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OBJECTOBER 2025
OBJECTOBER 2025 YouTube video by Corny

i made a comp of my animations
i added sounds to my favorite ones
if youd like to check it out

#osc #objectober #objectober2025

youtu.be/ceT4qNxhVaM?...

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pencil drawings of two figurines. one is a little creature with six legs and a big head cvered in blunt spikes. in it's mouth it holds a large stone age hand axe. the other is a kneeling humanoid figure with little wings and no head. in its arms is propped a stylised adze, a kind of ancient hand tool like an axe crossed with a hoe.
25, The tool held by this grave guardian figurine from the Ozo barrows is far older than the guardian itself. Several other tools, pieces of hide clothing, and human and animal remains were found within the barrow, each held in the mouth of a figurine which was clearly from a much later period than the remains themselves. Archaeologists estimate the difference in materials and technologies between the stone tool and the bronze figurine represents at least a thousand years.
What is the oldest thing you’ve ever held? Did it fit your hand? Did you find its weight reassuring, or a burden?

26. Stone figure of Khop, one of the thirty funerary saints of the ancient Iskite people. Khop holds a ceremonial adze used in the ritual of ‘the opening of the mouth,’ one of the traditional parts of the embalming process, during which the adze would be used to split the wrappings over the deceased’s mouth and eyes, so that perfumed wax could be poured into the mouth and throat. This figurine, like many in the surviving tombs of the Iskite, was beheaded by inquisitors after the uprising of Returned Dead, whereupon the funerary saints were deemed blasphemous and improper in their embalming process.
Look at he rough stone where Khop’s head has been broken off. What sort of tool do you think was used to break it? Was it being used for its intended purpose? What is an adze for, really?

pencil drawings of two figurines. one is a little creature with six legs and a big head cvered in blunt spikes. in it's mouth it holds a large stone age hand axe. the other is a kneeling humanoid figure with little wings and no head. in its arms is propped a stylised adze, a kind of ancient hand tool like an axe crossed with a hoe. 25, The tool held by this grave guardian figurine from the Ozo barrows is far older than the guardian itself. Several other tools, pieces of hide clothing, and human and animal remains were found within the barrow, each held in the mouth of a figurine which was clearly from a much later period than the remains themselves. Archaeologists estimate the difference in materials and technologies between the stone tool and the bronze figurine represents at least a thousand years. What is the oldest thing you’ve ever held? Did it fit your hand? Did you find its weight reassuring, or a burden? 26. Stone figure of Khop, one of the thirty funerary saints of the ancient Iskite people. Khop holds a ceremonial adze used in the ritual of ‘the opening of the mouth,’ one of the traditional parts of the embalming process, during which the adze would be used to split the wrappings over the deceased’s mouth and eyes, so that perfumed wax could be poured into the mouth and throat. This figurine, like many in the surviving tombs of the Iskite, was beheaded by inquisitors after the uprising of Returned Dead, whereupon the funerary saints were deemed blasphemous and improper in their embalming process. Look at he rough stone where Khop’s head has been broken off. What sort of tool do you think was used to break it? Was it being used for its intended purpose? What is an adze for, really?

bonus #Objectober 25: Tool!
still finishing the last couple of these in my own time - i plan to make them into a book in the new year!

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objectober 2025 day 31 halloween duo #bfdi #osc #objectober

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objectober 31 - free day

#osc #objectober #objectober2025 #bfdi #tpot

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Day 31: Free Day
Happy Halloween!

