I have gotten into the habit of checking www.tornadohq.com every time the weather feels "weird" to me, and more importantly I have been joyfully sending that particular page to my more anxiety-prone extended family.
But listen, beloved Tumblrines who are in nothern Texas and most of Nebraska:
I'm keeping you in my thoughts today, April 26th, 2024. I hope you're safe and dry and secure. A mile-wide supercell tornado is Not Fun Times.
Is Severe Weather In Your Forecast? #severeweather #tornado #flooding
For those folks in the southern and central plains and adjacent areas, itâs no secret that weâre heading into several days of severe weather with all hazards, including tornadoes, expected. Hereâs some very important and helpful severe weather, tornado, lightning, and flood safety information from the National Weather Service. Also, remember to plan well ahead if youâre traveling, working, etc.âŚ
Alright, to ao3's soon to be arriving Wattpad Refugees, a basic guide to general user culture:
1.) Unlike Wattpads vote system that let's you like each chapter, the ao3 equivalent kudos only allows one per work. Everyone is generally quietly annoyed about this. To engage with each chapter, you're heavily encouraged to comment. Trust me, it makes people's day.
2.) Ao3 has no algorithm. By default it's latest updated work first. You can find things to your taste through searches, filters and tags.
3.) 'No archive warnings apply' and 'user has chosen not to use archive warnings' mean two very different things. No archives warnings means the work is free from any content that could require a warning tag (character death, graphic depictions of violence, non-con, etc). User has chosen not to use archive warnings means it could contain any of the warning content, be it hasn't been explicitly tagged. Treat it like an allergen. No archive warnings apply is allergen free. User has chosen not to use archive warnings, may contain traces or whole chunks of the allergen. If you're likely to have a bad reaction, maybe don't take the risk.
4.) Speaking of warnings, ao3 has very few restrictions on the type of work that's allowed. Whatever your personal thoughts or feelings on that are, thats how the site is. You're likely to run across some dark subject matters and a lot of people are uncomfortable with reading that. You're well within your rights not like these works and have your opinion on whether they should be allowed, but harassing the authors of such works (or any works) is more likely to come back on you than them. Ao3 operates on a strong policy of 'don't like, don't read'. Use the tagging system to your full advantage to only engage with the kind of works you want to see.
We look forward to welcoming you all and seeing the fantastic works you create. Happy writing!
Also had a Jupiter Jones phase, after which I swerved hard into the Pippi Longstocking lane for about three months. Arrived in a new time zone, went to a library and they had none of those books. But Holly Hobby has her own novel? And it's a serious one, a tad spooky?
Would you ever make the "I have a lot of feelings about this book" card design into a sticker label? I'd love to buy a pack to put on my favorite books before I lend them out. Also, not me shopping in your store before I actually receive my first order ... BUT I LOVE YOUR STUFF!
Hey there! Firstly, thank you!
I'm extremely pleased and humbled by your enjoyment. I'm also a bit "hm hm! hm!!" because we are barely starting out along a very long plan to make wonder and create dazzle.
Book stickers get tricky. It has to be extremely clearly worded in teh description "this sticker is unlikely to come off and will likely cause damage if you remove it" and other such things.
So saying, there is a future phase of... stuff... (everything from stickers similar to what you mentioned to registry stuff to stories and rambles) called "Eldritch Librarian" that I've been tinkering with for some 7 or 8 years at least.
It started slowly with Evil Supply Co. but the company was so scattered that the notes just kinda went everywhere and I couldn't focus. Part of --
The Shift I Ought to Cleverly Name and Likely Won't Because It Amuses Me To Call It Something Different Every Time
-- has been to resolve that lack of focus.
With book modifications, things get inherently personal, very quickly (hence the looping this project with Eldritch Librarian). Some books are to gift, some are to lend, both need to be addressed in modification.
The Short Answer: Yes, on an unknown schedule, and part of a larger system.
As to your order!
Again I say thank you!
It's ready.
It's either in the mail or will be in the mail tomorrow (Monday, April 22).
If you haven't gotten an email tracking yet, that will come on Monday morning sometime, depending on where your order sat in the queue.
I was tinkering with the shipping system last night.
Tracking info generates immediately when your label is produced, as your order is packed, but prior to said tinkering, it would only email Day Of Going Out the Door.
Now it emails within a few minutes of the label being generated.
The advantage to this being those of us whom Are Frequently Awake in the Middle of the Night staring at the walls and wondering "hm has that shipped yet" and rather than waiting on servers to click over to what is deemed (for whatever reason) as The Time to Send, it just sends immediately.
I will also say thank you one last time.
When I say "I was overwhelmed with the initial response" I mean it both emotionally (most positive possible connotation) and physically (most positive possible connotation).
