Animals Magnets
Description: This funny t-shirt is the perfect gift to a lazy friend, mom, girlfriend, boyfriend, best friend who loves pandas. Featuring the phrase No You Do It with a tired and cute panda. This product is perfect to wear on Birthdays, Holidays, Parties, or just staying in home with his cat or dog. Have a variety of products such as t-shirts, hoodies, masks and much more.
here for the cats alien ufo cats Magnet
by kittens give stitches / moonstruck crystals / kara pavlik
$3.75 $4.75
Description: This witty design, titled "Shenanigans Because Life Is More Fun When You Are Up To Something" features a humorous, spirited sentiment. It's a symbolic visual that comically captures serene mischief and a playful nod to life's playful side.
Shenanigans Because Life Is More Fun When You Are Up To Something Magnet
by Solberg
$3.75 $4.75
Description: A cute yellow duck holding a small knife, around it the text "I choose violence". An art that mixes humor with the temperament of ducks.
I Choose Violence Funny Duck by Tobe Fonseca Magnet
by Tobe Fonseca
$3.75 $4.75
Description: Dino Boy is a young boy called Todd who parachuted out of a crashing plane with his parents still on board. He lands in an unknown South American valley where dinosaurs, cavemen, and prehistoric mammals somehow have survived alongside some strange creatures and various tribes like the Moss Men, the Rock Pygmies, the Worm People and the Vampire Men, amongst others. Dino Boy then meets the caveman Ugh (who saves Dino Boy from a Smilodon when he first arrives) and his pet baby Brontosaurus Bronty who become his friends in the episodes to come. The cartoon also features a woolly mammoth named Tusko who Ugh would enlist in certain episodes to help him, Dino Boy, and Bronty out.
Description: The three wise monkeys are a Japanese pictorial maxim, embodying the proverbial principle "see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil". The three monkeys are Mizaru (見ざる), "does not see", covering his eyes Kikazaru (聞かざる), "does not hear", covering his ears Iwazaru (言わざる), "does not speak", covering his mouth. Lafcadio Hearn refers to them as the three mystic apes. There are at least two divergent interpretations of the maxim: in Buddhist tradition, it is about avoiding evil thoughts and deeds. In the West, however, it is often interpreted as dealing with impropriety by turning a blind eye.