#osc #bfdi #objectober
Another successful objectober completed

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objectober 2025 day 30 a humble tree #bfdi #osc #objectober

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Day 25 - Campfire
Day 27 - Apple Bobbing
Day 28 - Craft
Day 30 - Costume

#objectshows #osc #objectoc #objectober

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Day 19 - Rivals ft. Cameron
Day 20 - Host
Day 23 - Treat
Day 24 - Pumpkin ft. Snow Golem

Blue Soda and Invincible Lollipop - Me
Cameron - CGPNB

#objectober #osc #objectshows #bfb

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objectober 30 - tree

#osc #objectober #objectober2025 #bfdi #tpot #xfohv

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#Objectober - Orb. Last one. Many thanks to @toadlett.bsky.social for their very inspiring prompt list (I wasn't sure if I was supposed to tag you on all of them)

#art #ink #mouse

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objectober 2025 day 29 sharing a meal #bfdi #tpot #osc #objectober

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Day 30: Tree
They may not have won, but they still are at the resort

#osc #bfdi #bfdiminiresort #bfdimr #objectober

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pencil drawings of two lamps - one is a humanoid shaped candleholder, with the candle in a bowl held in the figure's arms. dribbles of wax have run over the edge of the bowl and down the arms and dress of the figure. her face is obscured by a buildup of soot from the flame. The other lamp is a clay vessel shaped a bit like a pig with a gaping mouth and several holes for eyes.
23. Votive candleholder from the crypt of Phlegistones the Undying. Toward the end of his reign, it is said that Phlegistones developed a great fear of the dark, and a beleif that if he remained always in well-lit spaces, that death could not reach him, as death only lived in the shadows. His tomb was filled with over 4,000 lanterns and candles, and sooty remains suggest that they were all lit when he was interred. of course, once sealed the tomb had poor ventilation, and the flames would quickly have been extinguished.
Look at the soot covering the candleholder’s face. The candle would have burned so close to her eyes. Have you ever stared into a flame, and felt it draw you in?

24. Oil lamp in the shape of a beast, from the excavations at Mord Lake. Little is known about the people who made this lamp. It is designed to have its hollow body filled with oil, and a wick of twisted cloth or reeds poke out of the mouth and lit, so that it appeared to have a tongue of fire.  This fearsome lantern guarded the single burial chamber unearthed at Mord, an otherwise simple and unmarked burrow with scarcely room for the body interred within.  No other traces of the people of Mord have been found at this point.
Count the beast’s eyes. What was it watching for, do you think? Do you sleep with a light on? Does anything watch over you?

pencil drawings of two lamps - one is a humanoid shaped candleholder, with the candle in a bowl held in the figure's arms. dribbles of wax have run over the edge of the bowl and down the arms and dress of the figure. her face is obscured by a buildup of soot from the flame. The other lamp is a clay vessel shaped a bit like a pig with a gaping mouth and several holes for eyes. 23. Votive candleholder from the crypt of Phlegistones the Undying. Toward the end of his reign, it is said that Phlegistones developed a great fear of the dark, and a beleif that if he remained always in well-lit spaces, that death could not reach him, as death only lived in the shadows. His tomb was filled with over 4,000 lanterns and candles, and sooty remains suggest that they were all lit when he was interred. of course, once sealed the tomb had poor ventilation, and the flames would quickly have been extinguished. Look at the soot covering the candleholder’s face. The candle would have burned so close to her eyes. Have you ever stared into a flame, and felt it draw you in? 24. Oil lamp in the shape of a beast, from the excavations at Mord Lake. Little is known about the people who made this lamp. It is designed to have its hollow body filled with oil, and a wick of twisted cloth or reeds poke out of the mouth and lit, so that it appeared to have a tongue of fire. This fearsome lantern guarded the single burial chamber unearthed at Mord, an otherwise simple and unmarked burrow with scarcely room for the body interred within. No other traces of the people of Mord have been found at this point. Count the beast’s eyes. What was it watching for, do you think? Do you sleep with a light on? Does anything watch over you?

#objectober 12: Lamp
there are so many specific kinds of lamp people have made, I've had a lovely evening looking at them.

