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yourepower · 10 months
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Ironsmith Artistry Meets Lava Lamp Innovation: A Unique Collaboration
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In the realm of decor and design, unexpected collaborations often yield the most extraordinary results. Enter the realm of Ironsmith artistry and lava lamp innovation—an unlikely partnership that showcases the fusion of craftsmanship and technology. In this article, we will delve into the captivating journey where Ironsmith artistry meets candelabra base innovation, resulting in a truly unique collaboration that adds an exquisite touch to both aesthetics and ambiance.
1. Ironsmith Artistry: An Age-Old Craft with a Modern Twist:
The art of Ironsmith has a storied history, combining the skillful manipulation of metal with creativity to produce intricate and awe-inspiring pieces. Traditionally associated with forging functional items like gates and railings, Ironsmiths are now branching into unexpected territories, infusing their expertise into items that bridge the gap between functionality and artistry.
2. The Timeless Allure of Lava Lamps:
Lava lamps, those iconic relics of the past, have retained their charm over generations. With their entrancing blobs of liquid wax and soothing glow, they create an ambiance that's both nostalgic and contemporary. But how can Ironsmith craftsmanship enhance these already captivating pieces?
3. A Synergy of Craftsmanship and Innovation:
Imagine a lava lamp replacement bulb with a base crafted by the skilled hands of an Ironsmith—a base that marries traditional metalwork techniques with the sleekness of modern design. Explore the captivating effects of Ironsmith-created bases that not only support the lamp but also elevate it into a piece of art.
4. Illuminating Innovation: The Role of Lava Lamp Bulbs:
Lava lamp bulbs, whether traditional incandescent or cutting-edge LED, play a crucial role in the entire spectacle. Discover how the right lava lamp bulb complements the Ironsmith-crafted base, enhancing its visual impact and creating an interplay of light and shadow that is nothing short of mesmerizing.
5. Crafted to Perfection: Lava Lamp Replacement Bulbs and Ironsmith Bases:
Explore the process of combining lava lamp replacement bulbs with Ironsmith-crafted bases. Learn about the meticulous attention to detail required to ensure compatibility, safety, and optimal aesthetics, resulting in a lava lamp that's not just functional but also an exquisite piece of decor.
6. The Artistry of Illumination:
Witness the union of Ironsmith artistry and lava lamp innovation come to life as the lamp casts its warm glow across the room. The interplay between the meticulously crafted base and the enchanting movement of the lava becomes a conversation between craftsmanship and technology.
7. Elevating Aesthetics and Ambiance:
A lava lamp featuring an Ironsmith-crafted base becomes a conversation starter, a focal point that bridges the gap between art and function. Its unique presence adds character to any space, evoking conversations about the convergence of age-old craftsmanship and modern design.
Conclusion: 
The union of Ironsmith artistry and lava lamp innovation transcends the boundaries of time and tradition. This collaboration brings forth a lava lamp that is not only a symbol of relaxation but also a testament to the human touch in design. As we admire the warm glow and artistic base, we are reminded of the endless possibilities when craftsmen and innovators come together to create something truly exceptional.
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All In 1
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No tag lists. Do not send asks or DMs about updates. Review my pinned post for guidelines, masterlist, etc.
Warnings: this fic will include dark content such as noncon/dubcon, age gap, power imbalance, low self esteem, and possible untagged elements. My warnings are not exhaustive, enter at your own risk.
This is a dark!fic and explicit. 18+ only. Your media consumption is your own responsibility. Warnings have been given. DO NOT PROCEED if these matters upset you.
Summary: you meet a mysterious man on a night out with your sister. (petite!reader)
based on the winning option for this poll
Characters: casino owner!Bucky Barnes
Note: told myself to slow down, didn't.
As per usual, I humbly request your thoughts! Reblogs are always appreciated and welcomed, not only do I see them easier but it lets other people see my work. I will do my best to answer all I can. I’m trying to get better at keeping up so thanks everyone for staying with me.
Your feedback will help in this and future works (and WiPs, I haven’t forgotten those!) Please do not just put ‘more’. I will block you.
I love you all immensely. Take care. 💖
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It’s your first time wearing that skirt. You’ve had it in your closet for two years. At least. You’re not really a skirt person but it’s cute. The floral on black with the zipper up the front. It drapes nicely enough though you’re not used to wearing anything so short. You have a trusty pair of shorts on just in case. 
You don’t go out either. Definitely not to places like this. You keep an arm across your middle, gripping your other as the hordes of people make you dizzy. The shining gold accoutrement of the decor along with the waft of low music over the noise of tables and voices add to your vertigo. 
The casino is busy and bright and loud. You stay close to your sister as she leads you across the carpet; ivory with golden curliques patterned across them. You’re no gambler either but you’re not there to play cards.  
“I think it’s upstairs,” Roxie says as she looks at the tickets in her hand. “Gala Room B.” 
“Oh, right,” you murmur and smile at her, “what’s the band again?” 
“Don’t worry about it the tickets were free,” she chirps as you look up at her. You feel even more a child beside her; your height often adds to your inferiority complex. Historically, you think, those characteristics have been often intertwined. 
“No, but--” 
“You need to get out of mom’s place more,” she chides, “I could’ve brought Katie instead, but I chose you, sis.” 
“I know, er, thanks,” you run your hand up to your shoulder and rub it nervously. 
“Show doesn’t start for another hour. Let’s get a drink,” she insists and turns, strutting towards the long bar at the other side of the grand space. You trail after her, shrinking down even further. She turns back to you as she leans on a tall stool, “what d’ya want?” 
“I don’t know. I don’t really...” 
“I know, it’s one drink, how about a vodka-cran?” She suggests, “you love cranberry.” 
“Um, sure, if you think that’s good.” 
She sighs and rolls her eyes. She’s the wild one, not you. You know you bore her and since your parents’ divorce, years ago, you haven’t really hung out together. She went with your dad and you with your mom, since then, it’s all been a bit fuzzy. 
She orders as you stand back, not wanting to get in the way of the people all around you. You lean back, rocking nervously as you glance around. You feel underdressed as you see women in cocktail dresses and men in suits. Even your sister is a stark contrast to your overly casual attire; your favourite purple cardigan and the skirt you’ve never worn. 
Your eyes scan the room, admiring the golden sconces of bulbs that resemble candelabras and the gilt trim all along the wall. The more you look around, the less you belong. You don’t even know why you said yes. Well, your mom pushed you into it. Just like your sister, she keeps saying you need to get out more. 
You rub your lips together and feel around your small tassled purse. It’s used, like most of your things. The thrift store is as much as your mom can afford and you still haven’t found a solid job. You worked at the grocery for a summer before they laid off half of you then did a one-day stint at a polling centre for the last municipal election. Even if you wanted to go out, you don’t have the money for it. 
You pull out your chapstick and smear it around your chafed lips as you sway back the other direction. You stop short as you nearly slam into another body and you stumble out of the way of the man in his black-and-white suit. Embarrassment creeps hotly up your cheeks and you cap your lip balm and stand out of his path. 
He’s taller than you. Well, everyone is. But to you, he seems huge. His suit is finely tailored to his figure though his hair seems to clash with the refined style. It’s almost to his collar but neatly parted, a shank falling forward to frame his sharp cheekbone. His square jaw is trimmed thickly with a dark beard, peppered with strands of silver and patch along the dimple of his chin. You’ve never seen anything as blue as his eyes, they are almost inhumanly vivid. 
“Sorry, doll,” he touches your arm as he passes and smirks, swiftly turning his sights ahead of him. 
You gulp as your shoulder hits someone else. You spin to face your sister as she offers you a glass. You take the red concoction with the short black straw sticking out over the ice cubes. You thank her as the chill seeps into your hand. 
“Oof, look at him,” she leans to watch after the man in his dark suit, “damn.” You frown and look in the other direction. She scoffs and nudges you, “come on. That guy is totally stunning. Even you can see that.” 
“I don’t wanna gawk at him,” you mutter, “he’s a stranger.” 
“Oh, whatever, not like he’d notice,” she snips. 
You scrunch up your lip and tuck your chapstick away as you peer toward the man. He goes up to a table, sliding in next to a taller woman with honey-blond hair and a shimmery dress. He rests his hand along her lower back as he chatters to her and the rest of the players around the leather trim. 
“Sheesh, he’s fine,” she puts a twang on the last word, “mmph. If I wasn’t with Tom...” 
“Right,” you look down at the drink and sip from the straw. You make a face and cough. 
“It’s not that strong,” she slaps your back, “don’t be dramatic.” 
“I know,” you clear your throat, “I just wasn’t expecting the taste.” 
“Let’s go upstairs,” she points above. 
“Uh, okay,” you agree to her sudden diversion. You suppose you really are boring. 
You follow her up the curved stairs and along the railing that overlooks the lower casino room. Arched windows let in the night and the glow of the facade. You lean on the polished wood and peer down at the first floor; it looks even more resplendent from there. You sister puts her elbow on the railing as she looks around. 
“We could stick around after, lose some money,” she says. 
“I don’t... mom only gave me a twenty and I owe you for the drink.” 
“Pfft, whatever, I’ll spot ya. Tom gave me some extra with the tickets,” she trills, “it’ll be fun. Play some black jack. It’ll be an experience. You could say you’ve actually done something.” 
You smile, closed-lipped and tight. She isn’t wrong. It’s your first concert, for some cover band, and your first time at a casino. It’s not an exaggeration to say this is the height of your life experience. 
Your eyes wander down and meet another pair. You wince. It’s that same man. He walks towards you, a certain swagger in his stride. As he peers up at you, his cheeks dimple and he winks. You wrinkle your brow and look behind you. When you turn back, he’s gone. Right, you’re imagining things. 
Roxie slurps as her straw turns hollow. She’s already drained her cocktail, meanwhile you’ve barely taken a sip. She stirs the ice and hums. 
“Wait here, I’m gonna get a refill,” she raises her glass. 
“Oh, I can come with you--” 
“Nah, just stand here,” she insists. “You’ll just slow me down.” 
“Sure, uh, okay.” 
You curl your shoulders inward as she walks away. Great. All alone. You avoid looking anywhere but your glass. You face the railing again and balance your drink on it. It’s not bad, tarter than you’re used to and a little burny.  
You play with the black bracelet around your wrist, the band they stuck around it when they scanned your ID at the door. You suppose it’s a good idea but they wouldn’t be letting kids in here, would they? Oh yeah, the hotel is attached. 
As a kid, you never went on vacations like that. No hotels, no casinos, no shows. It seems like Roxie is catching up on all of that and you’re just there. The world is so much scarier when it’s all a mystery to you. 
“Excuse me,” a deep voice startles you. You ignore it, thinking it’s merely a passerby, “miss?” 
There’s a tap on your shoulder and you barely save your cocktail from spilling over the edge. You clutch the glass with both hands and face the stranger. It’s that same man, with the suit and the long hair and the oceanic eyes. Something about him is familiar beyond your few earlier glances. 
