Reigen stared at him, his expression stern in the way Serizawa had learned it was when he didn’t have to keep up his customer service pleasantries. He stepped close to him and rested his forehead against his shoulder, hiding his expression. His quiet words, however, Serizawa could hear loud and clear.
“retractable” might be the wrong word for duck teeth. they’d be “protractable”, like cat claws. sheathed by default, in a relaxed position. then you piss them off and they open their mouth to bite you and SHING
Anonymous asked: hi, mod!! I just wanted to thank you for making your comic The Princess and the Jester! I've been showing it to my students every week (I teach several week long summer classes on creative writing for 5th-8th graders) on poetry day to get them more excited about writing poems and they always LOVE it. That comic is when the lesson really starts to click for them. I really owe you a lot for that! I thought I'd let you know :D
WWUAHGUAHUGHU WHAT OH MY GOODNES THA TAKWNF THANKS OH G
blazedrgn asked: I love the interaction between Gladstone and Donald in a Christmas for Shacktown, just how Donald asks, Gladstone ends up agreeing, and when Gladstone's favorite hat takes damage, Donald's ready to throw down with whoever caused it, and he doesn't even know WHO. The whole exchange is just really sweet to me
I KNOW RIGHT it’s one of those lovely, simple exchanges that really shows what their relationship is despite their differences <3
Anonymous asked: okay I know you're still working on the next doodle comic (and it'll be a long time bc you've said it's 'a doozy' and like at least 30 pages long) but can you at least give us a tiny hint of what it's about? I gotsa know SOMETHING about it!
you’re twisting my arm here (and you’re right it’s going to be Long While before it’s finished), but I don’t want to spoil things, so I’ll just give two little samples of Carl Barks which have fed into its inspiration: one, the shading and overall vibe of this panel of Only a Poor Old Man -
And this line of Gladstone’s in A Christmas for Shacktown (he also says it in a couple of other stories like A Financial Fable)