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Objectober 2025 Compilation 2

Day 10 - Ghost
Day 13 - Party
Day 15 - Baking
Day 17 - Meet up
Day 18 - Alliances

#objectober #osc #objectshows

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objectober 2025 day 28 stone notes #osc #objectober

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objectober 29 - meals

#osc #objectober #objectober2025 #ii #inanimateinsanity

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Day 29: Meals
The horrors of fastfood work.

#osc #one #hfjone #objectober

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objectober 2025 day 27 window watching #bfdi #osc #objectober

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⚠️⚠️PHOTOSENSITIVITY⚠️⚠️
flashing lights

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objectober 28 - stone

#osc #objectober #objectober2025 #hfjone

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Day 28: Stone
Liam we are so fucked

#osc #one #hfjone #objectober

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pencil drawings of two mummified heads wearing elaborate ctowns, and two small stone figurines. One of the crowns is jewelled with hanging beads obscuring the mummy's face, and large eye-shaped ornaments oer where the eyes would be. the other crown is tall and shaped like a lotus flower, with a small black snake winding between the petals.
the stone figuurines are both of a faceless figure seated on a stone chair, with a tall two-spiked crown on their head. one is roughly hewn and has a fat tummy and large breasts. the other is slimmer and has clothing etched into it.
21. Two examples of protective “crypt crowns”, from the Enniz and Dopamenaj Kingdoms respectively. Crowns like these were worn by mummified bodies, and allowed the protective spirit of the tomb to inhabit the body and use it to repel intruders. In more ancient versions, the elaborate crown is reduced to a simple eye motif, or, as in the Dopamenaj example, a brass serpent coiled around the skull of the deceased.
Look at how bright and shiny the metal of the crowns is, against the preserved skin of the mummies. Are things that shine more alive than things that don’t? Do you feel like something is looking at you? Who is it?

Did you come here to be looked at, or to look at things?

22. Representations of the “King under the earth” from the 3rd and 12th eras of the Margine Civilization. Represented by a (usually) seated figure with a featureless face and tall, two-pointed crown, this figure seems ot be a guardian of crypts, catacombs and other subterrenean spaces meant to be enclosed and left undisturbed. Popular rumours of the terrible misfortunes that befall anyone who enters a space guarded by the King have largely been debunked. These specimens were bequeathed to the museum by the widow of the explorer Eardmund Aufel, and are displayed with gratitude and condolences.
What forgotten spaces are under your feet? Who waits there in the dark? How would you ever know?

pencil drawings of two mummified heads wearing elaborate ctowns, and two small stone figurines. One of the crowns is jewelled with hanging beads obscuring the mummy's face, and large eye-shaped ornaments oer where the eyes would be. the other crown is tall and shaped like a lotus flower, with a small black snake winding between the petals. the stone figuurines are both of a faceless figure seated on a stone chair, with a tall two-spiked crown on their head. one is roughly hewn and has a fat tummy and large breasts. the other is slimmer and has clothing etched into it. 21. Two examples of protective “crypt crowns”, from the Enniz and Dopamenaj Kingdoms respectively. Crowns like these were worn by mummified bodies, and allowed the protective spirit of the tomb to inhabit the body and use it to repel intruders. In more ancient versions, the elaborate crown is reduced to a simple eye motif, or, as in the Dopamenaj example, a brass serpent coiled around the skull of the deceased. Look at how bright and shiny the metal of the crowns is, against the preserved skin of the mummies. Are things that shine more alive than things that don’t? Do you feel like something is looking at you? Who is it? Did you come here to be looked at, or to look at things? 22. Representations of the “King under the earth” from the 3rd and 12th eras of the Margine Civilization. Represented by a (usually) seated figure with a featureless face and tall, two-pointed crown, this figure seems ot be a guardian of crypts, catacombs and other subterrenean spaces meant to be enclosed and left undisturbed. Popular rumours of the terrible misfortunes that befall anyone who enters a space guarded by the King have largely been debunked. These specimens were bequeathed to the museum by the widow of the explorer Eardmund Aufel, and are displayed with gratitude and condolences. What forgotten spaces are under your feet? Who waits there in the dark? How would you ever know?