“I think you dropped this?” He holds up a chip with a golden 100 on it. You blink and shake your head. 
“No,” you scrape out of your throat, “I don’t-- I didn’t--” 
“I swear I saw it fall out of your bag,” he looks down at your purse. 
“Really, I’m not... I don’t gamble.” 
“Ah, well, if it’s just hanging around, might as well use it, huh?” He keeps his hand out, “maybe it’s your lucky day.” 
“I couldn’t. If someone lost it...” your voice doesn’t want to go and he leans in to hear you, adding to the heat spreading through your chest. Is it the alcohol or him? 
“You’re sweet, keep it,” he shoves the chip toward you. 
“Please, I... I... can’t...” you wipe a hand on your skirt and clutch the fabric. 
“Doll, I can’t hear you,” he says as he grabs your hand and dislodges it from your skirt, “here.” 
He presses the chip into your palm. You stare at his tie then look down at the white chip with gold detailing. His hand brushes yours before he rescinds his touch. 
“Erm...” you murmur dumbly and shake your head. 
“My treat,” he growls. 
“But...” 
“Like the skirt, by the way,” he surprises you as he pinches a fold, “cute on you.” 
Just as quickly as he appeared, he strides away, leaving you blankly staring after him. His broad shoulders move beyond a thick marble pillar as you hold up your drink and the chip. You just look between them. 
“Hey,” Roxie approaches again, “oh, what’s that?” 
“A chip...” you state plainly. 
“Duh, I know. Where’d you get it?” 
You look at the floor. Would she even believe you? “The floor.” 
“Ooo,” she plucks it from your fingers, “awesome, “now we’re definitely having some fun tonight.” 
“Rox,” you swallow and look up at her, “we should hand it in. It’s a lot of money. If someone lost it--” 
“If they lost it, they can afford it,” she bobs her neck as she speaks, “live a little,” she sneers and taps your glass, “and finish your drink. Maybe that’ll loosen you up.” 
You nod and recede into yourself, cradling the glass again with both hands. You put your lips to the straw and drink until you can’t anymore. She gulps straight from the brim of her glass and sighs, wiggling as she peers around. 
“I almost don’t even want to see these old men play music,” she snickers as she takes in the expanse of tables flashing lights. 
“Oh?” 
“Relax, we’re going to see the show. You’re a horrible liar and mom will see right through you,” she sneers, “besides, I told her I wouldn’t get you in too much trouble.” 
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Love Story
Colette is an up and coming actor, Harry is an international popstar who fell in love with cinema. When the pair work on a rendition of Romeo and Juliet, their worlds collide as feelings develop.
CW: Brief mention of dying, Smut.
Word Count: 11,860
Colette stepped into her dressing room, a lavishly appointed space designed to echo the opulence of the Verona in which her film "Romeo and Juliet" was set. The walls were draped in deep burgundy velvet curtains, softening the room with a rich, warm texture that whispered of hidden secrets and dramatic declarations. Golden accents framed mirrors and furniture, reflecting the flickering light from several ornately carved silver candelabras positioned thoughtfully around the room.
As she entered, her eyes were drawn to the vanity, an exquisite piece of craftsmanship with an expansive mirror bordered by tiny bulbs that bathed the area in a gentle, flattering light. Upon the surface lay an array of cosmetics and brushes, each laid out with precision, their handles catching glints of light like miniature scepters waiting to bestow their magic upon her.
The air was filled with a subtle scent of roses and myrrh, creating an atmosphere that was both calming and invigorating, as if the very essence of romance and tragedy had been captured and dispersed through the room. A large window draped with heavy curtains looked out upon a secluded garden that boasted marble statues peeking through lush greenery—Juliet's own secret sanctuary.
Colette’s costume hung on a dress form; it was a stunning creation of silk and lace, the fabric dyed in shades of moonlight and adorned with delicate embroidery that mimicked the intricate patterns of an Italian tapestry. The bodice was fitted, designed to accentuate her figure while allowing for the dramatic movements required in her scenes.
Next to the dress stood a pair of custom-made shoes, their leather soft and supple, seeming almost alive, like they were molded from a piece of night itself. They were embellished with small pearls and crystals, which twinkled like stars against the shadowy backdrop.
On a small table beside her plush, velvet-covered chaise lounge lay her script, its pages worn from use yet handled with reverence. It was flanked by a quill and an inkpot—an affectation provided by the director to inspire connection to the era they were emulating—as well as a delicate teacup painted with scenes from Shakespeare’s works.
Taking a deep breath to steady herself amidst this feast for senses—a real-life canvas painted with details fit for royalty—Colette prepared mentally to step once again into Juliet's world: one where love defied reason and every corner held both beauty and sorrow. She sat at her vanity, poised to transform under the artful hands of her makeup artist, ready to breathe life into Shakespeare's timeless lover once more.
The door to her dressing room opened with a soft creak, heralding the arrival of Madame Laurette, the makeup artist whose skills transformed actresses into visions from another time. Clad in a smock splattered with the remnants of foundation and rouge from previous masterpieces, Madame Laurette carried an ancient-looking leather case, which she set down with a practiced grace next to Colette.
"Ah, my dear," Madame Laurette began, her voice a soothing melody, "today we paint the tragedy and triumph of young love upon your canvas." Her hands were deft as they opened the case, revealing rows upon rows of pots and brushes, pencils and palettes; tools of the trade laid out like a surgeon's instruments, each with a purpose to bring forth beauty from bareness.
With delicate fingers, Madame Laureette applied a light moisturizer to Colette's face, preparing the skin like a primed canvas. She then used a sponge to dab on foundation that matched Colette's complexion so perfectly it seemed as if it were but a whisper on her skin. As she worked, she spoke softly about the character of Juliet—her passion, her grace, her strength in the face of despair.
Next came the eyes—windows to Juliet's soul. Madame Laurette chose shades that reflected the hues of twilight; dusky purples and soft blues blended seamlessly to suggest a depth of emotion. The eyeliner was applied in a fine line, accentuating the shape of Colette's eyes, making them appear larger, more expressive. Lashes were curled and coated with mascara that made them flutter like the wings of a night moth.
Cheeks were next attended with a brush dusted in rose-pink blush that brought a gentle bloom to her porcelain skin, reminiscent of English roses in bloom. It was as if Juliet herself had paused in a garden, momentarily caught up in thoughts of her Romeo.
Lips were not forgotten—painted in a soft red that was bold yet not overwhelming—a color that whispered of promises and kissed by starlight. As Madame Laurette worked her magic, the transformation from actress to character was nearly complete.
Finally, Madame Laurette set everything with a light dusting of powder which seemed to pull forth an ethereal glow from within Colette herself. Standing back to admire her work, she nodded slightly as if granting approval to proceed with the act.
As Madame Laurette packed away her tools and bid her farewell with wishes of good luck, Colette took one last look at herself in the mirror. Now staring back was Juliet Capulet: tragic yet triumphant in her love—a young woman framed not only by curls dark as raven wings but also by an aura of timeless romance that would soon spill over onto the stage under countless watching stars.
Her movements were infused with an anticipatory grace that seemed woven from the very threads of the narratives she was set to embody. The costume assistant approached, a vision of focus and professionalism, carrying the garment that would complete the transformation: a dress that seemed spun from moonlight and gossamer dreams.
The dress itself was a masterpiece of historical accuracy blended with theatrical flair. Its fabric was a whisper-soft silk that flowed like water over Colette's form, pooling slightly at her feet in a shimmering cascade of sky-blue. Intricate embroidery adorned the bodice, featuring delicate vines and flowers meticulously stitched with silver thread, catching the light with every subtle movement and suggesting a lattice of morning dew. Sleeves of sheer chiffon draped elegantly from her shoulders, airy and almost translucent, giving her arms the appearance of being wrapped in wisps of cloud.
As she stepped into the dress, the assistant deftly laced up the back, pulling the strings tight enough to sculpt her waist without hindering breath—a crucial balance for any performer. The final touch was a delicate ribbon tied in a bow just below her collarbone, a nod to youthful innocence and burgeoning romance.
Once dressed, Colette floated towards the full-length mirror, her steps tentative yet poised as though she were both discovering and remembering Juliet’s haunted grace. Her reflection seemed to transcend time; here was Juliet not as mere fiction, but resurrected in flesh and blood and silk, her eyes alight with both excitement and a hint of sorrow for the tale she was to live anew.
Taking a deep breath that lifted her chest slightly against the soft confines of her dress, Colette turned away from her reflection—away from Juliet's temporary shelter—and made her way out of the dressing room. The corridor outside was lined with flickering candles encased in glass lanterns hanging from ornate metal stands, casting shadows that danced like shy phantoms on the walls.
As she walked, her dress whispered secrets only she could hear, each step a murmur of silk. Exiting the building, she stepped out into an expanse that felt less like part of a film set and more like stepping through a wrinkle in time into Verona itself. The set designers had outdone themselves; cobblestone streets wound beneath balconies overflowing with ivy and blooms. Lamps glowed softly along pathways and a distant fountain murmured in melodious tones.
Here under the vast expanse of an artificial twilight sky beginning to pin itself with stars, Colette paused at the center of an old square waiting for Harry's arrival. In this moment suspended between reality and fiction—where night air kissed her cheeks as sweetly as any lover might—she was neither Colette nor Juliet but something timeless; a whisper of love’s eternal reverie waiting to be awakened by Romeo’s pledge beneath soft-footed shadows.
Colette felt eborn into another age and another life—her heart beating rapidly with anticipation and empathy for her character’s imminent joys and sorrows. She moved towards the set where artificial stars awaited their nightly audience and real emotions would stir under painted skies.
Just as the anticipation in the air reached its peak, Harry emerged from the shadows, a figure pulled from the very pages of Shakespeare. His costume was a masterpiece of Elizabethan artistry—velvet doublet embroidered with intricate silver threads that caught the light with every subtle movement, making him shimmer like a star newly born into the night sky. His breeches were of a similar rich fabric, hugging his legs with a precision that spoke of many hours spent in the tailor’s care. Upon his feet were boots made of soft leather that whispered against the cobblestones as he moved.
His hair, usually untamed and wild, had been tamed into soft waves that framed his face, echoing the romantic heroes of old. Around his neck, a heavy chain with a cross pendant rested against his chest, gleaming softly in the lamplight. His eyes, when they met Colette's, sparkled with a mixture of excitement and nervous energy—the perfect echo of Romeo’s own youthful vibrance and passionate soul.
As Harry walked closer to where Colette stood, waiting in her character's eternal reverie, his presence seemed to draw the very essence of the night towards him. The distant murmur of the fountain seemed to harmonize with his every step, creating a melody that resonated with the quiet rustling of Colette’s gown. Each element of the scene—the glowing lamps along the pathways, the soft rustle of ivy against stone—seemed to lean towards him, as if nature itself was eager to hear the tale these two star-crossed lovers would enact.
