, sitting in front of her chair, in a puddle of mud.
âSilly boots, I almost lost you,â said Lillian-May.
As her grandfather had once told her when she was very little. One can not set off on a proper adventure without the right pair of boots. Though she thought her adventure cap was indeed more helpful.
Lillian-May sat outside her back door, pulling on her big boots. Sheâd gotten them when she was smaller, now sheâd grown, as all small children do.
âAll I need now is some friends,â said Lillian-May in a matter of fact tone. âPerhaps a silly old bear.â She said as she ran off into the deep wood.
After some time she came upon a place most familiar. The home of one huggable Pooh Bear.
âGood evening Pooh Bear,â she called out coming down the bend.
âHallo Lillian-May.â
âPrepare yourself, Pooh,â said Lillian-May excitedly.
âAh yes prepare,â Pooh said. He thought for a little and then asked. âPrepare? ForâŠsupper?â
Lillian-May shook her head and giggled. âNo you silly old bear. We are all going on a grand Expedition,â said Lillian-May as she boldly pointed her hand in the air. âWe are going to go on an adventure.â
âOh!â said Pooh. âWhat kind of adventure?â he asked.
âThe fun kind,â said Lillian-May, not quite knowing what kind herself. âI donât quite know what for. But itâs an adventure, for something.â
âWhat kind of a something?â Asked Pooh.
âWe wonât know until we find it Pooh.â Said Lillian-May, as she carelessly drew symbols in the dirt.
âAh yes, yes I see now.â Said Pooh, though he didnât really.
âNow youâd best go round and get the others. I must go to get more adventuring supplies from my tree.â And with these new orders Pooh waddled off.
It wasnât long before Pooh and his friends were all together ready to begin their adventure. First to arrive was, of course, was Pooh with his best animal friend Piglet, then Lillian-May and Kanga, with Roo in her pocket, then Eeyore and lastly Tigger with the rest of their friends.
âWell here we all are,â said Eeyore in his usual melancholy way. âTogether again.â
âYes Eeyore,â said Lillian-May. âTogether for another adventure.â
âAn adventure? Yippee!â Squeaked young Roo as he jumped out of his motherâs pouch.
âAre you ready?â
âReady!â Cheered all the animals of the wood. Pooh, Tigger and all except save for Eeyore.
So off they all went on a grand new adventure, where to none of them knew, what for they didnât know either. However they were with theyâre friends, so it didnât quite matter.
âInked Memoriesâ #1
Calendar illustration. (reupload for tag correction)
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