No fair, the line went past the horizontal axis.
A ripping good comic today.
X-acto knife?
A graph of the stock market?
… showing how the bottom fell out?
The bottom dropped out, literally.
Horace….Now you know what happens when you redline horsepower.
well, that ranked terribly.
Whose strip did Horace drop into this time?
Welcome to your rewarding career in accounting.
Bet that didn’t elevate his mood.
Pretty graphic …
independent variables
Sometimes a compressed vertical scale cannot hide the fact you are bottoming out.
seems like Horace forgot to set his margins…?
Love it! Samson, I always enjoy your application of cartoon physics. I love your perspective on things.
Business suddenly fell off.
That’s a rule in kirigami too—don’t cross the line, or you’ll have separate pieces instead of a thing.
July 31, 2015
tudza Premium Member about 1 year ago
No fair, the line went past the horizontal axis.
Imagine about 1 year ago
A ripping good comic today.
Argythree about 1 year ago
X-acto knife?
Doug K about 1 year ago
A graph of the stock market?
… showing how the bottom fell out?
Say What Now‽ Premium Member about 1 year ago
The bottom dropped out, literally.
Egrayjames about 1 year ago
Horace….Now you know what happens when you redline horsepower.
Chris about 1 year ago
well, that ranked terribly.
santa72404 about 1 year ago
Whose strip did Horace drop into this time?
coltish1 about 1 year ago
Welcome to your rewarding career in accounting.
Jeffin Premium Member about 1 year ago
Bet that didn’t elevate his mood.
Michael G. about 1 year ago
Pretty graphic …
charles9156 about 1 year ago
independent variables
mistercatworks about 1 year ago
Sometimes a compressed vertical scale cannot hide the fact you are bottoming out.
InTraining about 1 year ago
seems like Horace forgot to set his margins…?
thejanith Premium Member about 1 year ago
Love it! Samson, I always enjoy your application of cartoon physics. I love your perspective on things.
eddi_tbh about 1 year ago
Business suddenly fell off.
JH&Cats about 1 year ago
That’s a rule in kirigami too—don’t cross the line, or you’ll have separate pieces instead of a thing.