This makes me think of my first real vore experiences. the old eggo waffle/pancake commericals
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QNxyTynRJY0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4p9MBGPa9CY
The Runaway Pancake (picture book)
Forum rules
Cause of this section. See here
Formerly called "Extra softvore". Which imply vore that are generally safe. In additional for this particular form, we accept worksafe only material, that means no violent and no sexual contain (ie. No blood, no scat, no digestion, etc) allowed here. See forum's sticky before posting please!
Read them in detail here
Cause of this section. See here
Formerly called "Extra softvore". Which imply vore that are generally safe. In additional for this particular form, we accept worksafe only material, that means no violent and no sexual contain (ie. No blood, no scat, no digestion, etc) allowed here. See forum's sticky before posting please!
Read them in detail here
26 posts
• Page 2 of 2 • 1, 2
Re: The Runaway Pancake (picture book)
This made me want pancakes. ^^
This signature does not exist. Or does it?
-
Mahewa - Somewhat familiar
- Posts: 71
- Joined: Tue Sep 15, 2009 2:33 am
Re: The Runaway Pancake (picture book)
was it an....Evil...Pancake?
-
Evilpancake - Advanced Vorarephile
- Posts: 896
- Joined: Tue Mar 20, 2007 11:00 pm
Re: The Runaway Pancake (picture book)
If anyone is interested, there's a Russian, very well-known fairy-tale, called "Kolobok" (not sure how to translate it in English). Basically, old couple out of boredom made kolobok (ball of dough), but Kolobok run away soon in the forest. And in the forest, he/it met different animals - hare, wolf, bear, and the last one was fox. The fox was the smartest of the animals, and she (in Russian, the word fox has a female gender, so the animal is always pictured as a female) pretended to be deaf, and asked Kolobok to jump on her nose, so she could hear him/it well. When Kolobok did so, the fox gulped him immediately. XP
Some pics to the tale (sorry, only as links):
http://rusfolklor.ru/wp-content/uploads ... 28x300.gif
http://www.home-edu.ru/user/f/00001232/ ... lobok5.jpg
http://games-mm.ru/userfiles/Image/good/photo_66.jpg
Some pics to the tale (sorry, only as links):
http://rusfolklor.ru/wp-content/uploads ... 28x300.gif
http://www.home-edu.ru/user/f/00001232/ ... lobok5.jpg
http://games-mm.ru/userfiles/Image/good/photo_66.jpg
Memento mori and YOLO
-
Goldy-Gry - Been posting for a bit
- Posts: 41
- Joined: Tue Jun 08, 2010 5:05 am
Re: The Runaway Pancake (picture book)
Sounds like the gingerbread man... yep- thats it all right lol
Now, back to our scheduled lurking.
If I sound rude, I'm being blunt, likely because somebody did something stupid. I'm not the best at controlling it sometimes
If I sound rude, I'm being blunt, likely because somebody did something stupid. I'm not the best at controlling it sometimes
- killermeow
- Intermediate Vorarephile
- Posts: 437
- Joined: Tue Jun 29, 2010 9:20 pm
- Location: The dragons lair, sadly its empty
Re: The Runaway Pancake (picture book)
Goldy-Gry wrote:If anyone is interested, there's a Russian, very well-known fairy-tale, called "Kolobok" (not sure how to translate it in English). Basically, old couple out of boredom made kolobok (ball of dough), but Kolobok run away soon in the forest. And in the forest, he/it met different animals - hare, wolf, bear, and the last one was fox. The fox was the smartest of the animals, and she (in Russian, the word fox has a female gender, so the animal is always pictured as a female) pretended to be deaf, and asked Kolobok to jump on her nose, so she could hear him/it well. When Kolobok did so, the fox gulped him immediately. XP
Some pics to the tale (sorry, only as links):
http://rusfolklor.ru/wp-content/uploads ... 28x300.gif
http://www.home-edu.ru/user/f/00001232/ ... lobok5.jpg
http://games-mm.ru/userfiles/Image/good/photo_66.jpg
I remember that one. It is actually such an old yet imaginative tale. I always wondered how the Kolobok could roll away from a bear and even outspeed a wolf, but then could not roll off the fox's tongue.
There are many books depicting that tale and all of the different versions were pretty amazing.
I remember there was also another russian tale about a fox that swapped different animals for bigger animals to eat and later on got her hands on someone's bride.
However the fox did not have the time to eat her, because a brave boy came in with his dogs to rescue her.
-
THEholySnail - Been posting for a bit
- Posts: 29
- Joined: Fri May 13, 2022 9:32 am
26 posts
• Page 2 of 2 • 1, 2
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users