#7: >>19188Previous threads:>>4286 >>7962 >>9877 >>12247 >>13706 >>15838
#7: >>19188
Previous threads:>>4286 >>7962 >>9877 >>12247 >>13706 >>15838
>>21591Is there a name for that corded ball Konata has?
>>21591
Is there a name for that corded ball Konata has?
>>21901It's a water balloon, and I'm honestly unsure of the name... good question.
>>21902 It's a water balloon that functions as a yo-yo.
This makes for an awesome wallpaperBy the way, is it even possible to make dumps here with that verification shit?
This makes for an awesome wallpaper
By the way, is it even possible to make dumps here with that verification shit?
>>22144I do believe that's exactly what they're trying to stop.
Why?You're not telling me that you're posting these thousand of pics... One by one, manually!?
Why?
You're not telling me that you're posting these thousand of pics... One by one, manually!?
These pictures didn't all just suddenly appear here. This board's been here a while, and there are many people who contribute to it.
Yeah, one by one over the course of a couple years isn't too much of an effort, really. I rarely have more than two or three to post in a thread per week.
IT'S MOTHER EFFING GIF TIME
http://www.fanfiction.net/s/5427916/1/The_Rise_of_Konata
>>22800I guess that's supposed to be a joke, but nobody is laughing.
>>22726Any more by this artist??
>>22726
Any more by this artist??
(remove the verification...)
>>22928it keeps the spambots out
>>23272NOT her bedroom desk.
>>23272
NOT her bedroom desk.
>>23273THANK you for sharing.
>>23273she's at college ^_____^;
>>23277Actually it looks like she's working at an animation studio. That's a storyboard form she's writing on and I see a stopwatch next to her used for timing scenes.
>>23277
Actually it looks like she's working at an animation studio. That's a storyboard form she's writing on and I see a stopwatch next to her used for timing scenes.
>>23277Wish we had a play-by-play of the gang in college if can't have scanlations!
Wish we had a play-by-play of the gang in college if can't have scanlations!
>>23272Since when has Konata started wearing rope braids?
Since when has Konata started wearing rope braids?
>>23299Episode 6, when she goes to the beach with the others.
>>23299
Episode 6, when she goes to the beach with the others.
Somebody needs to draw Konata cosplaying as that chick from Bayonetta.She has the hair for it already.
>>23607Say what??
>>23607
Say what??
>>23610"Baka!"
>>23695What is it bout these tables Japanses love so much in anime??
>>23695
What is it bout these tables Japanses love so much in anime??
>>23702Since most modest Japanese homes do not have central heating these tables, called kotatsu, have a heating element underneath and a cloth skirt to keep the heat in. So it's comfortable on cold days to snuggle up to them or even sleep in them.
>>23702
Since most modest Japanese homes do not have central heating these tables, called kotatsu, have a heating element underneath and a cloth skirt to keep the heat in. So it's comfortable on cold days to snuggle up to them or even sleep in them.
>>23703I don't wanna say how backwards for a place like Japan, but Geeze! Is home heating oil that expensive over there???
>>23703
I don't wanna say how backwards for a place like Japan, but Geeze! Is home heating oil that expensive over there???
>>23704As with most differences between societies, you can't really say it's "backwards" until examining the history which led to it.Consider that most people in urban areas live in high-rise apartments. These are the people who would be able to first afford cooling systems when they were new and expensive. Unlike America, however, they couldn't simply move to a newer, more recently-built house. In Japan, some house or large apartment (called "mansion"s) loans are taken out for multiple generations (as in, you will inherit your parents house and continue payment on its loan). Thus despite the advent of new home climate control technologies, it was impractical to achieve them by altering the building and inconveniencing all who lived there. Thus one bought a wall/window-mounted unit and it became a precedent. This is a pattern that is common across much of Asia. Along with the kotatsu, a sort of space-heater-with-fan is also common.Many newer office buildings, and some apartments/mansions do have central air but even with with recent increases in adoption, it's still not the norm. One option that is also common for homes is a split system which is a bit more complicated and modern than a simple window-mount, but has less of the ductwork and bulk of American-style central systems. My apartment has these and they're quite nice.
>>23704As with most differences between societies, you can't really say it's "backwards" until examining the history which led to it.Consider that most people in urban areas live in high-rise apartments. These are the people who would be able to first afford cooling systems when they were new and expensive. Unlike America, however, they couldn't simply move to a newer, more recently-built house. In Japan, some house or large apartment (called "mansion"s) loans are taken out for multiple generations (as in, you will inherit your parents house and continue payment on its loan). Thus despite the advent of new home climate control technologies, it was impractical to achieve them by altering the building and inconveniencing all who lived there. Thus one bought a wall/window-mounted unit and it became a precedent. This is a pattern that is common across much of Asia. Along with the kotatsu, a sort of space-heater-with-fan is also common.
Many newer office buildings, and some apartments/mansions do have central air but even with with recent increases in adoption, it's still not the norm. One option that is also common for homes is a split system which is a bit more complicated and modern than a simple window-mount, but has less of the ductwork and bulk of American-style central systems. My apartment has these and they're quite nice.
>>23706I think it may also have something to do with it not being a good idea to use oil or gas as fuel to heat wooden structures in a highly earthquake-prone country, something most people never have to think of.
>>23711That's true as well. There is the same issue to a lesser extent with electricity and so homes have easily-accessible earthquake-related circuit breakers. Also one doesn't have to use gas or oil even for central heating. In the American south where it's often not cold for long and not as extreme, you simply use the same electric central air conditioning unit for heating as you do for cooling. Even though it's more expensive/inefficient than oil or gas, you don't have to do it as often or as intensely as at higher latitudes so the solution works well enough.
>>22637Normal Konata = KawaiiCat-eared Konata = Mega kawaii
>>22637
Normal Konata = KawaiiCat-eared Konata = Mega kawaii
>>24311isn't this Kanata?
>>24330Nope, there's an ahoge.
>>24330
Nope, there's an ahoge.
Over 100 images, continued in >>24392
- wakaba 3.0.7 + futaba + futallaby -