The square they occupied breathed with an air of ancient romance; it was as though they had truly stepped back in time and were no longer actors on a set but living embodiments of their characters. The buildings surrounding them wore age like proud badges, their windows darkened save for the occasional flicker of candlelight that suggested life continuing unaware inside. Above them, the crescent moon cradled stars that had witnessed countless tales of love and tragedy.
Harry reached the center of the square, his boots clicking on the cobblestones with a rhythmic certainty. He stopped before Colette, who remained motionless, her gaze fixed upon him with an intensity that belied the serene expression on her face. Her costume—a flowing dress of midnight blue, embroidered with tiny silver threads—whispered tales of bygone elegance as it caught the breeze, fluttering lightly around her ankles.
Clearing his throat softly, Harry began to recite Romeo's lines with a tender fervor that seemed to pull at the very air around him. "But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks? It is the east, and Juliet is the sun." His voice rose and fell in perfect cadence, each word a brushstroke painting emotions across the canvas of the night.
As he spoke, an unexpected gust of wind stirred the leaves around them into a gentle dance, mirroring the turmoil brewing in Romeo's heart as he gazed upon his forbidden love. The scent of rose and old stone mingled together, casting a spell over the scene that was palpable. The director, hidden in the shadows beyond the set's makeshift lights, allowed himself a small smile at the authenticity of this moment—cinema magic in its purest form.
Colette responded in kind, her voice carrying back to Harry with equal parts longing and restraint. "O Romeo, Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo?" She stepped forward slightly, her hands clasped before her as if to steady her racing heart. Her eyes never left Harry's, and in them flickered the fire of Juliet's love—a burning, all-consuming flame that acknowledged neither reason nor consequence.
The crew around them had ceased all movement; even those seasoned in film felt themselves caught in the spellbinding performance unfolding before them. The prop master forgot his duties for a moment, lost in the authenticity of Colette's accent and the palpable connection between her and Harry.
Above them, clouds began to drift across the moon's face slowly veiling and unveiling the celestial glow. This natural play of light added a dramatic flair to the scene below—an unwitting collaboration between man and nature that highlighted this poignant moment of shared solitude between two lovers cursed by fate.
Every detail was perfect, the way the lamplight flickered as though trembling with anticipation; how a distant owl hooted right at Juliet’s tender confession; the subtle shift of fabric as Harry moved closer to Colette—contributed to an atmosphere thick with drama and history. Even those behind cameras or holding booms felt as if they were no longer just creating but witnessing something transcendent; a story retold yet forever new in its telling.
As Harry delivered Romeo’s pledge of undying love beneath Juliet's window conceived anew beneath towering oaks and ageless stone buildings, it was clear this was not merely a recitation but an act of truth.
The director, normally a stoic figure shadowed by the breadth of his responsibilities, allowed a rare smile to creep across his face as the final words lingered in the air, trembling like the leaves around them. His approach was silent, reverent almost, as if stepping into a sacred space that the actors had conjured with their spellbinding talent.
"Cut!" he called out, but the word was soft, filled more with awe than command. The silence that followed was profound, filled with the collective held breath of the crew before they erupted into spontaneous applause. The clapping rolled through the set like thunderous waves, each member expressing their unbridled admiration for what they had witnessed.
The director raised his hands, beckoning for quiet, his eyes gleaming with both pride and something akin to gratitude. "That," he said, his voice steady but imbued with emotion, "was nothing short of magnificent. Harry, Colette—I've seen many a scene in my years behind the camera, but what you both have delivered today transcends performance. It reaches into the core of what it means to be human; to love, to despair, to hope."
He walked over to the actors, who were still nestled in their characters' final embrace, slowly returning to themselves as they listened to his praises. "Colette," he continued, turning to her with a respectful nod. "Your Juliet is both vulnerable and fiery; you’ve given her a depth that breathes new life into Shakespeare’s lines. And Harry," he turned with equal admiration to the young actor whose eyes still held a glimmer of Romeo's passion. "You’ve played Romeo not just as a lover but as a warrior fighting against the inevitable tragedy of his fate. Exceptional work."
The surrounding buildings and trees seemed to absorb his words, casting longer shadows as if in agreement. The director then turned towards the crew members who had captured every nuanced moment on film. "And let’s not forget the incredible work of our crew—lighting, sound, props—this magic can’t happen without each piece falling perfectly into place."
He clapped his hands together once more, this time signaling an end rather than silence. "Alright folks, let’s pack up here—remember this feeling of accomplishment. We’ve got early scenes tomorrow and we need to bring this same energy."
As they disbanded gradually, whispers of praise continued amongst them like quiet ripples on a pond at dusk; everyone shared part of the triumph. Juliet’s balcony scene would be remembered not just for its beauty and tragedy but for its vivid realness that evening under the shrouded moonlight—an echo of love carried softly by the wind through the leaves of those ancient trees.
As the crew began to disperse, the air filled with the clatter of equipment being packed and the soft murmur of satisfied conversations. Harry and Colette slowly walked side by side toward the dressing rooms, their costumes slightly less pristine than they had been at the start of the day but still radiant under the fading sunlight. The path was lined with ancient oaks, their branches gnarled and stretched toward the sky like silent watchers of countless tales unfolding under their gaze.
Harry glanced at Colette, noting how the evening breeze gently lifted strands of her hair. She looked ethereal, a stark contrast to the raw intensity she had displayed on stage just moments before. "You were truly magnificent today," he said, his voice carrying a warmth that lingered in the cool air. "It’s amazing how you transform so completely."
Colette smiled, a blush tinting her cheeks. "Thank you, Harry. You were incredible as well. There’s a certain ferocity you bring to Romeo that’s both thrilling and heart-wrenching."
They reached the dressing rooms, tucked behind a curtain of ivy that draped over the stone walls of the old stage building. Its doors stood like portals back to reality from the whimsical world they had just left behind on set.
Pausing by her door, Harry shuffled slightly, a mix of eagerness and hesitation playing across his features. "Colette, I was wondering, would you... perhaps care for some dinner? There’s this little place I know nearby, quite secluded, perfect for winding down."
The offer hung between them like a delicate promise; a chance to extend the enchantment of their shared performance into the evening. Colette’s eyes lit up with genuine interest. "That sounds lovely, Harry. A quiet dinner would be perfect." Her smile was inviting, bridging the gap between their on-set romance and off-set camaraderie.
As they walked towards Harry's car parked under a canopy of whispering leaves, they talked about everything from their interpretations of their characters to trivial anecdotes from their daily lives. The restaurant was nestled in an alley illuminated by strings of faint golden lights that created halos in the misty night air.
Inside, they chose a corner table surrounded by bookshelves filled with worn volumes and odd trinkets—a cozy retreat from the outside world. As they ordered, they continued to unravel layers of conversation, each topic a stepping stone deeper into each other’s thoughts and dreams.
The meal was delicious—simple fare but made with care—a reflection of the restaurant itself. They laughed over shared appetizers and lingered over wine that painted their thoughts in broader strokes. The candlelight flickered across their faces, casting soft shadows that danced to an unplayed rhythm.
By dessert, Harry found himself watching Colette with renewed appreciation as she articulated her ambitions for future roles and her vision for modern theatrical interpretation. She listened equally intently as he described his journey through being a musician and his aspirations beyond.
As Harry and Colette lingered over the last sips of their drinks, the cozy warmth of the restaurant began to feel like a protective cocoon against the crisp night air outside. They shared a quiet moment, smiling at the serendipity of their meeting and the depth of conversation it had spurred. But as they rose to leave, pushing their chairs back gently against the worn wooden floor, the surreal bubble they had enjoyed burst with abrupt clarity.
Stepping out onto the alley, they were met not by the quiet of the night but by a sudden burst of flashing lights and clamorous voices. Paparazzi, having caught wind of their dinner together, swarmed around them like moths to a flame. Cameras clicked and flashed relentlessly, capturing every gesture and expression, as reporters shouted questions trying to pierce through the veil of their private evening.
"Harry! Colette! Are you two more than just co-stars?" one voice rang out, sharper than the rest.
"Is this dinner a sign of a new Hollywood power couple?" another chimed in.
Shields up against this intrusive barrage, Harry instinctively placed a protective arm around Colette’s shoulders. He guided her gracefully yet swiftly towards his car, parked under the now ominous canopy of leaves that whispered secrets in a tone much darker than before. Each flash from the cameras cast stark shadows on the ground and painted their path in fast paced steps.
Colette kept her head down slightly, her smile replaced by a composed mask of cordial indifference; it was clear she was no stranger to these encounters but nonetheless hoped they might evade them tonight. Harry muttered a polite "have a good night" as he helped her into the passenger seat of his car.
Inside the relative safety of the vehicle, they exchanged a look—a mix of amusement and exasperation—and Harry let out a sigh as he started the engine. The lights outside continued to flash through the tinted windows as he maneuvered out of their parking spot.
The drive back was quiet at first, as if they were both processing the sudden shift from intimate conversation to public spectacle. Yet soon enough, Harry turned down the volume on an ambient tune that had started playing automatically when they entered.
"That was intense," he said, glancing over at Colette with an apologetic half-smile.
"It always is," Colette replied, turning to face him with a resigned smile. "But hey, part of our charming careers, right?"
Harry laughed softly. "Yeah, charm is one word for it."
As the car glided through the dimly lit streets, the silence between them grew heavy with unspoken thoughts. Colette broke the tension first, her voice soft but tinged with a hint of frustration.
"I sometimes wonder if this is what we signed up for, you know? The constant scrutiny, the invasion of privacy... Is it worth it in the end?" she mused, her gaze fixed on the passing city lights.
Harry nodded thoughtfully, his grip on the steering wheel tightening imperceptibly. "I ask myself that question too, especially on nights like this. It's like we're always under a microscope, every move dissected and analyzed by strangers."
A sense of comfort blossomed between them, a shared understanding born out of their parallel experiences in the spotlight. Colette turned to Harry, a spark of defiance igniting in her eyes.
"But despite all of that," she continued, her voice gaining strength, "we can't let them define us or dictate our every move. We're more than just their headlines and gossip fodder."
Harry smiled at her resolve, a flicker of admiration shimmering in his eyes. "You're right, Colette. We're artists first and foremost, creators of worlds and emotions."
Their shared conviction filled the car with a renewed sense of purpose, a quiet determination to reclaim their narrative from the prying eyes of the paparazzi. As they neared Colette's apartment building, Harry parked the car with a sense of finality.
"Thank you for tonight," Colette said sincerely, turning to face him with a genuine smile. "Even the chaos at the end, I truly enjoyed our conversation and dinner, it was really good."
Harry returned her smile warmly. "Likewise, Colette. We are more than just co-stars caught in a media frenzy."
