Received: Photo signed on 4/2/14
Address used:
Orange Is The New Black address (No longer valid)
Return address:
The Katz Company
1674 Broadway
7th Floor
New York, NY 10019


DiamondDave wrote:Sent: LOR, photo and SASE on 10/26/13
Received: Photo signed on 4/2/14
Address used:
Orange Is The New Black address (No longer valid)
Return address:
The Katz Company
1674 Broadway
7th Floor
New York, NY 10019
Lisasautographs wrote:DiamondDave wrote:Sent: LOR, photo and SASE on 10/26/13
Received: Photo signed on 4/2/14
Address used:
Orange Is The New Black address (No longer valid)
Return address:
The Katz Company
1674 Broadway
7th Floor
New York, NY 10019
MW1221 wrote:Lisasautographs wrote:DiamondDave wrote:Sent: LOR, photo and SASE on 10/26/13
Received: Photo signed on 4/2/14
Address used:
Orange Is The New Black address (No longer valid)
Return address:
The Katz Company
1674 Broadway
7th Floor
New York, NY 10019
I'm looking for the point of this post, and I'm not seeing it.
I understand, it's tough to see. You have to kind of tilt your head and squint.Jammydodger wrote:MW1221 wrote: I'm looking for the point of this post, and I'm not seeing it.
No and I can't see the point in your post either.
Oh yes of course I can see it quite clearly now Thanks for that much appreciated.MW1221 wrote:I understand, it's tough to see. You have to kind of tilt your head and squint.Jammydodger wrote:MW1221 wrote: I'm looking for the point of this post, and I'm not seeing it.
No and I can't see the point in your post either.
You see, it's classical view of renaissance art. The zebra represents the antelopes, running for freedom, while the farm house represents the feared hunter, decked in the fur of his latest kill--the evil chipmunk. If you look really closely, you can see dollar signs in the chipmunks eyes, representing the death of a currency yet to be born.
The color scheme is probably the most magnificent though. See how the oranges are separated from the reds by the thin stripe of white? That's because of the constant struggle between good melons and bad melons. I mean, how often have you gone to the store and bought what you think is a perfectly good melon only to get it home and find out that it's a pumpkin, and a plastic one at that? I think the painter really captured that raw emotion. Don't you?
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