More than probably i'll be just a rebloger (since i lack talents XD); but since i have wide and varied tastes you will see a lot of variety aroud here.

So far you will find mostly BBC's "Sherlock". And of course some of my men ;)

Other things that may drop by: art, music, weirdness, geekness, fun, other TV shows....etc etc etc

What you won't find here at all: Irene Adler, Avengers, Hiddleston, Elementary. Specially the last two.

My Contributions: Made By me

My Recomendations: Give it a look

23rd May 2013

Photoset reblogged from Someday I'll be part of your world. with 1,228 notes

bakerstreetbabes:

mid0nz:

BBC Sherlock’s Books & Magazines Master List 

  • This list is as accurate as possible as of 5/22/13. These are the books that I’ve caught but it’s always possible I missed some! BIG thanks to naturalshocks & anons for reporting several books that I’ve missed.
  • Please send additions, corrections, comments, questions, etc. to http://mid0nz.tumblr.com

Abbreviation Key:

Only epidoses with an * have books that I’ve seen/remembered/listed.

*P = Pilot
*ASiP = A Study in Pink
*TBB = The Blind Banker
TGG =The Great Game
*ASiB = A Scandal in Belgravia
*THoB = The Hounds of Baskerville
*TRF = The Reichenbach Fall
*TV =
The Blog of John H. Watson- The Visitor
*AWJ = Arwel Wyn Jones pre-S3 set photos
? = Indicates that the title is partially illegible

BOOKS & MAGAZINES VISIBLE AT 221B

Sherlock’s Bookcases

The Kitchen Table

Sherlock’s Desk

The Lounge Floor

Under John’s Lamp Table

  • The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16. (Chicago to Death) + one other volume, illegible [TBB]

The Foyer (There are 2 book cases: one next to the lounge entrance to 221B, and another across from the kitchen entrance.)

  • ? probably random volumes from an old encyclopedia. [HoB]
  • Scarlet Feather by Maeve Binchy [ASiP] (I’m assuming that’s Mrs. Hudson’s!)

Taped to the Wall (over the fireplace)

The Blind Banker (see also, Books Visible at 221B)

Carriers’ Books

Library

The Hounds of Baskerville

The CO’s office

The Reichenbach Fall (see also, Books Visible at 221B)

St. Aldate’s

Amazing and now even more thorough!

Tagged: SherlockSherlock S2books*_*

Source: mid0nz

17th May 2013

Photo reblogged from "There is nothing so important as trifles." with 31 notes

tookmyskull:

NAMESAKES
In developing his literary detective, Doyle based Sherlock Holmes on Dr. Joseph Bell, a surgeon and teacher he had studied with while attending Edinburgh University.
Holmes’ last name may have been based on American jurist and fellow doctor Oliver Wendell Holmes (above), whom Doyle greatly admired.
“Never,” Doyle once wrote, “have I so known and loved a man whom I had never met.”
(How can you not admire a man with a ‘tache like that.)
His detective’s first name may have come from Alfred Sherlock, a prominent violinist of his time, although other possibilities have been put forward.
“Years ago,” Doyle was once quoted in a newspaper, “I made thirty runs against a bowler by the name of Sherlock, and I always had a kindly feeling for that name.”
Holmes’ devoted friend Dr. John Watson may have been named after a doctor who, like Doyle, had practiced at Southsea. The real Dr. John Watson also was a Portsmouth Literary and Scientific Society member who’d served time in Manchuria.
Sherlock Holmes and John Watson were not the original names Doyle chose.
In “The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes,” Sherlockian scholar Vincent Starrett writes: “A leaf from a notebook of the period exists, and the astonished eye beholds it with dismay. ‘Sherrinford Holmes’ was the detective’s name as first it was jotted down by his creator. And from the same source, one infers there was an earlier name for Watson. The good doctor, one learns with tardy apprehension, was to have been ‘Ormand Sacker.’ It is a revealing page, that page from Conan Doyle’s old notebook, and a faintly distressing one. In the end, however, it was Sherlock Holmes, and Sherlock Holmes it is today – the most familiar figure in modern English fiction; a name that has become a permanent part of the English language.”

tookmyskull:

NAMESAKES


In developing his literary detective, Doyle based Sherlock Holmes on Dr. Joseph Bell, a surgeon and teacher he had studied with while attending Edinburgh University.

