applesforthis - You can't get there from here
You can't get there from here

Fannish things, writing, other stuff. Often NSFW. My pronouns are they/them.

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This Was More Challenging Than The Station Because We Don't Get As Many Scenes/angles Of The House. Still

A floor plan in bright colors with detailed labels, showing the main level of Dulcie and Cath's house from the TV series Deadloch.
A floor plan in bright colors with detailed labels, showing the upper level of Dulcie and Cath's house from the TV series Deadloch.
A simple line drawing showing an exterior view of Dulcie and Cath's house from the TV series Deadloch.

This was more challenging than the station because we don't get as many scenes/angles of the house. Still fun, but in places where we don't know what's there I've left it blank and noted that.

Part of the house is an A-frame. As I was drawing the floor plans I realized that they could be hard to understand for that reason, so here's an exterior view as well to hopefully clarify. 

(Please note, I do not have any insider knowledge of this set's floor plan. I have reconstructed this from what we can see in the series.)

(Previously: the station)

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More Posts from Applesforthis

1 year ago
Kate Box and Nina Oyama (who played Dulcie Collins and Abby Matsuda in Deadloch) are in police uniforms, their costumes from the series. Kate is holding out a banana with the top peeled to Nina, and Nina is leaning forward as if about to take a bite. Nina is very silly/goofy/enthusiastic. Kate is looking away coolly over the rims of her sunglasses. This is a VERY camp dick joke.

Every once in a while I remember that this photo happened and my day gets a little bit better.

Not sure if this counts as fanfiction exactly, given that it's the actors from canon who created it. Apocrypha, maybe?

(Via N.O.'s instagram. x)


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10 months ago
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Abandoned Buildings Reclaimed By The Desert Sands Kolmanskop, A Ghost Town Frozen In Time. Ph. Mark Daniel
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Abandoned buildings reclaimed by the desert sands ➤ Kolmanskop, a ghost town frozen in time. ph. Mark Daniel


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1 year ago

If I had a nickel for each time I've been told to stop "overthinking" this type of hypothetical or categorical question, I'd have...a lot of nickels.

The way most autism literature describes "literal interpretation" is often not at all similar to how I experience it. Teenage me even thought I couldn't be autistic because I've always been able to learn metaphors easily.

In fact, I love wordplay of all kinds. Teenage me was fascinated to learn all the types of figurative language there are in poetry and literature.

But paperwork and questionnaires are hard, because there's so much they don't state clearly. Or they don't leave room for enough nuance.

"List all the jobs you've had, with start and end dates." What if I don't remember the exact day or month? Is the year enough?

"Have you been suffering from blurred vision?" Well, if I take off my glasses the whole world is blurred, but I'm fairly sure that's not what the intake form at the optometrist is asking.

Or the infamous (and infuriatingly stereotypical) "Would you rather go to a library or a party?" What sort of party? Where? Who's there? I work at a library. Am I currently at the library for work or pleasure? Does it have a good collection?

It's not common figures of speech that confound me. It's ambiguity, in situations that aren't supposed to be ambiguous.


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