List of Objects in Makin' Magic

Labermort Tree
"Elle and Art Labermort loved nothing more than to spend the afternoons together talking and laughing underneath the trees. Generations have passed, but this tree still remains. It never blooms, it never flowers, and despite its dead appearance it seems very much alive. Sims often whisper about the strange happenings near this tree, perhaps the Labermorts haven't really left."

It is a dead tree. Sometimes, small yellow eyeballs can be seen in the hole in tree.

Mr. Bones Does Broadway
"In this highly collectible antique poster print, famed Magic Town actor/dancer/skeleton Mr. Bones dances the "Skinless Shuffle" to promote his immensely popular musical revue, "Not Without My Tibia." The poster created quite a bit of controversy due to Mr. Bones' "scandalously skinny" appearance, and was quickly pulled from print. His critics were livid: "Our children look up to Mr. Bones, and right now he's setting a very bad example by being undead."

Swami Slicer And The Box of Mystery
"An oil-on-loose-canvas depiction of Dr. Meki Slicer (a.k.a. The Swami) with the subject of his doctoral dissertation, The Multi-Layered Assistant Containment Device. Although Dr. Slicer received his degree, he was shunned by the academic community (perhaps due to the sorry condition of some of his "test assistants") and he was forced to put his skills with a blade to use as a very showy neighborhood butcher."

The Basket Case
"Unsuspecting petty criminal Suzie Newman attempted to make a getaway with Faerie Mara's profits from the day - but she was cornered by the local MagiCo law enforcement officials near a magic performance. Panicked, Suzie ducked into a barrel onstage in the middle of a trick - and emerged as a man! "Suzie" Newman was never found, but "Steve" Newman turned over a new leaf and lived a long and happy life."

Zombo the Effervescent
"Zombo's name remains a fear-inspiring one in the world of magic. Convinced that he was a master magician, Zombo toured the country, leaving a trail of doves with silk scarves for wings and (thanks to his signature "trick") audiences who inexplicably hiccuped floating soda bubbles for weeks. Eventually, he lost his wand - but thanks to his style and intimidating presence, he went on to become a successful model on the side-show-poster circuit."

Agnes Elizabeth Steadman, A Portrait
"Stories tell of Agnes Steadman's legendary grace and beauty, but that beauty was offset by her insanity, which began at the age of 12 (when she claimed to be haunted by the ghost of an apple tree). By the time she was 40, Agnes communicated using only hand gestures and screams. Some say that those shrill sounds can be heard drifting through the hallways of her old haunts to this very day..."

This painting can only be bought from the Creepy Classics Painting Display by MagiCo.

August J. Stuffiman IV, Legendary Gentleman
"This incredible, rigidly emotive portrait of the man himself embodies every refined, tee totaling fiber of his character. He was many thing: a logician, a professor, a renowned doctor of cranial medicine, but Stuffiman, above all, was a gentleman. A robus baritone, Stuffiman spoke 12 languages and held mastery of each with lyrical fluidity. Rarely known to have ever cracked a smile, he insisted "Life is serious work". Yet, beneath a cloak of mystery, Stuffiman died laughing of unknown causes."

This painting can only be bought from the Creepy Classics Painting Display by MagiCo.

Leslie Giggham Fluttersbeak, October Hunt
"A portrait commissioned by the young Lord depicts him amid the dales of his homestead, boldly ferreting out a sly vixen in the autumn of the late century. Fluttersbeak very much flattered himself in the commissioning of this work by N. Bartholomeow Loinscottonbottom, bribing the artist with huge tracks of land so that he might exaggerate the subject's character and jaw line. For it was well known that Fluttersbeak was an agoraphobe who cowerd in terror of his own refelction."

This painting can only be bought from the Creepy Classics Painting Display by MagiCo.

Doctor Sebastian Hyde, Self-Portrait
"The ruffian who rode the rails from rags to riches, this genial gent revolutionized the aesthetics of the age, industriously inventing any number of innovations in the matters of the graphical mathematical machine. He was himself, by all accounts, a delightful chimera, able to enumerate posthumously and postulate endlessly, he instructed his machine to miraculously assemble this oil on canvas in an era long before the monstrous modern graphical engine."

This painting can only be bought from the Creepy Classics Painting Display by MagiCo.