Holmes’ last name may have been based on American jurist and fellow doctor Oliver Wendell Holmes (above), whom Doyle greatly admired.

“Never,” Doyle once wrote, “have I so known and loved a man whom I had never met.”

(How can you not admire a man with a ‘tache like that.)

His detective’s first name may have come from Alfred Sherlock, a prominent violinist of his time, although other possibilities have been put forward.

“Years ago,” Doyle was once quoted in a newspaper, “I made thirty runs against a bowler by the name of Sherlock, and I always had a kindly feeling for that name.”

Holmes’ devoted friend Dr. John Watson may have been named after a doctor who, like Doyle, had practiced at Southsea. The real Dr. John Watson also was a Portsmouth Literary and Scientific Society member who’d served time in Manchuria.

Sherlock Holmes and John Watson were not the original names Doyle chose.

In “The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes,” Sherlockian scholar Vincent Starrett writes: “A leaf from a notebook of the period exists, and the astonished eye beholds it with dismay. ‘Sherrinford Holmes’ was the detective’s name as first it was jotted down by his creator. And from the same source, one infers there was an earlier name for Watson. The good doctor, one learns with tardy apprehension, was to have been ‘Ormand Sacker.’ It is a revealing page, that page from Conan Doyle’s old notebook, and a faintly distressing one. In the end, however, it was Sherlock Holmes, and Sherlock Holmes it is today – the most familiar figure in modern English fiction; a name that has become a permanent part of the English language.”

Tagged: Sherlock HolmescanonbooksDoyle

Source: tookmyskull

16th May 2013

Quote reblogged from "There is nothing so important as trifles." with 124 notes

One of the most remarkable characteristics of Sherlock Holmes was his power of throwing his brain out of action and switching all his thoughts onto lighter things whenever he had convinced himself that he could no longer work to advantage.
— Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, His Last Bow (via polymnia)

Tagged: Sherlock Holmescanonbooks

Source: polymnia

15th May 2013

Quote reblogged from One more miracle Sherlock, for me with 260 notes

The good Watson had at that time deserted me for a wife, the only selfish action which I can recall in our association. I was alone.

Sherlock Holmes,

The Blanched Soldier, by A. C. Doyle

(via xgraciela)

Tagged: Sherlock Holmescanonbooksand this is one of the reasons i don't like reading the latest stories >.<

Source: xgraciela

12th May 2013

Photo reblogged from The Baker Street Babes with 177 notes

bakerstreetbabes:

tea-at-221b:

The Adventure of the Devil’s Foot 1910

bakerstreetbabes:

tea-at-221b:

The Adventure of the Devil’s Foot 1910

Tagged: Sherlock Holmescanonbooksand this is why i want them to do this story in Sherlock!

Source: tea-at-221b

11th May 2013

Quote reblogged from "There is nothing so important as trifles." with 12 notes

Ah, I forgot I had not told you. I am getting into your involved habit, Watson, of telling a story backward”.

Sherlock Holmes to Dr. Watson

(Arthur Conan Doyle, The Problem of Thor Bridge)

Tagged: Sherlock Holmescanonbooks

Source: thenorwoodbuilder

11th May 2013

Photo reblogged from "There is nothing so important as trifles." with 86 notes

Tagged: Sherlock Holmescanonbooks

Source: meiringens

11th May 2013

Quote reblogged from Canon Fodder Friday with 3 notes

To the logician all things should be seen exactly as they are, and to underestimate one’s self is as much a departure from truth as to exaggerate one’s own powers. When I say, therefore, that Mycroft has better powers of observation than I, you may take it that I am speaking the exact and literal truth.

Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure of the Greek Interpreter

It’s Canon Fodder Friday time!

If you’re reading along with us, remember to post your reaction to this week’s story (in any form you choose) to the #canonfodderfriday tag. Then go browse the tag to see what everyone else has posted!

(via canonfodderfriday)

Tagged: Sherlock Holmescanonbooks

8th May 2013

Photoset reblogged from Something witty goes here with 407 notes

bakerstreetbabes:

Spanish Sherlock Holmes story covers by Rafael Penagos

You can see more at El Desván del Abuelito

I love these, they’re so very unique!

Tagged: Sherlock Holmescanonbooks

Source: eldesvandelabuelito.blogspot.com

5th May 2013

Photo reblogged from The Science of Johnlock with 2,179 notes

Tagged: Sherlock Holmescanonbooks

Source: meiringens