A brass-bound record of chaos, corsets, and commentary.

Tag: kraken

Victorian lady in a steampunk gown sits in an ornate airship lounge, opening a small clutch bag to reveal a tiny kraken offering her a lace handkerchief. At the bottom of the meme image reads the caption "Pocket Kraken — because one can never be too careful with valuables… or sailors.".

Pocket Kraken — because one can never be too careful…

Pocket Kraken — because one can never be too careful with valuables… or sailors.

Facebook, 9th Augast 2025.

Victorian lady in a steampunk gown sits in an ornate airship lounge, opening a small clutch bag to reveal a tiny kraken offering her a lace handkerchief. At the bottom of the meme image reads the caption "Pocket Kraken — because one can never be too careful with valuables… or sailors.".

Captain’s Log, Supplemental:
Lady Winslet’s new ‘pocket companion’ has stirred both admiration and mild panic among the crew. Measuring no more than six inches from tentacle to tentacle, the diminutive kraken resides in her evening clutch and responds to her commands with unnerving swiftness.
Yesterday, it passed her a handkerchief; today, it attempted to fillet Jenkins for looking at her bonnet. I am forced to consider the possibility that we’ve taken on the most well-dressed privateer in the aether.

Between the lines (and pixels).

The “Pocket Kraken” meme takes one of the most feared creatures of maritime legend and reimagines it as a dainty, handbag-sized companion for the well-dressed steampunk socialite. In true steampunk fashion, it blends the absurd with the refined — pairing high society etiquette with a fantastical pet that’s equal parts charming and dangerous.

The humour comes from the juxtaposition: a creature known for dragging ships beneath the waves is here politely handing over a lace handkerchief. In the logic of the steampunk world, this is perfectly normal — after all, if you can fit an airship in a teacup (given the right amount of brass and optimism), why shouldn’t a kraken fit in your evening clutch?

The caption, “Pocket Kraken — because one can never be too careful with valuables… or sailors,” plays into the tongue-in-cheek worldbuilding, implying that the kraken’s talents are equally suited to guarding jewels and abducting hapless seafarers. It’s a wink to those familiar with nautical lore and a nod to the whimsical impracticality that defines the genre.


A steampunk-style etched illustration of a chaotic scene where a man in Victorian attire releases a large pigeon from a cylindrical canister marked “broadband.” In the background, another character appears alarmed by questionable events. The style is darkly whimsical and deliberately surreal.

Deploying the Emergency Diplomacy Kraken

Logbook Entry #008 – Tentacle Diplomacy Protocols

What’s your steampunk solution to unexpected sea monsters?

Drop it below

Deploying the diplomacy Kraken again… Or never mind the tentacles…?

Visuals are conjured with the help of machines. No krakens were harmed (or negotiated with) in the making of this image.

Facebook, 13th May 2025;

A steampunk-style etched illustration of a chaotic scene where a man in Victorian attire releases a large pigeon from a cylindrical canister marked “broadband.” In the background, another character appears alarmed by questionable events. The style is darkly whimsical and deliberately surreal.

Observed anomaly:

Unidentified leviathan encountered in the lower fog banks of the Thames-Sargasso Channel.

Standard torpedo etiquette is deemed insufficient.

Protocol Theta-8 enacted: Deploy the emergency diplomacy kraken.

Results: inconclusive, but impressively dramatic.

Meme context:

Originally posted to Facebook with the prompt:

🧭 What’s your steampunk solution to unexpected sea monsters?

The replies included everything from polite cannon-fire to “ask if it’s read Jules Verne.”

This image represents one of the more… tactile approaches.

Text reads:

“Deploying the emergency diplomacy kraken again.

Some days call for torpedoes. Other days call for tentacles.”

Because sometimes, even in steampunk diplomacy, things get grabby.

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