Married to The Sea: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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{{quote|Married to the Sea - the champaigne of web comics.}}
{{quote|''Married to the Sea - the champaigne of web comics.''}}


''Married to the Sea'' is a gag-a-day webcomic created by Drew (of ''Toothpaste for Dinner'' fame) Natalee Dee (of ''[[Natalie Dee]]'' fame). It is not drawn per se - it is more of a collage made of public domain black and white pictures, mostly from Victorian era USA, with captions and dialogue added. Most of the humour is based upon how oddly the captions and dialogues fit, reinterpreting the picture entirely. Intentional anachronisms, both in topics and in speech, are also added pretty often. There is also social commentary and just simply nonsensical stuff.
''[[Married to The Sea]]'' is a gag-a-day webcomic created by Drew (of ''Toothpaste for Dinner'' fame) Natalee Dee (of ''[[Natalie Dee]]'' fame). It is not drawn per se - it is more of a collage made of public domain black and white pictures, mostly from Victorian era USA, with captions and dialogue added. Most of the humour is based upon how oddly the captions and dialogues fit, reinterpreting the picture entirely. Intentional anachronisms, both in topics and in speech, are also added pretty often. There is also social commentary and just simply nonsensical stuff.


You can read it [http://www.marriedtothesea.com here].
You can read it [http://www.marriedtothesea.com here].


{{tropelist}}
=== Tropes used by this webcomic: ===
* [[Anachronism Stew]]
* [[Anachronism Stew]]
* [[Art Style Dissonance]]: In the same way as [[Wondermark]].
* [[Art Style Dissonance]]: In the same way as [[Wondermark]].

Latest revision as of 04:15, 29 December 2016

Married to the Sea - the champaigne of web comics.

Married to The Sea is a gag-a-day webcomic created by Drew (of Toothpaste for Dinner fame) Natalee Dee (of Natalie Dee fame). It is not drawn per se - it is more of a collage made of public domain black and white pictures, mostly from Victorian era USA, with captions and dialogue added. Most of the humour is based upon how oddly the captions and dialogues fit, reinterpreting the picture entirely. Intentional anachronisms, both in topics and in speech, are also added pretty often. There is also social commentary and just simply nonsensical stuff.

You can read it here.

Tropes used in Married to The Sea include: