MechANImoids Special "X" Anniversary
Publisher: MU Press, Seattle, WA
No. of Issues: Anniversary Special, 1994
Format: Direct Comic, Est. Print Run: 5,000 Contributors:
Mike Curtis, Hubert Bartels, Charles Ettinger, Dusty Everman, Phil King, Michelle Light, Dave Lind, M. Mitch Marmel, Kyle Miller, Jose Montes, Charles Roe, Toivo Rovainen, Mike Sagara, Tom Verre, Jeffrey H Wood
Brief Description of Contents:
Mostly multipanel pinups, with one full-length adventure (Mayan Macabre), and an illustrated history of SnowBuni's development.
Comments:
Celebrating the tenth Anniversary of SnowBuni's first publication. Hey, we got a Hot Flash recommendation in the Preview Special.

SnowBuni
Publisher: MU Press, Seattle, WA,
No. of Issues: One-shot Special, 1991
Format: Direct Comic, Est. Print Run: 6,000 Contributors:
Kyle Miller, Jose Montes, Mike Raabe, Charles Roe, Mike Sagara, Tom Verre, Edd Vick, Jeffrey H Wood
Brief Description of Contents:
A collection of full-length SnowBuni stories and pinups.
Warning: Contains Nudity
Comments:
SnowBuni's First Professional Publication. Overall, a very uneven effort, but one must consider the novice status of the publisher (Edd Vick) and the project manager (myself) at this time.
Valiant Varmints
Publisher: Shanda Fantasy Arts, Conway, AR
No. of Issues: One-shot Special, 1998
Format: Direct Comic, Est. Print Run: Undisclosed Contributors:
Kjartan Arnorsson, Mike Curtis, Charles Ettinger, Chuck Fiala, Gary Fields, Shane Fisher, Carl Gafford, J.P. Morgan, Taral Wayne, Jeffrey H Wood
Brief Description of Contents:
A mystery story, with one chapter each starring the contributor's character; Savage Squirrel for Arnorsson, Phantom Bunny and Bullet Crow for Fiala, SuperSwine by Fields, Moon Mouse by Gafford, Fission Chicken by Morgan, Beatrix Farmer by Wayne, and SnowBuni by myself. A wraparound story (illustrated by Shane Fisher) is narrated by Chasne Carter, a character from Carole Curtis's Katmandu independent comic.
Warning: Contains Nudity
Comments:
It's a neat concept, with a somewhat uneven product (due to the conflicting styles of the creators, eccentrics all). The Valiant Varmints investigate a rash of seemingly unrelated crimes, all tied to a shadowy character behind a shiny metal mask.
Who is "Bullet Head?"
Each chapter provides a clue, and the reader may deduce the answer before the Varmints... but be warned that the perpetrator hails from a newspaper daily strip that hasn't seen print since 1919!
Sexi Alien Critteroid SnowBuni
Promo Zine for the Emerald City Comic Con 2005
Publisher: Pseudo Comics, Vancouver WA
No. of Issues: 1, 2005
Format: Color Cover, B&W interior digest fanzine
Est. Print Run: 100 Contributors:
Hubert Bartels, Kyle Miller, Jeffrey H Wood
Brief Description of Contents:
Reprints the entire run of webcomics produced between 2000 - 2001, mostly unfinished sketch layouts with dialogue and lettering added via PhotoShop. Produced for distribution at the Emerald City Comic Con in Seattle, Washington, 2005.
Warning: Contains Nudity
Comments:
The finished product was surprisingly well-accepted, considering that the contents were thrown together from my online art archives and pinup galleries. Many reader, having received a copy on the first day of the convention, returned on the second day to tell me that these were the best SnowBuni stories yet. The major complaint from these same readers was that many of these stories were unfinished.
Hidden Treasures
Publisher: Pseudo Comics, Moscow, ID
No. of Issues: 2, 1994
Format: B&W digest fanzine, Est. Print Run: 500 Contributors:
Mark Ashworth, Mark Barnard, Mitch Beiro, Dennis Clark, Dusty Everman, Robert Guthrie, William Haskell, Angie Hilmo, Michael Hirtes, Milton Knight, Dave Lind, Kyle Miller, Jose Montes, Roy D. Pounds, Charles Roe, Toivo Rovainen, Mike Sagara, Dan W. Taylor, Tom Verre, Edd Vick, Jason Waltrip, Jeffrey H Wood
Brief Description of Contents:
Pinups, gag panels, and photos of SnowBuni by various artists and models.
Warning: Contains Nudity
Comments:
When SnowBuni was published regularly, I received a lot of fan art, letter illustrations, and envelope doodles. This publication provided a vehicle for artwork which would otherwise never see distribution.
MechANImoids
Publisher: Pseudo Comics, Moscow, ID
No. of Issues: One-shot, 1994
Format: B&W magazine size, Est. Print Run: 200 Contributors: Mike Sagara, Jeffrey H Wood
Brief Description of Contents:
The seventh in a series of model sheets, each collecting the latest ideas about SnowBuni's shared world (the Sylvalagi, a hidden competitor species antagonistic toward mankind).
Comments:
Compiled and printed for MechANImoids Special "X" project contributors, which was celebrating 10 years of SnowBuni publications.
Retro! Model Sheet Collection
Publisher: Pseudo Comics, Moscow, ID
No. of Issues: One-shot, 1994
Format: B&W magazine size, Est. Print Run: 500 Contributors: Mike Sagara, Jeffrey H Wood
Brief Description of Contents:
A collection of SnowBuni model sheets, reprinting the first six in the series, and containing new artwork by Mike Sagara. Warning: Contains Nudity
Comments:
Presents a detailed history of SnowBuni's artistic and continuity development.
The SnowBuni - Desert Peach Jam
Publishers: Pseudo Comics, Fine Line Studios
Moscow, ID, and Seattle, WA
No. of Issues: One-shot, reprint and new material
Multiple printings: 1988 - 1995
Format: Digest size fanzine, Est. Print Run: 5,000 Contributors: Donna Barr, Jeffrey H Wood
Brief Description of Contents
Reprint of the SnowBuni - Desert Peach Jam from SnowBuni Blizzard #5. Originally printed in 1988, back for multiple reprints by popular demand since then.
Comments:
This small press publication features a very unlikely team-up between Donna Barr's WWII "Desert Peach" German Army officer in Africa, and my own Sylvalagi bunnygirl, SnowBuni.
As Donna Barr says:
- The perfect German gentleman meets Jeff's bouncy buxom bunny-girl. This mix of talents, styles and worldviews should not have worked, but Jeff's and my readers thought otherwise. Still in demand -- which still confuses the hell out of us.
Copies are available from Donna Barr's Fine Line Studios.
The Best of SnowBuni Blizzard
Publishers: Pseudo Comics, Moscow, ID
No. of Issues: One-shot reprint collection, 1992
Format: Digest size fanzine, Est. Print Run: 3,000
Multiple Reprints Contributors:
Juan Alfonso, Donna Barr, Dennis Clark, Mike Curtis, Susan Dorne, Robert Guthrie, Steve Keeter, Kyle Miller, Jose Montes, David Rains, Charles Roe, Mike Sagara, Jeffrey H Wood
Brief Description of Contents:
A collection of reprints from the "SnowBuni Blizzard" series, with some new material.
Comments:
Contributions were determined by fan favorites (as indicated by letters of comment (LOC's)), and excluding works which were currently in print in other publications.
SnowBuni Blizzard
Publishers: Pseudo Comics, Seattle, WA,
Rock Bottom Studios, No. of Issues: 7, 1988- 1999
Format: Digest size fanzine, Est. Print Run: 1,000
Multiple Reprints
Contributors:
Dozens and dozens of small press enthusiasts and independent creators.
Brief Description of Contents:
Continuity stories, pinups, and gag panels starring SnowBuni and her race, the Sylvalagi, with a regular editorial column and letters sections.
Comments:
Probably the most successful series featuring SnowBuni. Contributors were encouraged to develop their own characters for Snowy's universe, and collaborate on the Sylvalagi shared world.
CodeName: SnowBuni
Publishers: Pseudo Comics, Seattle, WA,
No. of Issues: One-shot Ashcan, 1987
Format: Digest size fanzine, Est. Print Run: 100
Contributors:
Juan Alfonso, Reggie Byers, Tim Corrigan, Susan Dorne, Milton Knight, Dave Lind, "Grim" Jim Main, Mark Spildooren, Jeffrey H Wood
Brief Description of Contents:
One full-length SnowBuni story, pinups by various contributors.
Comments:
This comic was originally intended for publication by Jim Main's Lightning Comics, which folded before the debut issue of CodeName SnowBuni was printed. The comic was distributed as a small press publication, instead.
