Some cinematic-style things I did. I really had fun with these <3 (These are some parts of a big story đ)
Ancano and Apprentice.. but my little horses!
what's wrong with this kid?
Ruins of Ravencroft: Carnage #1
Holy shit!
SONY: PlayStation Portable in an array of transparent colors (2005)
...is it horrible that the first thing I thought of when seeing this guy was "abortion pony"
If you saw my earlier Wylandriah remake from months ago... pretend like you didn't, lol.
Like Dravynea, I started with her actual preset and just tweaked the new sliders to give her less-standard facial features while keeping the broad strokes of her look.
She has new eyes, custom horns, glasses, and ink smudges on her face she hasn't noticed yet, whoops!
I tried my best to find an even vaguely messy style, to suit her somewhat scatterbrained demeanor.
Umm... what were we talking about?
I'm using Hedge Mage Armor (with the colors addon) and I whipped up the lowered hood mesh just today for her btw XD
Prior Elderly Elves posts: Nurelion, Neloth, Runil, Calcelmo, Elynea, Body Textures, Elynea Final, Body Textures Variant WIP, Dravynea the Stoneweaver
me every day logging onto tumblr dot com
"Close your eyes," says Drevis Neloren, his mild voice echoing through the small lecture-hall. He steps around the lectern. "Don't open them. Sit where you are, please, as still as you can."
Fifteen first-years, sitting sprawled or cross-legged on the floor, stare back at him. Unfortunate, thinks Drevis, that they'd dismembered half the benches for firewood last yearâand unjust that the halls with surviving seats have been snatched up, for two semesters now, by Sergius. He resolves to take the matter up with Mirabelle. If he remembers.
"Eyes," he says again, milder still. "Every one of youâyou too, er, whatsit. In the back. Thank you." He clears his throat. "Now, then."
He's given this speech more times than he can recollectâat the Conclave, first, and now in Winterhold's cold and barren halls. He always pauses here. His students shiver and shift. For a deliberate moment, he lets them sit and listen to the room: the hum of the magelights, their breathing, the muffled wail of the wind outside. That which is sensible. That which is real.
"What do you suppose," he says at last, with a smile they cannot see, "is the deadliest school of magic?"
He's met with the blushing silence of a roomful of clever youthsâclever indeed, or they might have enrolled at the Conclaveâreluctant to risk a less-than-clever answer. Whatsit-In-The-Back, a stout young man with a farmhand's suntanned nape, is the first to contribute a guess. "Destruction."
A few other first-years titter on instinct. Drevis clears his throat again, sternly, to silence them. "What's your name?"
The boy's face is flamingâbut his peers, eyes still shut, can't see it. He answers with convincing nonchalance. "Onmund."
"Onmund," Drevis murmurs. "I'll forget a few times, Onmund, I'm sorry. Would you elaborate, please?"
"You can kill a man with a thunderbolt," says Onmund, committing with commendable stubbornness to his course; a useful quality in a mage, Drevis thinks. The boy will probably do well. "You can't kill him with anâan enchantment, or an illusion."
"You can't?"
"Enchantments are cast on things." Onmund's still a bit pink. "Not men. And illusions aren't real. Soâdestruction."
"Thank you, Onmund," says Drevis. A few young mouths open in protest. Before anyone can counter the claim in favor of dremoras unbound, or souls trapped, or apocryphal relatives transmuted into rice-pudding, he changes tack. "How many of you have cast an illusion? A shadow to startle your friend? Fall of stars for your little sister?"
A flurry of hands go up.
"Phantasms," says Drevis, shaking his head. "Tricks of the light, achieved through its transformation. Alteration, in other words, not illusion." As the hands sink, abashed, he smiles. "Are you all quite comfortable?"
Nods all around.
"Fortunate, isn't it," says Drevis, smiling still, "that we met in a room furnished with benches?"
Heâs given this speech more times than he can recollect. Itâs disconcerting, even so, to watch his students nod again.
"Open your eyes,â he says.
Fifteen first-years, sitting sprawled or cross-legged on the floor, blink down at the tiled stone. Then they stare. A few jerk backward or sideways, startled, and catch themselves with their hands.
Heâll never again cast on them without their knowledgeâbut it had to be done, just the once. Theyâll never forget.
"An illusionist," he says, his voice echoing in the stunned silence of the room, "can make you find him charming. A good illusionist can induce you to believe that he's your childhood friend, or your mother, or the owner of your coinpurse. A master illusionist can convince you that you're a bird"âhe pauses for the nervous laughter that he knows, through long experience, will comeâ"and compel you, consequently, to take flight from a balcony."
The laughter stops.
"You will not learn, this semester, to cast an illusion," says Drevis. "You will learn to ward your thoughts against suggestion, and compulsion, and to break even the strongest spell that seeks to steer you wrong. And for the first time in your lives," he adds, unsmiling, "youâll know that you can trust your own mindââ
* * *
ââvis,â shouts a voice in his face. âDrevis. Drevis!â
Drevis Neloren, with an apologetic smile, reaches to brace himself on the lectern. He leans on empty air. Someone catches him, staggers, sinks with him into the snow.
âIâm sorry,â he mumbles, âI forget what I wasâwhere was I?â His ears ring. Snowflakes sting his face. His brow, after a momentâs baffled thought, furrows. âWhere amââ
âDid it work?â A hand, rough and urgent, shakes him. âDrevis! Did you hit him?â
Drevis curls his hands, raking up two burning fistfuls of snow. Clarity seeps into him with the cold. Heâs on the ground, he understands with slow bewilderment, in the College courtyard, and the Eyeâ
âHeâsâAncano,â he gasps at whoeverâs holding him, âheâs still drawing from the Eye, I couldnât reachâI thoughtââ
His head throbs as though it might burst. He grinds a sob of pain between his teeth.
âAll right,â the gruff, familiar voice grumbles overhead. The hands that had caught himâthin and coarse, nails gnawed to the quickâhalf-lift him out of the snow. âWorth a try. Take a moment.â
Heâs never liked Enthir, thinks Drevis, lolling his head on his colleagueâs knee. It pricks his professional pride that heâs never seen through the man until today.
âSavos?â he rasps, squeezing his eyes shut. Searing spots like magefire dance across the dark.
âUhââ Enthir sighs through his teeth. âSomeone covered him up.â
He crooks his fingers in a shivering sign of prayer, willing himself not to be sick. The falling snow cools his brow. âIâllâIâll try again. In a moment.â
âDid your brain melt out your ears?â snaps Enthir, sounding more like himself. He calls across the quadrangle, raising his voice above the cries of prentices and gulls. âNo mindspeech in this! No seemings, no sendings!â
A shout of assent echoes back. Drevis grits his teeth and sits up. He watches the quadrangle spin. He watches Faralda bend to confer with Mirabelle, whoâs sitting white-faced and bruised on a chunk of fallen masonry, then stride out to call the milling, crying crowd of students to order: prentices, to Tolfdir! To me, adepts! Masters, to me!
Something sours in Enthirâs face. He stands.
âDonât tell the bosun,â he says under his breath, nodding to Faralda, âbut I think itâs high time to abandon ship.â
The snow gnaws Drevisâs hands. He feels beneath it, for a moment, the cool stone of the lecture-hall floor.
âDonât worry. We gucci.â
always @judas-had-a-crown âs fault. <3
21 y.o. Она/ĐľŃ/аŃПаŃŃŃОК Elder Scrolls, Funger, Arcane, doll collecting, Tokyo Ghoul, Marvel symbiotes, BG3. Open for trades and new friends
148 posts