Okay but do you have a section of your house dedicated to the can opener, including decoration and a table specifically made for the potential tin man you’ll use it on, the ONLY thing it could be used for?
And who says that the buffer could only be for a Tin Man? There might be a community of giants who favor armor close enough for the buffer to be a necessity.
No one ever freaks out when the foursome shows up; it’s a land where magic is common. Who knows how many animate metal folks arrive on a daily basis.
Also, look at Manhattan. It’s not that big an island. But even if you only look below 14th Street, you’ll find two unused subway stations. If Manhattan can support two unsued subway stations, Oz can support at least a dozen giant buffers.
If tin man is manufactured there must be hundreds of them working as woodsmen. If they are natural, there would be a population of at least thousands to be sustainable. I wonder if tin women lay eggs or have live births?
Tin man in the book was made by… not manufacturing. It was upsetting but it’s been so long all I remember was “Well these books are vastly different”. There was also a village of china dolls.
I remember that the Wicked Witch of the East (the one killed by Dorthy’s house) had enchanted the axe of a man who was a woodcutter named Nick Chopper. The axe would randomly dismember his own body when used. Some guy he knew would replace his body part when that happened, eventually replacing everything, which is how he became the tinman.
But nobody ever said “Hey buddy, how about maybe buying a new axe since this one keeps chopping off things?”
Chap can be a leg protector worn by a horse rider who goes through thorny bushes, or a British slang term for a man. Rubbing one with polish is a bit different from rubbing the other
Ah yes, so let me explain: the discussion on the rare occasions where the polish wheel could be used, I tried to make a joke that the wheel is used for special parties, but that it turned out it can be used to actually, literally make Tin Man shiny too. Do indeed it’s the slang word for man, but I was not trying to put even more naughty in. Sorry if I rubbed you the wrong way!
Wall mounted can openers were a thing, my grandma had one, and it had a decorated back plate too with 60’s style orange and brown flowers printed on it.
Okay but do you have a section of your house dedicated to the can opener, including decoration and a table specifically made for the potential tin man you’ll use it on, the ONLY thing it could be used for?
I’m only one person.
And who says that the buffer could only be for a Tin Man? There might be a community of giants who favor armor close enough for the buffer to be a necessity.
No one ever freaks out when the foursome shows up; it’s a land where magic is common. Who knows how many animate metal folks arrive on a daily basis.
Also, look at Manhattan. It’s not that big an island. But even if you only look below 14th Street, you’ll find two unused subway stations. If Manhattan can support two unsued subway stations, Oz can support at least a dozen giant buffers.
If tin man is manufactured there must be hundreds of them working as woodsmen. If they are natural, there would be a population of at least thousands to be sustainable. I wonder if tin women lay eggs or have live births?
Live births. Tin Women have an internal, moving assembly line. They are hundreds of times larger than a tin man.
Tin man in the book was made by… not manufacturing. It was upsetting but it’s been so long all I remember was “Well these books are vastly different”. There was also a village of china dolls.
I remember that the Wicked Witch of the East (the one killed by Dorthy’s house) had enchanted the axe of a man who was a woodcutter named Nick Chopper. The axe would randomly dismember his own body when used. Some guy he knew would replace his body part when that happened, eventually replacing everything, which is how he became the tinman.
But nobody ever said “Hey buddy, how about maybe buying a new axe since this one keeps chopping off things?”
I’m also fairly certain someone saved the body parts and made a new not him from them? That was probably a later book though.
Woodcutter of Theseus?
The books got extremely weird!
Not only for Tin Man, indeed. They run very kinky parties there in the weekends, might as well polish up a shiny chap once in a while.
You realize ‘chap’ can have two meanings?
Chap can be a leg protector worn by a horse rider who goes through thorny bushes, or a British slang term for a man. Rubbing one with polish is a bit different from rubbing the other
Ah yes, so let me explain: the discussion on the rare occasions where the polish wheel could be used, I tried to make a joke that the wheel is used for special parties, but that it turned out it can be used to actually, literally make Tin Man shiny too. Do indeed it’s the slang word for man, but I was not trying to put even more naughty in. Sorry if I rubbed you the wrong way!
Inspector Clouseau voice -
“I have never bin rub-bed the wrong way!”
Wall mounted can openers were a thing, my grandma had one, and it had a decorated back plate too with 60’s style orange and brown flowers printed on it.
Scarecrow’s table right next to it is identical. Hopefully they put some kind of cushioning on them for clients not made out of tin or straw.