As Colette opened the door to her apartment, the image of Harry in his Romeo costume flashed vividly across her mind. His appearance had been a perfect blend of vulnerability and valiance, his attire accentuating the expressive lines of his body as he moved with an almost ethereal grace on stage. The sheer, soft fabric of his shirt clung to him as if it were part of his own skin, and the way the stage lights had caught the highlights in his hair made him look like a figure from an old-world painting—romantic and heroic.
Inside her quiet apartment, everything seemed too still, too empty compared to the warmth of Harry's presence. She tossed her keys on the table absent-mindedly and moved towards her bedroom, her mind replaying their conversation in the car. His words echoed in her ears, blending with flashes of his smile and the intensity in his eyes when he spoke about their artistry. It was as if he'd stripped away all the glitz and scandal that so often cloaked their lives, revealing a raw, sincere connection between them.
Colette tried to settle into bed, pulling her covers close, but restlessness took over. Turning onto her back, she stared at the ceiling, her thoughts spiraling around Harry’s comforting arm around her shoulders earlier that night. She remembered how secure it felt, a protective circle that shut out the incessant flash of cameras and curious stares. The smell of his cologne, a subtle mix of bergamot and sandalwood—seemed to linger on her skin, transporting her back to their fleeting moments of privacy amidst the chaos.
The more she thought about him, the more details came flooding in. How his lips curved into a smile just before he laughed, how his eyes lit up when discussing a particularly passionate scene. Even the way he held himself during their performance—confident yet tender—seemed etched into her memory with surprising clarity.
A sigh escaped her lips as she turned again in bed, fluffing her pillow in vain search for comfort. The digital clock on her bedside table glowed 2:17 AM; time was slipping by slowly tonight. Every tick seemed to resonate within the quiet room, each one reminding her of Harry’s gentle demeanor and unspoken assurances.
Why was it so difficult to push these thoughts aside? Why did every tiny detail of him seem magnified tonight? Colette knew that sleep would be elusive as long as these memories danced through her head, a sweet torment but a torment nonetheless.
Realizing that fighting it was futile, she sat up and reached for a book from her nightstand. Perhaps diving into someone else’s fictional world could ease her back from hers filled with all too real emotions spurred by Harry. Yet as she flipped through page after page, Colette found herself reading without absorbing any words. Her mind was back with Harry, reliving each moment spent together that day.
Finally surrendering to the inexorable pull of those memories, Colette set the book aside and allowed herself to reminisce about every glance exchanged and every laugh shared with Harry until tiredness eventually claimed victory over turmoil—a bittersweet end to an evening that neither camera flashes nor gossip columns could ever truly capture.
As the first rays of morning light began to filter through her gauzy curtains, Colette felt a tentative peace settle over her. The unavoidable sunrise not only heralded a new day but also the unavoidable return to set where today's scenes awaited her—scenes that would force her to bridge the gap between reality and fiction, between Colette and Juliet, Harry and Romeo.
The day unfurled slowly, each moment stretching languidly as if aware of the weight it carried. Colette arrived on set, her heart thrumming a nervous rhythm against the cage of her ribs. The set was a meticulous recreation of Verona, the air perfumed with artificial blooms that lined the faux stone balconies. It was here, beneath a painstakingly crafted balcony, that she found Harry already immersed in his role, his eyes distant yet filled with an intense purpose.
As makeup artists fluttered around them like attentive sprites, dusting their faces with powder and painting their lips, the boundary between Harry and Romeo, Colette and Juliet blurred seamlessly. The director—a wiry man with a penchant for perfection—guided them through their positions with an authoritarian yet oddly paternal touch.
"Remember," he said, his voice low and urgent as if conveying a secret, "this kiss isn’t just about passion. It’s about discovery, wonderment. You’re unveiling layers of your soul to one another."
Taking their places, Harry extended his hand with a gallantry that could either be attributed to him or to Romeo—it was hard to tell at this juncture. As Colette placed her hand in his, their fingers tentatively entwining, she wondered if he felt the same electric surge that ran up her arm.
The cameras rolled silently, capturing every nuanced expression. Around them, the crew faded into obscurity; it was just Harry and Colette, Romeo and Juliet. As Harry spoke his lines—the words Shakespeare penned centuries ago—his voice wove around her heart like a tender vine. His gaze held hers captive and in that moment, under the watchful eyes of countless unseen spectators both present and future, fiction turned into a palpable reality.
With the gentlest of motions indicative of both apprehension and certainty, Harry drew closer. His breath mingled with hers—a sweet prelude to the imminent ballet of their lips. When their lips finally met in an embrace as old as time yet fresh like dew on morning leaves, there was a hush on set so profound that even the rustle of fabric seemed sacrilege.
The kiss deepened not out of direction but from an intrinsic need to explore the burgeoning emotion that had started off as an onscreen farce but had bloomed into something indefinably real. They existed in the breath between lines; in the silence between words—their world distilled into the small space between their intertwined fingers and mingling breaths.
As they parted—an infinity encapsulated in seconds—their gazes lingered longingly; not solely because the script demanded it but because their souls hesitated to disentangle.
"Cut!" The director's voice sliced through the thick curtain of emotion, abrupt yet not unkind.
Applause broke out among the crew, bringing Harry and Colette back from Verona to the soundstage. Yet something lingered in their shared glance, a spark that neither the stark lights of the studio nor the return to their own separate lives could dim. As they stepped away from each other, there was an awkward moment of hesitation, a mutual recognition of something undefined and new swirling between them.
The rest of the day passed in a daze of repeated scenes and whispered lines. Colette found herself more aware of Harry's presence, every look and every touch magnified under the scrutinizing lens of her newfound feelings. Off-camera, they joked and laughed, but there was an unspoken agreement in their smiles, a secret tucked away behind their lighthearted banter.
When filming wrapped for the day, Colette felt the exhaustion from emotional strain more than from physical demand. The carousel of her thoughts kept spinning as she drove home, the ghost of Harry’s touch lingering like a promise on her skin.
Back at her apartment, she knew she ought to eat something or perhaps review scripts for tomorrow's shoot. Instead, she found herself at her window, gazing out into the twilight cityscape, her mind replaying every encounter with Harry. It wasn't just their characters who had discovered new emotional landscapes; Colette feared she was standing on the precipice of a revelation herself.
Her phone rang, slicing through her silence. She hesitated before answering, half-hoping it was Harry. It was her agent instead.
"Colette! Todays news came in; you were absolutely sublime! Everyone’s buzzing about the chemistry between you and Harry," her agent enthused over the line. Though meant as praise, each word weighed heavy on her soul like stones filling her pockets.
"Thanks," Colette managed to say, her voice a mere whisper against the storm inside her. "That means a lot."
"Listen," her agent continued, oblivious to Colette's turmoil, "There’s talk already about future projects for you two—maybe even some endorsements together. This could be huge for your career."
Her career. Right. That’s what mattered. Yet as Colette ended the call and sat back against the soft cushions of her couch, she couldn’t help but wonder if perhaps this time, something else mattered more.
She finally allowed herself to consider the possibility that what was scripted for Romeo and Juliet might have woven itself into the fabric of reality for Harry and herself. Could life imitate art to such a degree? Or was it merely caught up in the whirlwind of creating something beautiful together?
The night deepened around Colette as she sat alone with her thoughts. She knew decisions lay ahead, decisions about how far she should let this potential off-screen relationship develop amidst their on-screen romance. Tonight though, she would allow herself one certainty: that in all her roles, both lived and acted, nothing had ever felt quite as dangerous or as genuine as whatever was unfolding with Harry.
The room dimmed further as the last strains of sunlight vanished, leaving only the flickering shadows cast by the streetlamps outside. Colette's mind, a whirlpool of longing and rationality, began to conjure vivid scenes of Harry reciting lines from their recent scenes. Each word, artfully delivered with his rich, emotive voice, seemed to echo through her now quiet apartment, filling the spaces between her scattered thoughts.
He had stood there on stage, beneath the opulent glow of the set lights, his eyes finding hers in the scripted moments that felt all too real. "But, soft! What light through yonder window breaks?" Harry's voice had quivered slightly with a passion that transcended performance. Colette remembered how her heart had leapt at those words, how the scripted distance between them seemed to collapse in a singularity of shared emotion.
As Romeo, he had been impetuous yet earnest, his every motion weaving a spell of youthful ardor and desperate love. And now, alone, she let her mind replay those scenes—his beseeching gaze, his hands reaching not just for Juliet but for Colette herself. Could it be that each line he delivered was an arrow aimed directly at her heart? The balcony scene unfolded again in her thoughts: Harry's silhouette framed by the mock Verona backdrop they had on set. "With love's light wings did I o'erperch these walls; For stony limits cannot hold love out," he had declared fervently.
Could stony limits hold her emotions at bay? Her career had always been a fortress of sorts—a necessity to keep vulnerability at bay. But Harry’s portrayal of Romeo dismantled her defenses brick by brick, not through sheer force but through the tender strength of shared vulnerability.
In her mind's eye, Colette wandered back to a moment during rehearsals when Harry had improvised—off-script yet profoundly resonant—speaking directly to her soul beyond the bounds of their characters. "And yet I wish but for the thing I have: My bounty is as boundless as the sea, My love as deep; the more I give to thee, The more I have, for both are infinite." How his eyes had held hers, unwavering!
The thought brought an unexpected tear to Colette's eye—a tear for the uncertain future, for the potential hardships they might face together or apart, but also a tear for the beauty of a connection that might just transcend the ephemeral world of acting.
Colette rose from the couch and moved towards her window. Gazing out into the starlit cityscape, she pondered over these newly tapped depths within her heart. Perhaps tomorrow she would make decisions with consequences she couldn't yet foresee. But tonight belonged to dreams and whispered lines—a night where Harry's recitations from Romeo and Juliet swirled around her heart like a sweet yet potent incantation. Tonight was not about contracts or cameras. It was about understanding that what they might share could be as profound and real as any love story ever penned—an ode not written by Shakespeare but lived by two hearts daring enough to explore it.
As the hours ticked by, the city outside her window slowly transformed. The glaring neon signs dimmed to a soft glow, and the relentless honking of cars turned into a distant murmur, as if even New York herself had decided to catch her breath. In that serene quietude, amidst the gentle rustle of leaves and the occasional chirping of a late-night bird, Colette's mind kept returning to Harry—to his eyes, his voice, his surprisingly delicate touch on stage.
She tried reading a book, but the words blurred into meaningless shapes as her thoughts danced back to those moments onstage when the air between them seemed charged with an electric intensity. It was in those moments when Harry's voice would deepen just so, casting out lines like spells that wrapped around her heart, binding it inexplicably to him.
Restlessness finally got the better of Colette. With a sigh, she set aside her book and picked up her phone. Her thumb hovered over Harry's contact—for a moment she hesitated—but then, driven by an impulse she neither questioned nor understood fully, she pressed call.
The phone rang briefly before Harry's familiar voice filled the line. "Colette? Is everything alright?"
"I couldn't sleep," she confessed softly, the words feeling both foolish and necessary.
