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OT: Halloween costume pics!Follow

#1 Oct 28 2011 at 1:55 PM Rating: Excellent
Mine isn't quite ready yet, but I thought it would be fun to post pics of our Halloween costumes! I have a party I'm going to later tonight, so I have to make a mad dash to finish mine.
#2 Oct 28 2011 at 2:03 PM Rating: Excellent
Does it really take that much time to remove clothes?
#3 Oct 28 2011 at 2:23 PM Rating: Excellent
I'm not going in my birthday suit! Smiley: tongue
#4 Oct 28 2011 at 2:39 PM Rating: Good
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We don't really celebrate Halloween here, though it's gained in popularity the last couple of years. Our version of Halloween falls in spring (around Shrovetide) and is called Fastelavn. Kids also dress up for that, though the theme of Fastelavn isn't scary stuff like Halloween (no pumpkin faces, bats, skeletons, etc.), I think it pulls its inspiration from a masquerade.

We then take turns to beat the sh*t out of a barrel containing candy. This event is called 'knocking the cat (out) off the barrel'. Good stuff, though there hasn't been an actual cat inside the barrel for some time now.

I think other European countries celebrate this as well.

Edit: Turns out Wikipedia has an article on it.

Edited, Oct 28th 2011 10:40pm by Mazra
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#5 Oct 28 2011 at 2:45 PM Rating: Excellent
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My camera's out lol but I've got quite a costume on just now after dropping a cup of flour while doing some baking... does that count?
I think I'm just going to duck and cover for Halloween itself there's really no kids in the neighbourhood unless the family brings their kids by to show off costumes, and I guess there might be a couple kids down the block but you never see them and almost never hear them. I might crack open this case of "pop chips" if kids do show up.
#6 Oct 28 2011 at 2:52 PM Rating: Good
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You actually hand out stuff to them?

I remember visiting my parents during Halloween one year and some kids came by. I had no idea it was Halloween (normally Hallow's End alerts me of this, but I hadn't brought my computer with me), so when the kids rang the bell, I was pretty surprised to see a bunch of kids in what I assume were costumes of some sort. And they were pretty surprised to see the werewolf my parents keep as a pet dog. 120 pounds of pure muscle and bone that dog, and taller than most of those kids.

I've never seen a bunch of skeleton-witches run as fast as they did.
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#7 Oct 28 2011 at 3:08 PM Rating: Excellent
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No costume for me and I won't be handing out candy. I will probably be handing around the local grocery store and waiting to get some cheep candy once it goes on sale though. I'm a greedy little piggy like that.

Oh and Mazra, I saw the picture of a Fastelavnsboller on that wiki link and I am conflicted. On the one hand it looks absolutely delicious. On the other, my blood thickens just by looking at it. Smiley: eek
#8 Oct 28 2011 at 3:16 PM Rating: Excellent
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If this head cold abides I'll be doing '50s dad tomorrow, kung-fu master on sunday and I have both doctor and a decent pirate in reserve if they're needed for monday's thing.

This is my favorite holiday and I usually try to hit every party and show I can over the weekend =)

Willow, if you want pics that's one thing. But there's no way I'll post here for these jerks to mock and snicker at! I'm looking at you Aeth!
#9 Oct 28 2011 at 3:24 PM Rating: Good
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Criminy wrote:
Oh and Mazra, I saw the picture of a Fastelavnsboller on that wiki link and I am conflicted. On the one hand it looks absolutely delicious. On the other, my blood thickens just by looking at it. Smiley: eek


It's the kind of pastry you eat one, maybe two of, but a third would surely kill you.
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#10 Oct 28 2011 at 3:48 PM Rating: Good
TherionSaysWhat wrote:

Willow, if you want pics that's one thing. But there's no way I'll post here for these jerks to mock and snicker at! I'm looking at you Aeth!


Pfft. What makes you think I started this thread purely for your benefit hmm? I like seeing other people's costumes, and I like showing off my own. Smiley: grin If you don't want to post yours here though, that's fine. I'll accept an email. Smiley: wink2
#11 Oct 28 2011 at 4:07 PM Rating: Excellent
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Mazra wrote:
It's the kind of pastry you eat one, maybe two of, but a third would surely kill you.


Not if you're American.
#12 Oct 28 2011 at 4:21 PM Rating: Excellent
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Mazra wrote:
We don't really celebrate Halloween here, though it's gained in popularity the last couple of years. Our version of Halloween falls in spring (around Shrovetide) and is called Fastelavn. Kids also dress up for that, though the theme of Fastelavn isn't scary stuff like Halloween (no pumpkin faces, bats, skeletons, etc.), I think it pulls its inspiration from a masquerade.

We then take turns to beat the sh*t out of a barrel containing candy. This event is called 'knocking the cat (out) off the barrel'. Good stuff, though there hasn't been an actual cat inside the barrel for some time now.

I think other European countries celebrate this as well.

Edit: Turns out Wikipedia has an article on it.

Edited, Oct 28th 2011 10:40pm by Mazra


My family hasn't celebrated Halloween since I was like 8. So since last year. Anyway...

This Fastelavn sounds kind of interesting. I'll take a look at the link. I'm not into the whole ghosts and scary crap (although I kind of like Hallow's End and TF2 Halloween maps...) But a masquerade kind of deal with cat beatings sound right up my alley.
#13 Oct 28 2011 at 4:29 PM Rating: Excellent
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They're predicting the worst turn out for "trick or treating" in 24 years here and we didn't get that many last year anyway.
I've never been a part of the "dress up and go out" (to the bar at least) scene, the bar scene here is rough enough on normal times but add a costume to it and people decide to go a little more nuts. Enough so that I turned down an invite to what should have been an interesting lecture tomorrow night but no way do I want to be in that part of town at that time of night.
#14 Oct 29 2011 at 1:28 AM Rating: Excellent
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Criminy wrote:
Mazra wrote:
It's the kind of pastry you eat one, maybe two of, but a third would surely kill you.


Not if you're American.
When you come from a culture where a dozen doughnuts is considered breakfast, you're more or less ready for any kind of fattening/sugary food other cultures want to throw at you.

Submitted without comment.

Edited, Oct 29th 2011 4:17am by Poldaran
#15 Oct 29 2011 at 2:29 AM Rating: Good
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Mazra wrote:
You actually hand out stuff to them?

I remember visiting my parents during Halloween one year and some kids came by. I had no idea it was Halloween (normally Hallow's End alerts me of this, but I hadn't brought my computer with me), so when the kids rang the bell, I was pretty surprised to see a bunch of kids in what I assume were costumes of some sort. And they were pretty surprised to see the werewolf my parents keep as a pet dog. 120 pounds of pure muscle and bone that dog, and taller than most of those kids.

I've never seen a bunch of skeleton-witches run as fast as they did.
Pics of dog, now plz.


Wonder Gem PigtailsOfDoom wrote:
TherionSaysWhat wrote:

Willow, if you want pics that's one thing. But there's no way I'll post here for these jerks to mock and snicker at! I'm looking at you Aeth!


Pfft. What makes you think I started this thread purely for your benefit hmm? I like seeing other people's costumes, and I like showing off my own. Smiley: grin If you don't want to post yours here though, that's fine. I'll accept an email. Smiley: wink2
Hey, why me? If we actually celebrated Halloween here I'd be the first to dress up.
Instead, I celebrate my mom's birthday. Smiley: tongue (No dressing up for that though)
#16 Oct 29 2011 at 5:30 AM Rating: Good
We don't have any official Halloween tradition here in Australia but since we're kind of the ******* child of English monarchy and American pop culture, plenty of kids do "celebrate" it by either dressing up from something that looks like it came out of a Rob Zombie music video or as a lady who works part time as a domestic servant and part time as a prostitute, and only uses the one uniform for both jobs. I don't have anything against it (well, apart from the disturbing amounts of children's costumes that are starting to show up in store's labelled "sexy nurse" or something, with a picture of a ten year old wearing it Smiley: eek) but I don't usually do anything to join in. I mostly forget about it, actually, until the doorbell rings and I wonder who the hell it would be until I see a group of kids out the window and realise that I've become a grumpy, oblivious shut-in of an old man already and I'm not even 30 years old.

Maz: Don't take this the wrong way. But, however horrendous the image is, there's something very fitting - in a "The Fantrabulous World of Mazra's Denmark" cartoon series kind of way - about picturing you talking about and demonstrating the beating of a barrel with a cat inside it with a completely friendly poker face. You Danes really are like hobbits. Just when I think I've got you bastards figured out you go and ... Well ... Pull a surprise cat out of a barrel. Smiley: lol

(Edit: I mentioned Mazra's post to my fiancée and now she's excitedly schooling me in Fastelavn)

Edited, Oct 29th 2011 12:53pm by Smallsword
#17 Oct 29 2011 at 6:59 AM Rating: Good
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The One and Only Poldaran wrote:
Criminy wrote:
Mazra wrote:
It's the kind of pastry you eat one, maybe two of, but a third would surely kill you.


Not if you're American.
When you come from a culture where a dozen doughnuts is considered breakfast, you're more or less ready for any kind of fattening/sugary food other cultures want to throw at you.

Submitted without comment.

Edited, Oct 29th 2011 4:17am by Poldaran



Honestly what I find most disturbing about that page is not the KFC pie or the massive grilled cheese (even though that is disgusting in its own right) but how much that one store is charging for chocolate covered Twinkies. Smiley: eek
#18 Oct 29 2011 at 9:04 AM Rating: Good
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His Excellency Aethien wrote:
Pics of dog, now plz.