I'll always ship what is currently considered slow -- always a small pile of days, the target is 2 - 5 days, with an upper limit of 8 or 9 days.
The window being "do we have your particular item in stock, right now, or will it be added to the next production run."
I could (and have) ramble about it for many (many) hours, but the short answer comes down to:
We produce in very small batches (high inventory can increase profit but compromises ability to experiment)
In off-peak hours (this allows us to slash production cost, enabling us to sell cards very inexpensively)
Using non-billionaire-owned suppliers as often as possible, respecting their production lines and timeframes etc. This is not a rebuff or commentary of anyone's business practices. It is simply part of my "We are a tiny business, we should support small businesses when buying boxes, etc." sensibility.
We hit what I figured we'd sell in our first six months within about six days.
The good thing about logistics, though, is there are industries (purposefully plural) around every single problem that exists. And just raw practice. There was a point where I figured out how to fold boxes a certain way that cut the time to fold in half.
Okay this was a lot :)
So:
Yes.
But not very soon.
Part of something bigger.
And THANK YOU!
Granted: Travel is usually easier as a team effort! But when the teamwork is not on offer, I am happier soloing than I have been in doing extra work for a noncontributory tagalong.
just curious as they're always things i've never questioned just doing but people in my life are often surprised that i don't mind doing them alone
How to make an archery target using recycled materials!
Iâm still on the injury recovery bandwagon, but GOD NEWS: thereâs a massive stock of archery references available on my Patreon so you donât have to miss out on watching me do cool stuff!
Okay I'm still having fun with Lyle's POV in Two Sidekicks Walk Into a Villain Bar, so that's on the agenda again today and here's the first bit of my next installment:
First night the Kid hit the streets again in his new costume, he neatly turned the Top upside down, spun Golden Glider headfirst into a stop sign, then swiped one of Captain Coldâs guns and iced the man from the knees down. So of course, as soon as the speedster returned the uncut diamonds theyâd been attempting to steal back to the jewelry store, Piper and Trickster nabbed him for a celebratory drink.
âIâm pretty sure this breaks the villain code of ethics, or something,â Kid laughed as the two of them pulled him into Lyleâs bar, grinning and unconcerned to be abruptly surrounded by crooks.
âWho cares, youâre back and better than ever!â Trickster cackled all the way up to the counter, and slapped down a trio of hundred dollar bills. Of Monopoly money.
The Kid rolled his eyes and put down some real cash, enough to cover drinks for all three of them. âGliderâs definitely going to care, when she gets over her headache.â
âSheâll groan and grumble along with her brother, and then tell you to at least take her out with something a little classier next time,â Piper snorted, sitting down so he and Trickster bracketed the Kid. âBut more importantly - that was a neat move, with Top, whereâd you pick it up?â
The blinding grin that took up residence on Kidâs face told Lyle exactly who he was about to mention even before he opened his mouth. âSomething my girlfriend showed me a few days ago. She has gotten so much more badass while I was gone.â
Lyle set down a root beer, a cherry cola, and an orange soda in front of the three boys. âYou two adjusting alright?â
âPretty well, yeah. Getting the death certificate overturned and some other legal stuff straightened out has been way easier, since sheâs done it before.â Kid took a sip of his root beer like that was a perfectly ordinary statement to make. Hell, for all Lyle knew, maybe it was with superheroes.
âSurprised you didnât come back to a, âmy girl dated and married and had a kid with someone elseâ situation,â Piper said with a huff. âIsnât that usually how it goes in the movies?â
The Kid winced. âWell...â
Trickster gasped dramatically, almost spilling his cola as he leaned into the speedsterâs face. âDid she?!â
âNo marriage, no kid, but- Red Arrow let me know sheâd been dating another guy, first one since I, well, disappeared, but she broke things off with him the day after I got back.â
Piper let out a low whistle, and Trickster splayed both hands against his chest. âAwww, itâs true love! I demand you two invite me to the wedding, and I wanna see all the little Arrow-Flash babies!â
Kid snorted, his cheeks turning pink. âJust for that, I might just drop Flashâs twins on you one of these days.â
The new Kid had mentioned them, a few times, little boy and girl already running around with their daddyâs superspeed. Lyle braced an arm against the counter and leveled his best glare. âNot in my bar, youâre not.â
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Thank you both! You have saved me from several fifteen minute stretches of staring at my hands, trying to summon up once-photographic memories of the entire previous page.
There's a Star Trek: The Original Series official licensed novel, pre-1990 original publication, that had at least one inflatable "Starship Decoy" in it.
I am convinced that it was How Much For Just the Planet? written by John M. Ford, but I keep also doing searches about Dreadnought! by Diane Carey.
My first printing dead tree edition copies are currently inaccessible to me -- anyone else know which book it is? Or, if I'm completely incorrect, who the correct author and title are?