tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1870069212223825401.post9139372754711568609..comments2024-03-28T03:27:26.345-04:00Comments on Dee-lusions of Grandeur: A Little Drop of ... Poison?Dee Mentiahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07798903090538917010noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1870069212223825401.post-48623895801248034192011-12-20T13:50:24.404-05:002011-12-20T13:50:24.404-05:00@ Steffi
I can agree with you on that, especially...@ Steffi<br /><br />I can agree with you on that, especially the trading part of it. Sometimes I'm in a certain mood, and finding out which person I owe fits that mood best can really help drive a better caption. I am not going to go looking for a dominatrix photo if I'm making a caption for Caitlyn .. unless perhaps the Dom is wearing a strap on and plowing the newly made girl!Dee Mentiahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07798903090538917010noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1870069212223825401.post-38298047880438221452011-12-12T07:58:58.597-05:002011-12-12T07:58:58.597-05:00First of all, before the "discussion", T...First of all, before the "discussion", THANK YOU for the awesome cap!<br /><br />As for the discussion, I think it's really hard to differentiate what you as a caption-maker add to the pic vs. what it just gives you.<br /><br />I look at many pics through my personal fantasy lens. As soon as I see the pic, the general backstory is just <i>there</i>... for somebody else it wouldn't be, or it would be different.<br /><br />The only time I have to add anything is I am scouting for a pic to fit a predetermined fantasy, for myself or others. The I try to find a pic that I can make work/believable, by adding stuff that may or may not be readily apparent at first glance.<br /><br />Some, but not all, Trading caps are thatway for me :)Steffimariechenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04047197245878117771noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1870069212223825401.post-32708871136011624722011-12-11T22:40:15.427-05:002011-12-11T22:40:15.427-05:00I almost always work with what the image gives me....I almost always work with what the image gives me. I might have the general outline of what I'm looking to create, but the story is almost always born from the first time I lay eyes on the picture. After that It's usually just a matter of getting that down on the page and from point A to point B.Jenniferhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08278508284141041193noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1870069212223825401.post-63506608440511366932011-12-09T15:50:05.344-05:002011-12-09T15:50:05.344-05:00I don't often go beyond what the image gives m...I don't often go beyond what the image gives me. At least not initially. If I am making a cap for a particular person, I will normally have an idea of the direction I want to go in, and if an image doesn't tell me a story immediately, or it tells me a story that doesn't vibe with what I have in mind, I just keep searching. <br /><br />Now once the story gets rolling, I may find some it going in a direction that steers away from the image. If I can make it work, I let it stay. But if it requires a new image, I often will just drop the idea out. Very rarely do I get a story rolling with one image, and then change it up enough that I need a different image altogether.Caitlyn Maskedhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02732033913089350905noreply@blogger.com