Chowder Jones is a enormously grumpy crab, and once worked as muscle for the Voom Voom Room, cracking the shells of those needin' crackin'. After a disagreement with management he decided to put the life of violence behind him  decided to open the Chowder Shack.  At the Chowder Shack everyone gets along, mostly due to Chow (Which is what close friends call him.) being a large and ornery Crab. Chow lives in a shoe behind the shack and spends his free time at the local animal shelter. His home is filled to the brim with runaway catfish.
Always the odd one out and the orphan, a genius teen was named profesora . Often the target of bullying in school she has vowed to have her revenge on all the bullies of the world, one invention at a time. Her agile mind bent to that task of proving her worth in indescribably horrible ways. She is seldom seen without her childhood friend an ne-er-do-well Sloog, by her side.
Best friend to Profesora Scuttelbutt and aspirational villian, The Sloog spends his  time coming up with comically flawed plans alongside the Profesora. Son of a wealthy industrialist father, Sloog seeks the approval of his distant father with his get rich quick schemes, and world domination plots. Inevitable these fail, much to his chagrin, but ever the optimist he bounces back after comically exaggerating bout of grieving.  
A Captain of Industry, this odious lobster, the fattest of the fat cats, is a big deal in the city of Coralia. In the neon glow of the sparkling city he has carved his empire of indulgence from the dreams of the every-man. In the Hidden dark corners folks whisper to each other of the Lobfather's sinister motives and his involvement with the Undersea Mafia.
Sheriff Shrimply faces all the criminals of the deep, big or small, the tiny lawman is at their heels. He is often seen roaming Davy Jones's locker, tracking down the criminals hiding in its shadowy canyons. While the sheriff he is kicking his boots back off duty you can find him in Coralia, catching some shut-eye.
As a adored Performer of star and show, her name headlines many of the Music Halls of Opalescent boulevard in Great Coralia. Vava is always the center of attention, a goddess in the spotlight and when she walks into a room, it goes quiet.
Women want to be her and men want to be near her. The poor girl with no intention in doing so , leaves behind stings of broken hearts as she flits through high society.
 
Dorothea Lilypad, widow and great matriarch of Lilypond Village where the upper crust idle away  their days in luxury.
Amassing incredible wealth over the years, she spends her retirement coordinating all the local high society charitable efforts. Not a good deed goes by unseen by her ever present eyes, and Dorothea has a memory that would shame an elephant.  Her grandfather Agustus Faustus Lilypad was the founding father of the village, and she carries this legacy with serious dignity. 
The trusted man servant of Dorothea Lilypad, this grumpy, sour-faced cricket servers on his Mistress, hand and foot. A consummate professional Rickets takes his butler-ing duties exceptionally seriously, which he executes with flair, panache, but mostly with strict discipline. The Lilypad Mansion never misses a beat, everything is on time and in its place. 
This bright gem of a City is called Coralia, the city of Music, excitement and the place where dreams are made and broken.
The home of the wealthy, high society, this Village is a serene place of wealth and affluence. The Best schools in the land are found here, and the widow Lilypad's charity efforts have placed many orphans in local boarding houses.  
The Marsh is the great cultural mixing pot of the land, everyone has visited at least once, filled with farmers , entertainers and visitors from abroad.
The deep seabed, where miscreants and outlaws hide, it takes a bold soul to find their fortune in this untamed land. And braver souls to hold on to it.
Coralia
Published:

Coralia

Aquatic themed Characters and Locations. Illustrated in a cartoony/children's book style and execution. Combining traditional media and digital Read More

Published: