📍Work In Progress Land
📍Work In Progress Land
Work in Progress Land is a creative and unfinished-looking place where everything seems to still be “being built.” The buildings look half-drawn, the beach looks sketched but not colored in, and even the water looks like it was made with pencils. It is a place that feels busy, imaginative, and full of ideas that are still becoming something new.
Work in Progress Land was discovered by Peyton, who found it in a very surprising way.
One day, while looking up at the sky, Peyton stepped onto what she thought was a fluffy cloud. Instead of being solid, the cloud opened like a trapdoor, and she gently floated down through pencil-colored air. When she landed, she found herself standing on a half-drawn beach, surrounded by buildings that looked like sketches coming to life. That’s when she realized she had discovered a brand-new place: Work in Progress Land.
The climate in Work in Progress Land is just like normal Connecticut weather. Some days are sunny, some are rainy, some are cloudy, and sometimes it’s a little cold or warm—just like home. The difference is that even the weather looks like it was drawn with pencils and crayons.
Work in Progress Land has many dramatic and interesting landforms, including:
Mountains
Hills
Canyons
Lakes
Rivers
Volcanoes
All of these landforms look like they are still being designed, with sketch lines and unfinished coloring.
Several creative, school-supply-inspired animals live in Work in Progress Land, including:
Sharpener dogs, who leave tiny shavings behind as they run
Eraser ducks, who can wipe away mistakes
Crumpled paper cats, who love to roll around
Pencil dolphins, who leap through pencil-colored water
Each animal looks like it came straight out of a drawing.
One of the most fun things to do in Work in Progress Land is surf on pencils, which glide smoothly across the pencil water like surfboards. Visitors can also hide inside giant crayon boxes, which make perfect secret hangouts.
Work in Progress Land is a place of imagination, creativity, and endless possibilities—where nothing is ever truly finished, and that’s exactly what makes it exciting.