Fandom Team-Up #2
Publishers: Pseudo Comics, Rock Bottom Comics
Seattle, WA,
No. of Issues: One in continuing series, 1986
Format: Digest size fanzine, Est. Print Run: 600
Contributors:
Tim Corrigan, Larry Blake, Jeff Nicholson, Jeffrey H Wood
Brief Description of Contents:
A rather standard superhero team-up in the Marvel comics style, starring Larry Blake's Nightshade and my own SnowBuni. Also included an interview with Nightshade, and stories showing each character visiting the other creator (SnowBuni drops in on Larry Blake (drawn by Blake), and Nightshade visits Jeffrey H Wood (drawn by Wood)).
Comments:
"Fandom Team Up" was a concept developed by veteran self-publishers Jeff Nicholson and Tim Corrigan , to introduce their respective characters UltraKlutz and Mightyguy to each other in ritual combat. Successive issues were to spotlight a new pair of contributors and characters in every new issue; for all I know, the series is still in production.
SnowBuni: Bright Eyed and Bushy Tailed
Publishers: Pseudo Comics, Seattle, WA,
No. of Issues: 2, 1987
Format: Minicomic fanzine, Est. Print Run: 200
Artist: Jeffrey H. Wood
Brief Description of Contents:
Each issue contains a single surreal story, where SnowBuni battles a number of cinematic and archetypal enemies.
Comments:
Quick production values throughout (all artwork and production work were completed in 48 hours each issue), it was nonetheless one of the most popular series produced by Pseudo Comics.
SnowBuni: On Assignment
Publishers: Pseudo Comics, Seattle, WA,
No. of Issues: 2, 1985 - 1986
Format: Minicomic fanzine, Est. Print Run: 100
Artist: Jeffrey H. Wood
Brief Description of Contents:
Silly stories featuring SnowBuni.
Comments:
One issue featured a babysitting plot, where the child became the target for bungling kidnappers. So many plot elements were identical to the movie "Home Alone" (which was released years later) that I was advised to retain an attorney and pursue copyright infringement (which I declined).
Plasma
Publishers: Champagne Studios, Eldon, MO
Pseudo Comics, Seattle, WA,
No. of Issues: 12, 1984 - 1992
Format: Digest size fanzine, Est. Print Run: 100
Contributors: Over 100 artists and writers
Brief Description of Contents:
Originally, Plasma featured general interest continuity stories and artwork, which later evolved into an emphasis on anthropomorphics (animals or animaloids in human-style roles).
Comments:
The first three issues were published by Kirk Chritton of Champagne Studios (from Champain (sic) Street, in Eldon, Missouri), and later resurrected as a Pseudo title (out of Seattle, Washington). The third issue of this anthology (as published by Champagne Studios) presented the debut appearance of SnowBuni.
Perihelion
Publishers: Pseudo Comics, Seattle, WA,
No. of Issues: 4, 1986 - 1987
Format: Digest size fanzine, Est. Print Run: 60
Multiple reprints and revisions Contributors:
Many many. A complete listing is pending
Brief Description of Contents:
An anthology containing amateur graphic continuity stories, pinups, movie reviews, and articles, with a science fiction twist.
Comments:
Published first in Dallas, Texas, and later in Seattle, Washington
Perihelion was the first publication to feature what were then proto-Sylvalagi. The characters were so successful that they eventually spun off their own star (SnowBuni), who eventually graduated to her own self-titled series.
Although I arrived at the title independently, I later learned that comics creator legend Vaughn Bode' had also produced a science fiction publication titled, "Perihelion."
Georgey Horsey
Publishers: Pseudo Comics, Seattle, WA,
No. of Issues: 4, 1983 - 1987
Format: Digest size fanzine, Est. Print Run: 20
Multiple reprints and revisions Contributors:
Many many. A complete listing is pending
Brief Description of Contents:
Anthropomorphic tales starring Georgey Horsey, a talking horse, and his human, Elena. Backup stories and pinups by other contributors appeared in some reprints .
Comments:
Georgey Horsey was my first attempt at a graphic continuity (comics-style) story. Hopefully, the reader will note some improvement in my style since that time.
Georgey was inspired by a stuffed animal owned by my sister, Elaine, and the original stories were actually written for her.
The series was first titled "George the Horse," but later the name was changed to avoid confusion with Arn Saba's "Neil the Horse."