

This question is special as it doesn’t come from Louise Dade, but rather a character of hers, the epically awesome Mrs. Squidman. And I’m just now noticing she doesn’t have a character page I could link this to. Get on that Louise!
I tried to put as much food in Jelena’s kitchen as I could. It doesn’t accurately represent the amount of food in a serbian kitchen. I’m not sure LEGO makes that much food.






































You know, as much as I’d like to believe it was real, that cracked stone brick pattern on that wall behind her is totally printed on it!
It’s very well photographed!
Ok, Ok it is just a comic, but following Eastern Slavic naming conventions wouldn’t her name be Dangerova? Yeah, I may be over thinking it.
You’re forgetting that this is a comic set in the LGverse in the future where space travel is commonplace and they have naming conventions which evolved over time to what they are in the comic in the time period it was written for.
And also that I am Serbian and am very familiar with Serbian naming conventions. Even if my last name is a little odd for a Serbian name.
I very much appreciate that this set actually looks *exactly* like your mother’s kitchen– if viewed from the enormous wooden rack that’s usually full of loaves of bread.
It seems you can build anything with these bricks!
Would an infinite # on Lego monkeys with an infinite # of Lego Bricks eventually build Shakespeare’s Globe Theater? If so, how much would a ticket cost?
Your sets are awesome!
an infinite # of those LEGO gold coins.
Thank you!
Mrs. Squidman replies:
“I would send him food if I knew where he was. However, the one time I did manage to send him a loaf of home-baked bread, he was able to get himself out of a tricky situation by using the loaf as an improvised weapon. It was the yeast I could do, and my li’l Squiddikins was able to rise to the challenge and prove himself.”