crocordile:

I ABSOLUTELY cannot draw the steven universe style but here goes nothing anyway bc this is very cute………… the one in the ocean likes warm currents, the one in the earth is the most dramatic, and the one in the sky fangirls over earendil a lot

THIS IS??? SO CUTE????? AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA??!!!!??!!!

Ainur Blog Role Call!

starsinhercrown:

Hey guys, let’s do the thing! For those of us that are playing Ainur, reblog this post so I can put a master list together! (Yes, Melkor-Morgoths and Mairon-Sauron-Annatars, that includes you!) That way we know who we all are, and we can have Valinor shenanigans.

I’m Starsinhercrown, and I’m playing Varda!

I’ve been very, very slow on the roleplay side lately, but technically I am still here, playing both Melkor and Sauron.

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elitefalconry:

Marra loving her bath. #falconryscotland #elitefalconry #eaglesofinstagram #falconrygiftvoucher #falconryexperience #giftvouchers #awesome #pushingtheboundaries #Haliaatusalbicilla #christmasgiftideas

mostlyhydratrash:

howler32557038:

howler32557038:

earendil-was-a-mariner:

Gandalf doesn’t say that Shadowfax is the best or fastest, he says that he is the “lord of all horses” and I quite frankly want more information about the responsibilities and powers that come with that position. 

I would assume it behooves him to create a more stable economy for all horses by reigning in unnecessary spending. It must be a huge responsibility to be saddled with, but I’m sure he always meets it with unbridled enthusiasm. He’s probably chomping at the bit for the next horse presidential race – in fact, I hear he’s already leading in the Gallup polls.

oh my god i lost 7 followers

okay no more horse puns

#all they do is stirrup bad feelings

GODDAMMIT.

I talked with my dad on the phone today for about 20 minutes and he laid down the hottest floorplan for a 4th Age of Arda world building campaign, ready for a whole cast of original characters, generations after the fallout of the War of the Ring, AND IM SCREAMING BECAUSE I HAVE ENOUGH PROJECTS ALREADY 

ingvildschageart:

Yesterday I held a promt request contest, where the first three sending
me a character would get them drawn by me. So here is the first; Círdan,
the ship wright and lord of the Grey Havens, for @bodhvild!

I am very happy I
was given him as one of the characters, because i feel like he is one of
the most overlooked of the eldar of old, by me as well, and getting my
attention I realized how amasing he truly is. He may be one of the
oldest surviving elves in the third age, as one of those that awoke with
the first elves, which in my mind is truly mindblowing. Nowë was his
original name, and hinting to his early awakening, alongside Elwë and
Olwë. I like to think he may be their brother, though it is not
specified by Tolkien as far as I know. Truly he is one of the most
fascinatingly ignored of the moriquendi, and I would love to explore him
more throughout my art.

As for the promt this is only a rather
quick sketch, more drawing than sketch I guess, but I had so much fun
with it so I couldn’t help myself! ^^

Next is Varda! Very curious how I’ll make her, so I suppose we will all wait and see.

Cheers,
Iggy

___________

Cirdan © Tolkien

Art © IngvildSchageArt

Tolkien Character Criticism

glorfindelsbitch:

hilarius-and-felix:

The most common complaints I hear against The Lord of the Rings are about the characters. People say that in the books they have no real personalities, or that they’re just black and white; blandly good and blandly evil. These are really odd criticisms though. They’re odd because they’re so untrue.

The characters do have distinct personalities. And they don’t act like one dimensional stereotypes either, but like people. Can you really read the books without noticing Pippin’s clever curiosity, or Sam’s humble love, or Gimli’s proud honour (and intense loyalty), Gandalf’s quick temper, Éomer’s violent emotions, and on and on. To go into detail of each personality would take a dozen metas. And hardly anyone in the story is all good or all bad. Saruman and Wormtongue used to loyal to the good guys. The Southrons are hinted at having been deceived or coerced into fighting. The Dunlendings were explicitly lied to (and not entirely in the wrong in their grudge against Rohan). All the orcs we meet, though certainly nasty, still act like people and have believable motivations. Even Sauron was once good. And as for the good guys, do I really need to remind anyone of Denethor? He never at any point gave in to Sauron, but he wasn’t exactly good at the end either. What about Boromir or Sméagol? The Rohirrim, though unambiguously opposed to Sauron’s evil, are actually pretty racist, and the story does not justify it. Their treatment of the Dunlendings and the Woses is not okay, and not meant to be. Faramir provides us with criticism of Gondor and their increasing love of war for war’s sake (and that’s not even getting into their colonization). Gimli, Legolas, and Aragon each in their turn become stubborn and recalcitrant (though not all over the same thing) and nearly cause fights with their allies. Sam — possibly the most selfless character in the story — is unreasonably suspicious and distrusting of every new person he meets (unless they’re an elf), and that trait, in a very real sense, costs Sméagol his redemption.

Having said all that the curiosity remains. If these criticisms aren’t true, why do we feel like they are? I think I might know what’s going on. I’ve recently been reading a lot about medieval literature and discovered how very, very much they loved allegories. They even loved works that weren’t that good, just for being allegories. Because that’s the kind of story people of that age were crazy for. Our own age is crazy over something else: we want character stories. That is, we want stories that focus in on the personalities, flaws, emotions, and development of the characters. And we tend to forget that this isn’t the only kind of story, nor the only kind of good story. But it is the kind of story we have a very strong love of. Lord of the Rings has characters with actual personalities and flaws, but those aren’t the focus of the story. They’re there, but we see them more at a distance, when we’re crazy about seeing them close up. But LOTR couldn’t be the story that it is if it was making those kind of close ups. It’s definitely good, and it’s particular goodness depends on it being told the way it is. We can see that it’s good, but then we also criticize it for not providing the one thing we’re nearly always looking for. If this makes sense?

Yes, yes it makes so much sense!! It’s the same with the Silmarillion – you have these beautiful, complex characters (some of the most vividly entrancing I have ever come across in terms of inspiring me to write) and they’re seen from a distance, they are secondary to the story, and it’s still so wonderful. They are there without us being inside their minds, we see them through the story rather than seeing the story through them, and I love it so much.

reblogging because this is incredibly pertinent to what I’ve been studying.

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