Giles, if you would like to get by in American society, then you are going to have to follow our traditions. You're the patriarch. You have to host the festivities, or it's all meaningless.

Buffy ,'Sleeper'


Natter Area 51: The Truthiness Is in Here  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


DavidS - May 03, 2007 7:41:32 am PDT #5383 of 10001
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Sort of on this topic, cousin K wants to know if Matilda was named after the Tom Waits song.

Matilda's name comes from: Roald Dahl, Tom Waits, all the other Matilda songs, mutual family agreement.

Incidentally, there really was a Mathilde that Tom had an affair with in Copenhagen. She was a Danish folk singer.

She would also like me to tell you that "I can't tell you how many times I've listened to "I wish I was in New Orleans" while bawling over the 15 years I was gone. Of course now it makes me cry happy tears that I'm back!"

That song is especially sad because its full title is "I Wish I Was in New Orleans (in the 9th Ward)."


sumi - May 03, 2007 7:44:15 am PDT #5384 of 10001
Art Crawl!!!

I think that they need to break Trombones at the actual syllable break rather than tromb ones.


hippocampus - May 03, 2007 7:48:49 am PDT #5385 of 10001
not your mom's socks.

Can't they, I dunno, slant it or something?
My first thought too.

Typographically, it could still carry a sense of joining together disparate things, if they broke each line at equal length... and kerned it boxy:

swor
dfish
tromb
ones

since the title is up top right also, you can afford to play.


JenP - May 03, 2007 7:52:18 am PDT #5386 of 10001

LOL Trek.

Ohmygodsofunny.

George the terrier, rest well, little tiger.

Any thoughts Buffistas?

I guess #2 without hyphens if you have to pick one of the three, but I like either of your suggestions at the bottom better than any of the three covers so far.

ita, I'm glad you had a pain free day yesterday and, needless to say, hope it continues.

ETA: I definitely dislike the tomb ones break, because I read it as tromb wons, phonetically.


Kat - May 03, 2007 7:52:38 am PDT #5387 of 10001
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

Kat, was she always going to name him Noah?

Yes, or at least I think so. anyone want to go to ikea with me?


beekaytee - May 03, 2007 7:53:02 am PDT #5388 of 10001
Compassionately intolerant

Given the vertical orientation of the 33 1/2, could Trombone be sent off the cliff? End Swordfish with a horizontal T and orient that word vertically. Perhaps tucked under the h, to maintain the one-word continuity.


Sue - May 03, 2007 7:54:13 am PDT #5389 of 10001
hip deep in pie

Yes, or at least I think so. anyone want to go to ikea with me?

I do! It'll just take me a while to get to California.


JenP - May 03, 2007 7:59:30 am PDT #5390 of 10001

Oh, and I hope Allyson gets to keep the mouse. I like the mouse. And yay for niece.


Toddson - May 03, 2007 8:13:44 am PDT #5391 of 10001
Friends don't let friends read "Atlas Shrugged"

David, looking at that cover, my initial reaction would be to run the title vertically - either running up the side (with the "s" on its side at the bottom) or with the letters stacked ("s" at the top with the "w", etc., going down). If they can't, to maintain consistency with their style ... not sure. Sox's suggestion might work best.


Jesse - May 03, 2007 8:16:27 am PDT #5392 of 10001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

I like the look of Sox's suggestion, but I'm stuck on the trom-wuns thing now. Definitely not swordfish/trombones on two lines, because that just makes it look like a two-word title.