Motifs are one of the most powerful tools a writer has for weaving deeper meaning into a story.
A motif is a repeated element in your story that highlights a theme. While similar to symbols, motifs are more dynamic and can evolve as your characters and story progress.
Symbol: A single red rose representing love. Motif: Flowers appearing throughout the story to represent different aspects of relationships—love, decay, growth, and loss.
They deepen your story’s meaning. Motifs give your readers something to latch onto, creating a sense of unity.
They enhance immersion. Repeated elements help ground readers in your world.
1. Choose a Motif That Fits Your Story’s Themes
Ask yourself: What’s the central idea of my story? Your motif should subtly reinforce that idea.
Theme: Resilience in the face of hardship. Motif: Cracked glass—a recurring image of something that’s damaged but still functional, reflecting the characters’ inner strength.
2. Use Motifs to Reflect Character Growth
A well-designed motif can evolve alongside your characters, reflecting their arcs.
In the beginning, a character always wears a watch to represent their obsession with time and control. By the end, they stop wearing the watch, symbolizing their acceptance of life’s unpredictability.
3. Keep It Subtle (But Consistent)
A motif shouldn’t feel like a flashing neon sign. It should quietly enhance the story without overpowering it.
If your motif is rain, don’t make every scene a thunderstorm. Use it sparingly—maybe it rains during moments of emotional turmoil or reflection, creating a subconscious link for the reader.
4. Use Recurrence to Build Meaning
The more your motif appears, the more it will resonate with readers. The key is repetition with variation.
In a story about family bonds, food could serve as a motif.
Early on: A tense family dinner where no one speaks. Later: A shared meal where characters open up and reconnect.
5. Connect Motifs to Emotion
Motifs are most effective when they evoke a visceral reaction in the reader.
Motif: A recurring song. First appearance: A father sings it to his child. Later: The same child hums it as an adult, remembering their father’s love. Final scene: The song plays during the child’s wedding, tying past and present together.
Motif: Mirrors
Theme: Self-perception vs. reality. A character avoids mirrors at first, unable to face their reflection. They slowly start using mirrors to confront their flaws. The final moment shows them standing confidently before a mirror, accepting themselves.
Motif: Keys
Theme: Freedom and control. A character collects keys, searching for one that unlocks their past. They find an old, rusted key, which leads them to uncover family secrets. The motif shifts to symbolize freedom when they lock a door behind them, leaving their past behind.
Motif: Birds
Theme: Longing for freedom. Early scenes show a bird trapped in a cage, reflecting the protagonist’s feelings. Later, the bird is released, symbolizing a turning point in the character’s journey.
Motif: The Ocean
Theme: Emotional depth and uncertainty. Calm waters reflect peace in the protagonist’s life. Stormy seas mirror moments of inner conflict.
1. Identify your story’s central theme.
2. Brainstorm objects, actions, or images that resonate with that theme.
3. Introduce the motif subtly early on.
4. Repeat it with variation, tying it to key emotional moments.
5. Bring it full circle by the end, letting the motif reinforce the resolution.
I made this cute little Christmas graphic for an art collaboration on Instagram, where Christian artists are drawing themselves caroling! Is anyone feeling Christmas-sy yet? 🎄
one of the cutest things humans can do is discover a thing and immediately show it to a friend who will like it more. deriving joy from something that a friend likes solely because you love your friend is cute enough, but seeking them out to show them the thing is priceless
They are the best friends forever. 😔💖 That feeling when two people who have never had a real, lasting friendship form an unbreakable bond. These guys are my original characters Vincent and Witherspoon, from my project Wellwishers!
Have a bonus doodle of them in Animal Crossing style, too.
A funny little conversation that happened between me and my little brother! I hope you enjoyed episode #26 of Slices of Gremlin! If you did, please subscribe to the comic on Webtoon. If you didn't see last week, I have also lowered my Ko-Fi membership from $5 to $3! 👀👏 You can see comics there a week earlier than anyone else does.
You really need to make non-tragic past for your characters, significant people and events that impacted their lives, non-dramatic mundane moments that shaped them, happy memories, bitter memories, embarrassing memories.
Like yes the space princess lost her whole civilization, but did she have friends before that? Favorite place? Does she miss the sound of her favorite music she use to listen to?
Me internally when I stack coupons at the grocery store to buy cheap ice cream:
"Would you still love me if I was a worm" with Fluttercord makes my heart warm. 😂
Me when I'm howling at the moon and perhaps sleeping in the middle of a summer afternoon
Here are day six and day nine for Inktober! "TREK" and "SUN"! 👀 I skipped day seven and day eight. I'm trying to have fun with this challenge and not sweat it if I don't complete all of the days.
YOU WILL FIND A WAY!!!! YOU WILL FIND A WAY . You will find a WAY ….. you WILL find a way . You will find a way you will find a way……!! YOU WILL FIND A WAY YOU WILL FIND A WAY you will find a Way you will (find) a way you will find. a way you will find a way YOU WILL FIND A WAY!!!!!!!
linktr.ee/jazzleeillustrates Hi, I'm Jazz! I'm a Christian artist who loves making fun, colorful, and kitschy art! I make a weekly webcomic called Slices of Gremlin and I have an upcoming comic called Wellwishers -- I also have other projects in the works! MLP sideblog: @chaotic-kindness Art tag: #jazzleeillustrates
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