#Objectober 11: Crown
drawing headwear is so hard why are heads shaped like that?? what is going on up there?

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objectober 27 - window

#osc #objectober #objectober2025 #bfdi #tpot

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A mouse character is standing ready to work with his lamp helmet, his tool belt and a wrench as tall as him (he's a mouse, so a normal small wrench is big next to him).

A mouse character is standing ready to work with his lamp helmet, his tool belt and a wrench as tall as him (he's a mouse, so a normal small wrench is big next to him).

#Objectober - Tool

#art #ink #mouse

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Day 27: Window
She'll never get it

#osc #objectober

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objectober 2025 day 26 a fruity delinquent #osc #objectshowcommunity #objectober

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pencil sketch of a ceremonial suit of armour, and a pair of shoes. the armour is hung on a frame so it stands upright. it consists of a smock with a long train behind it, and woven armour on the upper arms and collar, and a pair of loose trousers. the whole suit is patterned with stylised upside-down bodies, representing dead people.
the shoes are lace up oots with pointed toes in a medieval style, made from pale, speckled and creased leather. there is dirt under them as if leaking from the soles.
19. Uniform of a high-ranking necropolis attendant, Labastrine. Though most of the grave guardians in this collection are objects or symbolic creatures, some were real people. Grave robbing became rife in the Labastrine city states, especially after the waves of Midas fevers, which left many people with bodies compsed partially of precious metals and stones. Necropolis attendants were armed warriors who had sworn to defend the dead with their own lives. Their ghostly white armour speaks to the prestige they held, and to the popular beleif that in pledging to defend the dead they had themselves given up their living souls.
Look at the crisp white linen of the uniform. Layers of reed and wooden armour provide protection underneath  the fine cloth. Look closer. Can you see any stains, faint, but too old to wash out?
20. Human leather boots. Origin Unknown. Donated from the collection of the Honourable Lord Obham in 2013. The toes of these unusual shoes are stuffed with earth. Wiggle your toes. Imagine feeling dirt between them. Where did it come from? Imagine if the dirt was inside your skin. What then?

pencil sketch of a ceremonial suit of armour, and a pair of shoes. the armour is hung on a frame so it stands upright. it consists of a smock with a long train behind it, and woven armour on the upper arms and collar, and a pair of loose trousers. the whole suit is patterned with stylised upside-down bodies, representing dead people. the shoes are lace up oots with pointed toes in a medieval style, made from pale, speckled and creased leather. there is dirt under them as if leaking from the soles. 19. Uniform of a high-ranking necropolis attendant, Labastrine. Though most of the grave guardians in this collection are objects or symbolic creatures, some were real people. Grave robbing became rife in the Labastrine city states, especially after the waves of Midas fevers, which left many people with bodies compsed partially of precious metals and stones. Necropolis attendants were armed warriors who had sworn to defend the dead with their own lives. Their ghostly white armour speaks to the prestige they held, and to the popular beleif that in pledging to defend the dead they had themselves given up their living souls. Look at the crisp white linen of the uniform. Layers of reed and wooden armour provide protection underneath the fine cloth. Look closer. Can you see any stains, faint, but too old to wash out? 20. Human leather boots. Origin Unknown. Donated from the collection of the Honourable Lord Obham in 2013. The toes of these unusual shoes are stuffed with earth. Wiggle your toes. Imagine feeling dirt between them. Where did it come from? Imagine if the dirt was inside your skin. What then?

#Objectober 10: Worn
some fun with fashion for this one.

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objectober 26 - fruit

#osc #objectober #objectober2025 #bfdi #tpot

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objectober 25 day aquatic dive
#bfdi #osc #objectober

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Day 26: Fruit
Do you think these compliment my eyes?

#osc #bfdi #objectober

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objectober 25 - aquatic

#osc #objectober #objectober2025 #bfdi #bfdia

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