There was a pause—a thoughtful silence—and then Harry’s voice came again, quietly intense. "Come over, then. I’ve been trying to distract myself with scripts and lyrics, but it seems tonight is bent on being restless."
A small smile touched her lips; relief washed through her in gentle waves. "Give me twenty minutes?"
"Take your time," he replied with such warmth that it felt like a hug through the phone.
When Colette arrived at Harry’s apartment—a modest yet cozy space filled with stacks of books and paintings that spilled from every corner—she found him sitting on the balcony overlooking the twinkling skyline. He had two cups of tea steaming gently on a small table between them.
As she stepped out onto the balcony, he rose to greet her with an ease that belied his earlier restlessness. They didn’t speak much initially; words seemed superfluous as they sipped their tea and let the city’s nocturnal symphony envelop them.
It was only after both cups were emptied that Harry spoke again, his voice soft but clear against the backdrop of whispering winds. "You know," he began hesitantly, "tonight reminds me of our final act last week—the way Juliet looks at Romeo with such... such unguarded hope.”
"Yes," Colette whispered back, feeling that familiar pull in her chest—the inexplicable connection that seemed to thrive in shared silences and stolen glances rather than grand declarations.
"Sometimes," Harry continued, turning to face her more fully now, "I wonder whether we’re more than just actors playing parts—whether some scenes bleed into reality without us even noticing."
Colette reached out then, touching his hand lightly. "Maybe they do," she said simply. And for a long while after that, they sat there together—two figures etched against a sprawling cityscape—finding solace in each other's presence and in the quiet conviction that tonight was not merely about roles or rehearsals; it was about discovering truths hidden within lines delivered.
As the night deepened and the city's sounds ebbed into a lulling quiet, the conversation between Harry and Colette drifted from their characters' tragic romance to their own realities—careers that were as dazzling as they were demanding, personal lives constantly scrutinized by the public eye, and futures uncertain but full of potential.
"Sometimes I think about stepping away," Harry admitted, his gaze locked on the distant lights. "From the music, from the films—just to see who I am when the lights go off."
Colette nodded. The vulnerability in his voice resonated with her own unspoken fears. "It's as though we're constantly wearing masks, isn't it? Onstage or off, it's hard to tell where the character ends and where we begin."
"Yeah," he sighed. "Tonight though, being here with you—it feels real. No scripts, no audience." His eyes met hers with an intensity that sent a shiver through her.
She smiled, feeling a sense of kinship forge deeper between them. "No masks," she whispered.
They sat for a moment in silence, each lost in contemplation of the rare simplicity this evening had brought them—a stark contrast to their everyday chaos. Harry eventually stood up, stretching his arms towards the starry sky before offering his hand to her. "Come on, let’s take a walk. The night’s too beautiful to spend it all sitting down."
Reluctantly leaving their secluded spot, they wandered down quiet streets lined with barely lit cafes and closed bookstores, their steps synchronized in comfortable silence. Every so often, Harry would point out an old theater or a quaint little art gallery he’d visited during his tours. Colette listened intently, her heart swelling with an affection that was new and yet profoundly familiar.
As they turned back towards Harry's apartment, he stopped suddenly under a streetlamp’s soft glow. "I haven't felt this... peaceful in months," he confessed, looking at her with an earnestness that made her heart skip.
She reached for his hand, squeezing it gently. "Neither have I," she said. "It’s easy to forget what quiet feels like when your life is full of noise."
Harry nodded, his gaze lingering on her face as if memorizing every detail. "Do you think it's possible? To find peace amidst all the turmoil?"
"I think," she started, pausing to gather her thoughts under his attentive gaze, "it's about finding the right person to share in those quiet moments—the ones who hear the music in your silences."
A warm smile spread across Harry's face as he drew her closer. Underneath that streetlamp, amid the sleeping city and beneath an audience of stars, they found a momentary escape—not as Romeo and Juliet caught in Shakespearean tragedy nor as celebrities shadowed by fames relentless spotlight—but simply as Harry and Colette discovering solace within each other's company.
As they slowly headed back to his apartment, hands entwined with silent promises of more shared nights like this one, both understood that while their careers might pull them in different directions come morning, tonight was theirs—a night marked not by dialogues written by playwrights long gone but by honest words exchanged between two souls navigating through life’s vast stage together.
She felt the warmth of his hand in hers, the roughness of his skin against her own soft palm, sending shivers down her spine. She looked up at him, taking in the way he moved, so confident and yet so gentle at the same time. Colette couldn't help but feel safe in his presence. The sound of their footsteps echoed on the empty sidewalk, mixing with the distant hum of traffic and occasional howl of a lonesome siren. As they turned into an alleyway, she breathed in the scent of freshly baked bread from a nearby bakery, mingling with the stale smoke from a cigarette butt left behind by some passerby. The stars above twinkled like diamonds scattered across a midnight sky, their light guiding them home.
They walked hand in hand beneath the glow of the streetlamp, casting shadows on the brick wall behind them as they stepped forward. The rhythm of their stride became synced, almost like they were dancing to an unknown melody. Every now and then, Harry would point out constellations he recognized or make up stories about the ones he didn't, his voice deep and soothing like velvet caressing her ears. His laughter rang out when she teased him about his astronomical knowledge—or lack thereof—and she loved how genuine it sounded despite everything that surrounded them.
Colette paused for a moment to look at a painting on an old doorstep; it was beautifully executed yet marred by graffiti tags that told stories of love lost and hearts broken. Harry stood beside her, looking over her shoulder as if seeing it for the first time too. She noticed how his presence made even this decrepit alleyway seem somehow beautiful.
They continued walking, their steps echoing softly against the pavement as they neared Harry's apartment building. As they reached the front door, he stopped and with a flourish produced a set of keys from his jeans pocket. The metal jangled softly against each other as he unlocked it, and then they stepped inside out of the cool night air into the warmth of his cozy living room. Setting down her purse, Colette looked around at the familiar surroundings - the worn sofa, the bookshelf filled with favorite novels and framed photographs from past adventures, and the unlit fireplace waiting for winter evenings. The musty smell of old books mingled with freshly brewed coffee drifting from the kitchenette.
"Well," Harry began as he shut the door behind them, "I guess this is where our little adventure ends."
Colette's heart sank at his words but she forced a smile anyway. "Yeah... it was fun while it lasted."
"It always is," he agreed quietly, moving towards her and giving her one last hug before gently pushing her towards the door. "You should get some sleep though, early morning meeting tomorrow."
With one final wave goodnight, Colette slipped through the door and into the hallway, hearing it click shut behind her. Outside on the sidewalk, she took a deep breath of the cool night air and felt a slight shiver run down her spine as reality came crashing back in - work in the morning with its emails and deadlines and office politics. But for now, she allowed herself to linger on the memory of their night together: The taste of wine on her tongue still lingering; the soft buzz from alcohol fading; Harry's touch still lingering on her skin like tiny electric shocks. 
As Colette closed the door behind her, she could hear the familiar clicking sound filling her with a sense of finality. The night air was crisp against her skin, carrying with it a chill that sent shivers down her spine as she took in deep breaths of the city outside. Her mind was still reeling from the events of the evening; it had been an unforgettable journey into a world she never imagined existed. But alas, all good things must come to an end, and now she found herself standing on the sidewalk once more, back in reality. The neon lights from nearby stores cast an artificial glow upon the pavement as she stepped away from Harry's cozy apartment and began to walk towards home. The sound of footsteps echoed on concrete as cars honked their horns in the distance, creating a symphony of urban noise that surrounded her.
She could still feel Harry's embrace pressing against her back as if he were wrapping his arms around hers again, sending tingles up and down her spine with each step she took away from him. She could still taste the sweetness of red wine dancing on her tongue - its tartness mixing with the lingering taste of their passionate kisses as if it were a bitter-sweet symphony only they shared. She let out a soft sigh and looked up at the starry sky above; the sight always managed to calm her nerves but tonight it only served as a reminder that their time together was over.
The streets were empty save for a few late-night stragglers making their way home from parties or bars, their laughter and music fading into nothingness as Colette walked further down the block. A soft breeze rustled through trees lining the sidewalk, leaves whispering secrets only they knew while carrying with them.
Once Colette made it home she brushed her teeth and went into her cozy bed wrapped around in her favorite cotton pajamas, snuggling deep into the softness of her sheets. She reached over to her phone on the bedside table and saw Harry's name still glowing on the screen. A smile tugged at her lips as she remembered their last goodbye
As she drifted off, Colette imagines walking through Central Park once more. The crisp air rustled through trees, carrying with it the scent of autumn - earthy and musky. She could hear the sound of leaves crunching underfoot and see birds flitting from branch to branch overhead. They sat together on a bench, leaning against one another as they watched nature's greatest show for free. He held her hand closely, lacing fingers between hers as if they were always meant to be entwined like that. And then she felt a drop of rain on her nose, followed by another one on her cheek. They both laughed as they ran hand in hand towards his apartment; their shoes splashing through puddles left behind by an unexpected shower that cloud-covered sky promised earlier in the day.
Colette woke up with that same coolness brushing against her face but found herself alone in bed instead of curled up with Harry. The memory lingered like a fond dream but faded away with each blink until all that was left was reality.
Colette got ready and made her way over to the studio, today was the last day of scenes, and the scene where Romeo and Juliet meet their demise.
As she entered the bustling set, the weight of the final day pressed on her shoulders like a heavy curtain about to fall for the last time. The air was thick with a mix of excitement and melancholy, as everyone from the crew to the cast moved with a purposeful urgency, aware that this chapter was closing. Colette brushed past the props and costume racks, her mind still tangled in thoughts of Harry and the night that they had spent wrapped in each other’s company.
She found herself in front of her dressing room mirror, staring at her own reflection as she slipped into Juliet's intricate gown. Each layer of fabric seemed to wrap her tighter, not just in character but also in the realization that soon she would have to strip away this identity that had become a second skin over months of filming.
"Knock knock," came a familiar voice from the door. It was Harry, leaning against the frame with that charming smile that always seemed to disarm her.
"Hey," Colette replied, her heart skipping a beat. "Ready for the grand finale?"
"As I'll ever be," Harry said, stepping inside and helping adjust a loose strand of her hair. "It’s surreal, isn’t it? Feels like just yesterday we were stumbling through our first lines together and today we die together."
Colette nodded, feeling the corners of her eyes moisten. "I'm going to miss us—this."
Harry took her hand gently, squeezing it reassuringly. "The end of one story, Colette. Not the end of everything."
Together, they walked onto the set where the final scene awaited them—a beautifully tragic conclusion to Shakespeare’s timeless tale. The set was a somber array of shadows and light, perfectly crafting an ambiance befitting their last moment as Romeo and Juliet.
As they stepped into their marks, silence enveloped the set. The director called for quiet on set and slowly, every surrounding noise dulled into obscurity until there was nothing but the fictional world they were anchored in.
"Action!" came the resolute call.
