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December 12, 2005
HEY AUCTION WINNERS!!!

Just a note - if you ordered original art, please check your ebay feedback - if I've left you feedback, your order was shipped today. If I have NOT left you feedback, then I have not received payment from you yet, and your item will ship as soon as that occurs - thanks! I was reassured by the post office that all internation artwork should reach its destination before Christmas, for any international buyers that were concerned.

If you have made a paypal payment for artwork, and I have not left feedback for you, please contact me via Ebay - if you've mailed in a payment and you haven't been left feedback, I probably just haven't gotten it in the mail yet, and your artwork will ship as soon as I get it. Thanks guys!

Comic updates are on hold for the moment as I am currently in the process of relocating - I'm hoping to have everything moved over by this weekend. Thanks for your patience with the delays!

READ POSTER NOW AVAILABLE FOR SALE!

Warehouse 23 is now doing poster printing, and as a result they are now offering the 'Read' design in a gorgeous, full-color 11x17 poster on heavyweight paper. I just received my comps today and I couldn't be happier with them. You can access the Warehouse 23 store by clicking on the 'store' button, or by clicking on this link - go give it a look!

Old News:

That's all, folks. Thank you for reading!

If you're despondent over the lack of QoW, this news may cheer you - due to an overwhelmingly positive reader response, QoW will start again next Monday and re-run all the original strips, seven days a week, with commentary. That's right, if you so choose you'll get to read my babblings about what exactly went on with the strips, stuff that wasn't supposed to happen, ideas that were ditched, ideas that were never explored, the works. I realize it's not NEW strips, but I thought it would be fun to do while I work on putting out my next project. Speaking of the next project - I will be announcing it as soon as it's ready to go. Keep an eye on the website, or the LJ community, or the forum, as I'll be posting it all over the place once it's live.

For those looking for other strips to read, check out my links section, and also the Keenspot dropdown up in the corner has a ton of good reads on it as well.

Comics!:
Something Positive
Sexy Losers
Scary Go Round
Striptease
Checkerboard Nightmare
It's Walky
CRFH!!!
Psychic Dyslexia Institute
24fps
Combustible Orange

Kill all remaining time you have here:
The Dionaea House - creepy and cool story!
fishfish designs: KITTY HATS!
Common Rotation - awesome band!
The Faerie Citadel: Wings and More!
X-Entertainment
Electronic Mayhem






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Hi there! You are reading the Queen of Wands rapid-fire reruns, a seven-day a week run of QoW with commentary. Commentary on later strips will contain spoilers, so if you are a new reader and here for the first time, I suggest you take a trip to the beginning of the archives and give the comic a read-through spoiler-free before jumping into the commentary.
Originally aired 10/18/04: I had over a hundred My Little Ponies when I was younger, and I used to love playing with them - my little sister also had a sizeable collection. One of our favorite games requires a little explanation - see, My Little Ponies are hollow. When you're making a custom pony (Like I did with Drumstick in this strip), you remove the head and work from there - the head is usually glued on but in the case of the older ponies, it was never glued on very well. My sister and I caught onto this, as well as the fact that if you broke the glue seal suddenly your pony could look from side to SIDE, which was highly entertaining. Even more entertaining was one of our favorite games - we'd remove the heads from all of the ponies, toss them in a big pile and then randomly start sticking heads on ponies until they all had a new head. Then we'd spend an hour exclaiming over how wonderful the new heads looked. My mother once caught us playing this game - or rather I remember her walking in, taking in the pile of pony heads on the floor and the decapitated ponies standing neatly in a ring around the pile, turning around, and quietly walking out.