Bimbo wrote:
Basically what I've done so far is not mentioned the cat's colour, but named him Smoke, implying he's black. Is that okay or should I mention somewhere the colour?
Laboratory wrote:
Mmm yeah I would say so, or at least dark-furred, as black cats in particular are symbolic of Halloween etc. How you do it is up to you though, so you could for instance just describe the encounter with a cat, and then finish with "then she remembered that the cat she had seen earlier was black, and suddenly it all made sense" or something like that.. Hopefully my explanation & example makes sense
@Vanity
Vanity wrote:
Do we have to specificaly describe the cat as black? Or can it also be implied by other parts of the story?
Do we have to specificaly describe the cat as black? Or can it also be implied by other parts of the story?
Mmm yeah I would say so, or at least dark-furred, as black cats in particular are symbolic of Halloween etc. How you do it is up to you though, so you could for instance just describe the encounter with a cat, and then finish with "then she remembered that the cat she had seen earlier was black, and suddenly it all made sense" or something like that.. Hopefully my explanation & example makes sense
@Vanity
Basically what I've done so far is not mentioned the cat's colour, but named him Smoke, implying he's black. Is that okay or should I mention somewhere the colour?