The scene unfolded with an intensity that mirrored the raw emotions both Harry and Colette felt. They delivered their lines with a palpable passion, their voices laced with the poignant realization of both the characters' and their own impending separation. As Romeo, Harry took a vial of poison, his hands trembling slightly—a detail that added a layer of desperate realism to his performance. Colette, as Juliet, lay motionless on the stone-cold crypt, her chest rising and falling subtly, awaiting her final cue.
When it came time for Juliet to awaken, Colette's eyes fluttered open to meet Harry's gaze one last time. The sorrow in his eyes was reflected in hers; no longer just acting, they were living their characters' tragedy. As she spoke her last lines, a tear escaped down her cheek, blurring the boundary between performance and reality.
The potent mix of fiction and their personal goodbye charged through their final kiss, drawing a silent gasp from the crew around them. As Juliet drove Romeo's dagger into her chest, Colette collapsed beside Harry with a grace that spoke volumes of the artistry she had poured into her role.
For a few heartbeats after the director called "Cut!" nobody moved. The echo of their lines lingered in the air, heavy with the weight of finality. It was only when the applause broke out that Harry and Colette were pulled back from Verona to the stark reality of the studio set.
Still lying beside each other on the cold ground of the set crypt, they turned to look at each other one last time. The clapping around them faded into a distant murmur as Harry reached out to brush away another tear from Colette’s cheek.
“That was...” Harry started but seemed unable to find the right words.
“Beautiful,” Colette finished for him, her voice barely above a whisper. “And absolutely fucking heartbreaking.”
They helped each other up and took a bow to the crew whose cheers had now filled up space like light flooding into dark corners. It was over — their journey as star-crossed lovers had come to an end on screen.
Just then, the director, a tall figure with a rumpled look that spoke of endless days and sleepless nights, stepped into the circle of light. He adjusted his glasses, looking from Harry to Colette with an expression torn between admiration and the perpetual dissatisfaction of a perfectionist.
"Truly magnificent," he pronounced, though his voice carried a but that hung in the air unspoken. The crew quieted, sensing there was more to come. "However," he continued, casting a quick glance at the cameraman who nodded sheepishly, "we had a slight glitch with the lighting. One of our key lights flickered out right at the crucial moment."
A collective sigh rippled through the team, mixed with a few suppressed groans. Yet no one protested— they all knew the importance of getting it just right.
"We need to go for another take," the director declared firmly. The disappointment was palpable, but so was the resolve to perfect the art they were all crafting together.
Harry and Colette exchanged a look of weary determination. Without a word, they moved back to their starting positions beside the stone altar that served as Juliet's final resting place. 
As the crew reset their equipment, Harry glanced around at the towering set pieces that recreated Verona's gothic splendor. Artificial moonlight streamed through stained glass windows crafted from gel and plastic but beautiful nonetheless. Shadows danced along walls textured to look like ancient stone, casting eerie patterns that whispered of old secrets and timeless tragedies.
Colette smoothed her velvet gown—a rich crimson that pooled around her like spilled wine—and repositioned her hairpiece, tucking a stray lock behind her ear before she lay down once more on the cold faux-marble slab.
The props master darted forward to adjust the placement of the dagger—a replica so finely crafted it seemed as sharp as truth itself—before scurrying away as silently as he had arrived.
"Places everyone!" called the assistant director, a sprightly woman whose energy seemed inexhaustible. Her voice cut through the murmured conversations and last-minute adjustments, snapping everyone back to attention.
As silence reclaimed the set, encapsulating it in a tense bubble of anticipation, the director looked over his tableau one last time. Satisfied, he lifted his hand high then brought it down sharply.
"And... action!"
In a haunting moment, Colette delved deeper into her character, her eyes brimming with an unfathomable anguish originating not in physical torment but in the profound intertwining of loss and love. As she enacted plunging the steel through heart and bone with tragic precision, Harry’s response mirrored her intensity—his visage a masterful portrayal of despair and utter helplessness.
Silently, the cameras rolled, capturing each subtle nuance: the taut muscles beneath Juliet's delicate makeup; Romeo's trembling fingertips reaching across unseen barriers; Colette's quivering shoulders as she drew breaths heavy with sorrow. When she crumpled beside Harry once more, her descent seemed like a graceful surrender—a fragile leaf succumbing to its inevitable fall.
The seconds stretched endlessly until once again the director called out "Cut!" His voice broke through Colette’s final shuddering breaths and this time when he spoke there was no hiding his satisfaction. "Perfect," he said simply, nodding with fervor.
The applause that erupted was spontaneous and heartfelt, echoing around the cavernous studio like waves crashing against a shore. Crew members wiped away tears, caught in the emotional riptide of the scene they had just witnessed.
Harry and Colette, still entangled on the ground, finally allowed themselves a small smile—exhausted, relieved, and a little incredulous at the magic they had managed to recreate. As they stood up, their faces glistening with sweat and theatrical tears, they were enveloped in a series of eager hugs and congratulations from everyone around them.
The makeup artists hurried over with their kits ready to do touch-ups, but for a moment nobody touched Harry or Colette; it was as if their looks were sacred, perfectly capturing the essence of the poignant tragedy they had just embodied. The director approached them, clapping Harry on the back and kissing Colette on both cheeks.
"I couldn't have asked for more," he said, his voice thick with emotion. "You both brought Juliet and Romeo to life in a way I never could have envisioned when we first started this project."
Harry, catching his breath, nodded appreciatively. "It felt right," he admitted, looking down at his costume, stained with artificial blood that somehow felt all too real at that moment.
Colette brushed a tear from her cheek and laughed lightly. "I think I'm going to miss her," she confessed, referring to Juliet. "It's strange how a character can become a part of you."
As they made their way off the set, passing through the constructed archways and past the fabricated stone tombs, there was a collective sense of completion but also of loss; the world they had created was temporary, its dissolution inevitable now that the film was wrapped.
The wrap party later that evening was a lively affair held at a local venue adorned with replicas of props and costumes from the film. The mood was buoyant yet bittersweet as cast and crew mingled, sharing memories from months of hard work.
Colette found herself standing by a balcony overlooking the city lights, a glass of champagne in hand. Harry joined her soon after.
"It's going to be odd not seeing everyone tomorrow," he said, leaning against the railing beside her.
"Yeah," Colette agreed softly. "It's like saying goodbye to family."
They sipped their drinks in companionable silence for a moment before Harry spoke up again.
"What’s next for you?" he asked curiously.
Colette shrugged slightly. "A few scripts to read; maybe some time off. And you?"
"Same," Harry replied. "Though it'll be hard to top this experience."
They smiled at each other, sharing an unspoken acknowledgement of the journey they had shared. The night grew deeper around them as words gave way to shared glances and laughter from inside reached their ears—a soundtrack to endings and new beginnings alike.
“Why don’t we get out of here, go to my place for a while.” Harry said while looking over at Colette.
Colette glanced up at the stars twinkling above, considering his invitation. A gentle breeze ruffled her hair, bringing with it the distant sounds of celebration from inside. It felt like the perfect end to an intense and transformative day.
"Sounds like a plan," she replied with a smile that matched the lightness in her heart.
They excused themselves from the party, slipping away unnoticed among the throngs of well-wishers and fellow revelers. The city's streets were quiet as they walked side by side, their footsteps syncing in a comfortable rhythm.
Arriving at Harry's place, he unlocked the door and let them into his warmly lit apartment. Colette really examined the place. The space was tastefully decorated with various mementos from his travels and projects, each piece telling a story of its own. Colette wandered over to a shelf displaying several old cameras and script binders.
"This place has character," she commented, picking up a vintage camera and examining it closely.
"Thanks," Harry said as he went to fix them some drinks in the kitchen. "It's my little sanctuary away from all the chaos."
Returning with two glasses of wine, he joined her by a large window overlooking the cityscape. They talked for hours about everything—from their fears and dreams to trivial stories from set—each conversation thread drawing them closer, weaving a new layer into their friendship.
As dawn hinted at its arrival with a soft glow on the horizon, Harry poured them each another glass of wine. "To new beginnings?" he proposed, raising his glass slightly.
"To new beginnings," Colette echoed, clinking her glass against his. They sipped their wine in serene silence, watching as the city slowly came to life.
Harry's heart raced as he leaned in closer to Colette, his breath hot against her ear. "I have to do this," he whispered urgently, desperation lacing his words. Colette's eyes widened in surprise, but she nodded, giving him permission to continue. And with that, Harry pressed his lips hungrily against hers, pouring all of his pent-up desire and longing into the passionate kiss. Electricity crackled between them as their bodies molded together, fueling the intensity of their connection. In that moment, nothing else mattered but the taste of each other on their lips and the overwhelming need driving them both.
“I’ve been thinking about this since we filmed that scene.”
Colette's breath hitched at Harry’s admission. "That scene?" she inquired, her voice trembling with a heady cocktail of nerves and anticipation. He traced his thumb across the contour of her lips, nodding before reclaiming them with a renewed intensity that left no room for doubt.
"That damn scene," he murmured against the luscious curve of her mouth, his hot whispers making her shiver in response. His hands found their way to her waist, pulling her closer so she could feel every hard inch of him against the softness of her body.
Colette's heart pounded in her chest as Harry's thumb traced the contours of her lips, her eyes fluttering closed at the feeling. His hot whispers sent shivers down her spine, and she couldn't help but arch into him, seeking more contact.
"That scene," he murmured against her skin, his voice thick with desire, "made me want you even more." With that, he claimed her lips once again, his tongue diving deep into her mouth as his hands found their way up underneath her shirt. She moaned into the kiss, feeling his calloused fingertips brush against the underside of her breasts.
His touch sent electric shockwaves through her body, making every nerve ending tingle with anticipation. She whimpered softly against his mouth, clutching at his shoulders as he teased her nipples through her bra. "Harry," she gasped out between ragged breaths, her voice barely a whisper.
He pulled back slightly to look down at her flushed face. "Tell me you want this," he growled lowly, eyes dark and intense as they bore into hers. Colette swallowed hard before nodding frantically. "I do," she whispered back in a voice that shook with need.
Without further hesitation, Harry scooped Colette up into his strong arms and carried her over to the nearby bed. He set her down gently before kneeling down between her spread legs and gazing up at her with a hungry glint in his eyes. "You are so so fucking beautiful," he murmured approvingly as he ran his roughened hands up along the insides of her thighs until they reached their final destination: the lace-covered mound of between them.
Groaning lowly, Harry pressed his fingers against the damp material covering Colette's core and pushed them through the fabric to slide along her wet folds. She cried out softly as sensations she hadn't felt since that fateful day on set washed over her once again—sensations that only seemed to intensify now that they were alone together like this .
Harry's fingers slid deeper into Colette's wet folds, finding her swollen clit and circling it gently. She moaned loudly, arching her back as the sensations overwhelmed her. "You like that, don't you?" he growled, his voice thick with desire.
"Oh god yes," she whimpered, her eyes fluttering closed. "Please, Harry. I need you."
He pulled his fingers away from her core and stood up, pulling her with him. She stumbled to her feet, feeling unsteady from the intense pleasure he'd just given her. He backed her up against the wall, their bodies flush from chest to thighs. His hard cock pressed against her stomach, making her even wetter.
"You are so pretty, love.," he murmured again, his lips brushing against hers in a featherlight kiss. His hands roamed over her body, squeezing her ass cheeks and pulling them apart to reveal her tight little hole. "I want you to feel every inch of me inside you."
Colette shuddered at his words, imagining how good it would feel to be filled up by him. She reached down between them and took hold of his cock through his pants, stroking it slowly as she looked up at him with pleading eyes. "Please," she whispered again.
Harry groaned deeply and grabbed hold of her wrists, lifting them above her head and pinning them against the wall next to her head. His other hand slid down between their bodies once more, pushing aside the fabric of their clothes until he could position his cockhead at her entrance. He looked into her eyes for permission before thrusting forward powerfully into her tight heat.
She cried out in shock and pleasure as he filled her completely in one swift motion. He began to move inside her slowly at first, watching as she adjusted to his size. But soon enough he picked up speed, slamming into her over and over again with a roughness that made Colette's legs shake uncontrollably beneath him."Fuck yes!" she screamed breathlessly as he took control of their coupling completely."
She could feel every inch of him, stretching and filling her while also leaving her wanting more. His grip on her waist tightened as he picked up speed, slamming into her so hard that the bed shook beneath them.
"You like that?" he growled, his voice hoarse with lust.
"God yes!" she moaned back, arching her back to meet each of his thrusts. Her nails dug into his shoulders as she clung to him, unable to resist the overwhelming pleasure coursing through her body. He reached down between them and rubbed circles around her clit with his fingers, sending shudders of delight through her entire being.
"You're so fucking tight," he grunted, leaning down to capture one of her nipples in his mouth and sucking hard. The sensation sent electric shocks straight to her groin, making her even wetter for him. She cried out his name as he hit a particularly sensitive spot inside her, causing an explosive wave of pleasure that left her breathless.
Colette found herself begging for release as he continued to thrust into her unmercifully. "Please... I need you to cum with me!" She could feel herself getting closer and closer to the brink but didn't want it without him by her side. In response, he picked up the pace even more, driving deeper than ever before as they both neared their climaxes together.
Their bodies moved in a frantic rhythm, the sound of their heavy breathing and the soft thuds of flesh meeting flesh filling the room. Colette felt the coil of tension winding tighter and tighter within her, her entire being focused on the overwhelming sensations Harry was eliciting from her.
Just as she thought she could take no more, Harry’s movements became even more purposeful, his strokes deepening, each pushing her further towards that edge. His mouth left her nipple with a wet pop, traveling up her neck, leaving a trail of kisses until he reached her ear. His hot breath against her ear sent another shiver down her spine as he whispered, "Let go for me, love. I’ve got you."
And with those words, Colette felt the dam break. A powerful orgasm washed over her, waves of pleasure pulsating through her as she cried out his name, her body trembling uncontrollably. Harry followed soon after, his own climax overtaking him with a groan as he buried his face in her neck, his body shuddering against hers.
As they both regained their breath, Harry slowly pulled back to look at Colette, his eyes soft now with a tender glow. Gently, he pressed a kiss to her forehead before easing out of her and helping her lay down on the bed. He lay beside her, pulling her into his arms and wrapping her up in his warmth.
They lay there in silence for a moment, neither needing words to express what had just transpired between them. Finally, Colette turned to look at him, a shy smile playing on her lips. “That was…” she started but seemed lost for words.
“Everything,” Harry finished for her, smiling back. He tucked a loose strand of hair behind her ear gently. “You were everything, my Juliet.”
Colette snuggled closer into his embrace, feeling an unfamiliar sense of peace wash over her. What had started as an undeniable attraction had blossomed into something far deeper in these moments alone together. They both knew that what was happening between them wasn’t just fleeting passion; it was something that might just redefine their understanding of connection and desire.
As the night deepened, outside the confines of their intimate world, the city's sounds blended into a distant hum, almost like a lullaby meant to soothe them in their post-climactic serenity. Harry lay there, feeling the gentle rise and fall of Colette's breathing against him, his thoughts meandering through the events that had led to this moment.
After what felt like an eternity bathed in silence and warmth, Colette stirred slightly, breaking the magical spell that had enveloped them. She lifted her head to meet his gaze, her eyes reflecting a mix of wonder and a hint of vulnerability. "Harry," she whispered, her voice barely audible over the quietude. "What does this mean for us? For tomorrow?"
Harry’s heart tightened at her words. Tomorrow. With their lives so deeply entrenched in public scrutiny and their careers always on the line, the weight of reality began to dawn on him. Yet looking into Colette's hopeful eyes, all he wanted was to delay those worries, to live in this bubble for as long as they could.
He brushed his lips against her forehead softly, choosing his words with care. "Let's not think about tomorrow yet," he murmured softly. "Tonight, it’s just you and me. No labels, no expectations. Just... us."
Colette nodded slowly, nestling back into his chest. "Just us," she echoed, allowing herself to be enveloped by the warmth of his promise.
They stayed like that for a while longer until sleep began to claim them, their bodies entwined in a quiet promise of the now with thoughts of tomorrow held at bay. 
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Who likes mid-century modern, all original, and orange, orange, orange? This beautiful 1965 MCM in Palm Springs, California has it. 4bds, 5ba, $1.850M.
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Take a step back in time when white & gray were not a thing. And, guess what? It comes with the furnishings! I see lots of orange, but the description says that the late owner's favorite color was red.
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Perfectly preserved time capsule. Look at those giant candelabras- they could be yours. Notice the bulbs in the ceiling beams.
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When you say, "I'll be at the corner bar," you mean you'll be in the living room. Love the fabric on the chairs. Pink & orange are naturals together.
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Zoinks! Ornate gold dining table and high-backed crushed velvet chairs. The laminate faux marble on the wall was popular then, too.
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Oh, wow, totally original kitchen right down to the appliances and laminate. They sure did love laminate back then. And, how about a ceiling of light?
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The fridge is new, but so what, it's off to the side. Look at the niche, place for desk, and the vintage intercom/radio system.
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Who wouldn't want an everyday dining room that has a purple ceiling and plush crushed velvet swivel chairs?
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This home is so vibrant. It includes a fancy tea cart that looks like Ben Hur's chariot, and the funkiest lamp I've ever seen.
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In the primary bedroom, I need the carpet, bed and chair. I always loved canopy beds, but this one is regal and funky at the same time.
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What a vanity, and of course, it's not an MCM if it doesn't have a sunken tub made of mosaic tiles.
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There were no cutting of corners in the secondary bedrooms, either. That canopy must be attached to the ceiling.
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Vanity table right in the bedroom. That's what I need.
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Interesting bath. There must be storage behind those doors.
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Even the smallest bedroom has a canopy bed. Notice the pink Aladdin's lamp on the night stand. Details!
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In any true MCM home, there has to be something in Harvest Gold, the most popular color choice.
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Cozy basement family room. So comfy looking.
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Plus a powder room. Note the door on the left.
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Orange cabinetry in the laundry room.
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Beautiful patio and pool outside.
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A vintage black & white photo proves that it hasn't changed at all.
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The .25 acre lot is set against a mountain backdrop.
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https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1240-S-Manzanita-Ave-Palm-Springs-CA-92264/18027905_zpid/
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dollsahoy · 1 year
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I've had this illuminated constellation globe since the late 1990s (it's still available!) and I just decided to see if one of the 60W-equivalent candelabra base fake Edison LED bulbs we have would fit, and it does, and wow does it look better than it did with the original stubby 25W incandescent bulb.
The LED base is longer than the incandescent, so I put some electrical tape over the part that would have been exposed above the socket, even though there's no way anyone is going to accidentally touch anything inside this globe.
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I am happy with this change, and it continues my accidental recreation of the way my bedroom lighting looked during the phase when I had multi-color fairy lights up year-round in the late 1980s
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ktzangpostudios · 1 year
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La Belle Époque - Fleurs de Lilas
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La Belle Époque - Fleurs de Lilas
(The Beautiful Era - Lilac Blossoms)
As we approach Spring, I am daydreaming of flower gardens, sweet smells on the air and the calls of the birds in the trees. My heart is full of romance and new beginnings. I chose this beautiful Violet/Purple/Lavender streaky glass because it reminds me of Lilacs and an early Spring. I offer you my flower garden of light; lilac blossoms.
This Antique Bronze Metal Stained Glass Lantern features a bronze finish with cut-out details, Violet/Purple/Lavender streaky glass in these stained glass panels with three frosted 1.5” x 2.5” diamond beveled glass accent, a solid piece of Violet/Purple/Lavender streaky glass on the back and a hinged door on the front. Illuminated with an led bulb in a candelabra base socket using 5W and producing a 300 lumen beautiful soft glow. The overall dimensions of the lamp are - Length: 4 3/8" Width: 4 3/8" Height: 10 1/2" .
*Currently on hold for an event *
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karatekels · 8 months
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Heirloom - Chapter 3
I'm having so much fun with this story! I'm still anticipating only one more chapter, and then an epilogue, but I definitely want to build out a Valek-verse at some point so I hope you all enjoy what I've got so far!
[No trigger warnings for this chapter!]
Previous Parts:
Chapter 1 | Chapter 2
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Reader’s POV:
Valek had returned to the tower to speak with you late in the afternoon the next day, though you had awoken late in the morning (having fallen asleep just before dawn) to a large bowl of fruit on the vanity. You had initially been hesitant to eat at first, before again reminding yourself that no one here needed to poison you if they wanted you dead.
The knock at the door startles you, before your brain becomes fuzzy and you feel yourself moving on autopilot, covering the windows by suspending the blankets from the heavy iron curtain rods, keeping them pinned in place by the vanity and one of the armchairs. The castle’s interior had clearly been renovated to be somewhat modernized; you had been grateful for the luxuries of the contemporary bathroom in particular. You try not to dwell on what may have happened to the building’s residents.
Looking around as best you can in the darkness, you don’t see any pinpricks of light, and the sense of urgency forced on you by the mesmerization fades away.
“Come in?” you say hesitantly, unsure if you were meant to.
The door opens, and in the time it takes to swing shut again two candelabras are fully lit and placed on either side of the room, bathing it in a soft orange glow. Valek sits in the armchair you had pushed back against the window, lounging in it like a royal would upon their throne. You stand awkwardly in the middle of the room, unsure of what to do or say.
“I think there is a light switch in here,” you offer weakly. The shadows cast by the candlelight make the dark parts of him seem to disappear at times, and it unnerves you.
“I prefer candlelight. It has been over a hundred years since electricity became commonplace, but I still find the false sunlight to be rather unpleasant.”
