h a l f b a k e r yCogito, ergo sumthin'
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
|
Nice try with the links, guys, but "close only counts in horseshoes and hand-grenades". Cookies and crackers are two different confections. And animal crackers typically are not graham crackers. And while most dinosaurs are extinct, they weren't included on the "extinct animal crackers" idea-list (which was about much-more-recently-extinct critters). |
|
|
your shortest idea yet, V? |
|
|
[po], no, "Neck Bolts" is my shortest (total words including title and subtitle and main text). And likely to stay that way. |
|
|
I'd hate to see the size of the box they come in. |
|
|
This would be especially cool if the crackers were not
whole dinosaurs but bones that could interlock into a
larger dinosaur. It would look like -link-. |
|
|
Sort of baked; back in the '80s, The Smithsonian Museum of
Natural History gift shop sold cookie-cutter sets that made
sugar cookies in shapes that, once baked, could be
assembled into simple models that vaguely resembled your
standard four, steggy, bronto, triceratops, and, of course,
good ol' Rexy. Last time I was there they didn't have them
(probably for the sole reason that my wife wanted them
for some inexplicable reason.) |
|
|
The only place I could find an example of these was on E-
bay, so I didn't link to it. If you absolutely have to see
them for yourself (they're pretty disappointing), do a
product search for 'Smithsonian dino cookie cutter' and be
prepared to wade through about 60 search results that
have little if anything to do with cookies, dinosaurs,
and/or the Smithsonian Institute. You might get lucky. |
|
|
Could the range be extended to include dinosaur shaped sacramental breads? |
|
| |