He's a Berner Sennen (Bernese Mountain Dog), but an unusually large one, and batsh*t crazy as well. He loves people, though, which is awesome, because when my parents bought him (previous owners couldn't handle him), he was shy and very afraid of strangers. Now he runs up to people, sits on their feet so they can't move and expects to be scratched behind the ears. If you don't comply with those wishes in a timely manner, he'll just lean backwards towards you, until you're supporting his full 120 pounds, which can easily throw you off balance if you're not ready for it.

What he loves more than meeting strangers, though, is when then doorbell rings. He starts barking that big dog bark that causes windows to chatter, while scratching at the door. When it's opened, he launches himself out of the doorway like he's a canine torpedo. And it doesn't matter if you're holding his collar or not, he'll take you with him if he wants to.

When he's standing on his hind legs, he's almost as tall as me, which naturally scares the living sh*t out of anyone on the other side of the door if they don't know about him.

The Smallsword of Doom wrote:
Maz: Don't take this the wrong way. But, however horrendous the image is, there's something very fitting - in a "The Fantrabulous World of Mazra's Denmark" cartoon series kind of way - about picturing you talking about and demonstrating the beating of a barrel with a cat inside it with a completely friendly poker face. You Danes really are like hobbits. Just when I think I've got you bastards figured out you go and ... Well ... Pull a surprise cat out of a barrel. Smiley: lol

(Edit: I mentioned Mazra's post to my fiancée and now she's excitedly schooling me in Fastelavn)


I like your comparison of us to the Hobbits. Short, dark-haired and with fuzzy feet. Smiley: glare

Also, it's good that your fiancé is able to help you learn the ways of our people. Resistance is futile.

Edit: Silly English, with 'teach' and 'learn' being two different things.

Edited, Oct 29th 2011 5:06pm by Mazra
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#19 Oct 29 2011 at 9:57 AM Rating: Excellent
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I decided not to dress up this year. Last year for work my team dressed up as football players and cheerleaders. The guys were the cheerleaders and the girls were the football players.

Needless to say, we won the company costume contest.

Edit: Am I the only one who pictures Mazra sitting there flipping through a Danish to English dictionary and pulling his hair out while responding to posts?

Oh, I am?

Ok, never mind then.

Edited, Oct 29th 2011 10:58am by Bigdaddyjug
#20 Oct 29 2011 at 11:14 AM Rating: Good
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The dictionary is electronic, but that's pretty accurate.

We use one word for both teaching and learning. We don't have a separate word for 'teaching', so we use 'learning' both for the receiving and giving of knowledge.
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#21 Oct 29 2011 at 11:30 AM Rating: Excellent
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I find it weird that Maz, Aeth, and just about every other non native English speaker on this board have better English than I do. But even when you're talking to Maz in G-chat his English is impeccable, and I'm assuming he doesn't flip through a dictionary for that.
#22 Oct 29 2011 at 11:35 AM Rating: Excellent
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agreeing with Sgriob here and then even when they're using their better english language skills they come across like they're terrified that they'll be using the wrong word / tense etc. It's funny sometimes to see when a lot of the native speakers really butcher it with text speak etc.
#23 Oct 29 2011 at 11:54 AM Rating: Excellent
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I think it's connected to the frequency with which we post here. At least, I know my ability to converse in English is one of the main reasons I'm posting as much as I am. I imagine someone not as well-versed in the English language would not post as much, if at all.

And it's a symbiotic relationship, really. My English has improved over the years I've been using it, which in turn has made me use it more. I just wish I'd started speaking English earlier, because my spoken English is horrible. I don't even have a cute European accent to go with it.

Also, since English isn't our native language, I suppose we're more aware of what words are supposed to go where and how they're spelled. I don't think about my Danish, but I put a lot more thought into my English, simply because I know that Danish syntax can't be copied directly. Sometimes I forget and my sentences become notoriously Danish.
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#24 Oct 29 2011 at 12:17 PM Rating: Excellent
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Mazra wrote:
I think it's connected to the frequency with which we post here. At least, I know my ability to converse in English is one of the main reasons I'm posting as much as I am. I imagine someone not as well-versed in the English language would not post as much, if at all.


That doesn't seem to stop Rawdeal.
#25 Oct 29 2011 at 2:01 PM Rating: Excellent
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Sgriob wrote:
Mazra wrote:
I think it's connected to the frequency with which we post here. At least, I know my ability to converse in English is one of the main reasons I'm posting as much as I am. I imagine someone not as well-versed in the English language would not post as much, if at all.


That doesn't seem to stop Rawdeal.


Raw is French. The two countries they hate the most are Great Britain and the United States. Do you think they really care if they are properly speaking English?

#26 Oct 29 2011 at 2:06 PM Rating: Excellent
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I'm from Scotland, and we hate the English more than anyone else on the planet, yet we still learn fairly decent English.
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