Such pretty curves in the middle of the puzzle! It's not often that a themeless's black square pattern tickles my aesthetic sense so ...
read moreSuch pretty curves in the middle of the puzzle! It's not often that a themeless's black square pattern tickles my aesthetic sense so strongly. Reminded me of another graceful one.

Solid triplet to anchor the middle:
- LEAD BALLOON is a hilarious term. I'm curious who first came up with the metaphor. Or perhaps it was a spectacular failure of a real test … even funnier!
- BLOOD VESSEL is a great phrase, although I didn't understand the clue at first. [Needle point?] gets to the fact that it's where blood is drawn from a needle? I suppose this works. Sort of. But it seems like it ought to have four or five question marks at the end of the clue to show what a stretch it is.
- SUNSET STRIP was a relief to uncover. After reading the [… of a ‘50s-‘60s TV series] clue, I thought we'd be in for some sort of esoteric Patty Duke or Dobie Gillis reference. Thankfully, SUNSET STRIP feels like it cuts across generations, making for a larger number of solvers who could appreciate it.
Not a ton of long slots, so it was important for Andrew to make use of all of them. I thought TETRAHEDRA and ESCAPE ROOM were standouts, although I wonder if these play too much to a niche audience. TETRAHEDRA is a great word, but when you clue it to D&D (a d4 means a four-sided die), it might turn off some solvers.
PAPER TOSS was the only long entry I didn't care for. It does make sense — you're trying to toss a paper ball into a trash can. But who says "let's play some paper toss!"?
Andrew's a pro, doing a great job of balancing snazziness and smoothness. Today, there was just a bit of EDO in terms of crossword glue, with not much wastage. As I'd expect from Andrew, a strong result on the whole.