Your lips twitch in amusement at his description of “false sunlight,” and you think of the daylight bulbs that some buildings used. Unlike the warmth of true sunlight, they always seemed to bright and clinical, and often gave you a headache.
“Fair enough,” you reply, shrugging nonchalantly. You’re still unsure of what to do with yourself, and Valek doesn’t seem inclined to speak. “Thank you for the fruit, by the way. It was very… considerate of you,” you say graciously. He inclines his head.
“Cassandra suggested that we find food for you. I often forget how often humans need to feed.”
“Well, er… thank her for me then, if you would,” you stammer, and again he merely looks at you in silence. Finally, after what feels like an eternity, Valek decides to inform you of the reason for his visit.
“I would like to ask you more about Jack Crow,” he tells you, his tone leaving no room for debate. “Why don’t you sit?”
You take a seat on the edge of the bed closest to him, crossing your legs underneath you. The mattress’s added height makes you a lot closer to eye-level with him.
“The way you speak about him, I assume that you’ve met my father?” you ask, hoping that you won’t get in trouble for the question.
“We have had several… encounters in recent years,” he replies vaguely, but you’re rather grateful for the lack of detail. You’re sure that whatever had happened between them had been violent and bloody.
“You’ve probably spent more time with him than I have,” you tell him, and again the twinge of abandonment that you felt whenever thinking of Jack Crow hits you, making you bite your tongue. “But I will do what I can.”
“When did you see him last?” he begins, starting with the easiest question, and you think back, trying to remember.
“I think it was around two years ago; it was right after I ‘graduated’ from Slayer training. He had come to Monteriggioni to recruit new members for his team, I think. I don’t know, I think he may have said five words to me while he was there.”
“And before that?”
“Probably five years ago; it was much of the same.”
“Why does your father not speak to you?” he asks, seeming frustrated.
“I wish I knew,” you remark bitterly, moving your legs to bring them up to your chest, arms wrapped around your knees. You truly think you would have been better off being on the streets as a teenager. “You’ve met him – did he seem like the paternal type to you?” you ask, raising your eyebrows at him with a bitter smile. Valek looks back at you with an unfathomable expression before moving on.
“And what of your mother?”
The topic makes you swallow thickly, and your hands clench into fists, your nails digging into the tender flesh of your palms.
“She died when I was a girl,” you inform him quietly, looking down at the floor. “If she were still alive, I don’t think I would be here, or know any of this.”
“You miss her.” It isn’t a question.
“Of course. She was my best friend.”
“And now?”
You look back up at him, tilting your head. “And now what?”
“Who has taken on that role in your life?”
You shrug. “No one, really. I spend most of my time taking care of the younger children who can’t start their training yet.”
Why was he so concerned with your personal life? Hadn’t you made it clear that you didn’t know anything of value? Unless…
“Oh,” you say with a frown. “Are you trying to figure out if there will be anyone wanting to avenge my death before you kill me?”
“No.”
“Because I’m pretty sure it won’t upset anyone in particular.”
“Miss Crow–”
“No more than any other Slayer being taken out by a vampire, anyway.”
“Y/N!” Valek hisses, snarling your name, and you fall silent, fear flowing through you at the sound. He takes a deep breath before continuing his interrogation.
“What aren’t you telling me?” he asks, frustrated.
“I don’t know what you mean,” you tell him honestly.
“Why would the Scholars of Monteriggioni take a child of impressive Slayer lineage and put her through the training only to not make use of her for the purposes she was raised for?”
“I don’t know. I’ve tried to figure that out myself. Maybe Jack thought that this would happen, that someone would take me to use me against him.”
“There must be more to it than that,” Valek muses, and you’re not sure how to answer, or if he even wants you to.
“If there is, I don’t know anything about it,” you mutter, mostly to yourself.
“Not yet,” Valek replies meaningfully, looking at you thoroughly, as if the answers could be found on your skin. “But we will find out. Until we do, you need not fear. We have no reason to kill you unless we are certain that you have nothing to offer.”
He rises from his chair, making for the door without another word.
“So what, I’m just stuck here?!” you exclaim, frustration and panic evident in your voice.
“I will have food brought to you regularly,” he tells you, as if that solved your problems.
“That’s not what I’m worried about!” you hiss, sounding almost like a vampire yourself. “I can’t just stay in here with nothing to do, I’ll go crazy!”
Valek pauses, turning back to look at you with an amused expression.
“I am sorry to hear the accommodations are not to your liking. Are you expecting some form of entertainment?” he asks, arching an eyebrow as he looks down at you like you were a child throwing a tantrum. You fold your arms across your chest, glaring at him.
“Did… do you know if the people that live… lived here had any books or anything?” you ask desperately. Maybe he thought you were being dramatic, but you did need to have something to occupy your time and your mind if you were going to be trapped in this room.
“Can I search the rest of the castle for some? I won’t do anything, I can’t make trouble, please…” you beg him, and you think you may see a glimmer of compassion in his pale eyes.
“I cannot allow you to leave this room, for your safety,” he emphasizes his reasoning, and you could almost be touched by the gesture, if this whole situation wasn’t his fault in the first place.
“I will see if anything suitable can be brought to you,” he says finally, leaving without a word, locking the door behind him.
Letting out a growl in your frustration, you immediately move to tug the blankets away from the windows, tossing them back on the bed. Scowling, you spend the remainder of the daylight hours sitting by the window, feeling like Rapunzel trapped in her ivory tower.
The next morning, an entire corner of the room is filled with piles of books, stacked as tall as you.
Two weeks later…
--- Valek’s POV ---
You were practically nocturnal these days, seeming to want to play catch up for your years without the night. It suited Valek perfectly well – he didn’t have to fear exposure to the sunlight to speak with you this way.
He visited your tower for hours at a time, every day, telling himself he was only looking for a reason to keep you here and alive, though it was never clear how these casual conversations were relevant to that pursuit. He would often bring gifts with him, items he gathered that you would enjoy based on your conversations with him. This week, you had mentioned the gardens of Monteriggioni as being one of the only things you missed about the place you’d been made to call home, and he had been bringing potted plants that were now gathered around the windows, soaking up the sun during the day. They were flourishing in the tower, and you had seemed more content with something to take care of.
Cassandra had taken a liking to you as well, treating you as a sort of surrogate child. Valek knew that in addition to the loss of her husband, she also mourned the inability to have children of her own, and having a living human to care for – even one older than herself, in the mortal sense – had brought out her maternal instincts. She would prepare meals for you in the evenings, when the others had left to feed, grateful for the opportunity to cook again and provide for someone, and would visit you often as well.
It wasn’t until the fifteenth day of your capture that Cassandra had come to him, alone in the dungeon of the castle to avoid the rays of the sun.
“What information are you hoping to find, Jan?” she asks him quietly, reclined on a chaise lounge across from him in one of the larger rooms they shared. He had been poring over old tomes as of late, searching for… something. Valek looks over at her, pale eyes narrowed, wanting her to just come out and speak her mind rather than taking this needlessly convoluted approach to the topic.
“Do you really think that there is anything special about her? That she has been confined to Monteriggioni for some crucial reason without her knowledge?”
“It would only make sense,” he says emphatically, closing one of the dusty volumes about the more deeply guarded secret rituals of the Catholic Church.
It truly made no sense to Valek to keep a perfectly capable, intelligent human hidden away for no reason. It was a waste of life, something that he did not appreciate after centuries of living as the undead.
“Would it? Or is that only what you want to believe, dearest?” Cassandra coos in her high soprano.
“What exactly are you suggesting, darling?” Valek retorts, his lip curling upwards as he hisses out the term of endearment.
“You care for Y/N.”
Valek raises an eyebrow.
“I am not the one who spends my nights preparing meals for her like a doting mother.”
“No, you spend your nights speaking with her, or else listening to her from beneath the tower during her waking hours,” she fires back with a smug smile. Valek closes the distance between them in an instant, tugging the small woman roughly by the hair to stand on the chaise, closer to his own eye-level.
“Peace, dear one,” she purrs, stroking his arm with a tiny hand in a calming gesture. “I care for her as well.”
“If we share the sentiment, then why mention it at all, Cassandra?” he demands, releasing her hair. She perches on the back of the chaise now, seeming to float in the air.
“We have not made a move on Monteriggioni in a fortnight, despite now knowing how to enter the city undetected,” she points out. “The others are growing restless.”
“The others will wait as instructed,” he snarls, and she holds her hands up as if in surrender.
“But what are we waiting for, Jan?” she presses, and he knows that she’s being the reasonable one but does not want to continue along this line of conversation.
“They will come for her,” he insists in reference to you. Even though you were apparently not bonded to the Slayers, to Jack, by the ties of familial love – a concept foreign and strangely disappointing to him, being devoid of family for so long himself – you were still a Slayer, and he knows that they will have been planning to rescue or avenge you since discovering your absence.
“They will come for her, and in doing so split their soldiers between us and Monteriggioni,” he explains to Cassandra. “It will be far easier to defeat them when their ranks are divided.”
“And what then?” Cassandra asks, forcing him to confront the part of this whole situation he had been struggling with the most.
“What will you do after all those she has known have been slaughtered, Jan?” she pushes. “Would you keep her alive through that only to kill her afterwards?”
No, he didn’t want you dead. He certainly didn’t want you aware of his role in murdering everyone within the walls of the city you have called home for half of your life. What other options did he have? He walks back over to the desk, looking at the stacks of books and wishing the one with the answer would jump out at him.
“We could Turn her,” she suggests, and a heavy tome jets across the room at her, thrown by Valek’s own hand before he could blink. She barely catches it before it strikes her in the chest, her dainty fingers leaving indents in the vellum.
“No,” he snarls. You would not be subjected to a life of eternal night, of being frozen in time. Not if he could help it. Despite your isolation and loneliness, you were a being that radiated warmth and life, that helped all living things around you thrive. He had watched you feed crumbs you had saved from your meals to birds that flew past your windows the other day, for Christ’s sake! The life of a vampire would not suit you.
“I like having her around,” Cassandra tells him plainly, not beating around the bush. “She could be an excellent scholar, she could help us find other relics…”
All valid points, it was true. But Valek knows that they aren’t his reasons for wanting to keep you with them.
“You don’t need to hide the truth from me, Jan,” she murmurs, looking up at him knowingly from under her eyelashes. “I know love when I see it.”
He rises up to his full height, glaring down at Cassandra. They were not having this conversation.
“Hold your tongue, Cassandra,” he snarls, and the woman bows her head in deference to him, though Valek knows she will not be dissuaded from her opinions, especially given the fact that she was, in all likelihood, right.
“Y/N is not a familiar, she’s a person. And she has lived enough of her life under the thumb of others. I will not condemn her to our fate.”
“Would you just release her into the world then, with nothing and no one? She has no experience moving through the human world on her own!”
“No,” he responds, sounding almost petulant, like a child.
“Then what’s it going to be, Jan? She’s not a Slayer at heart, she can’t survive on her own in the real world, and you refuse to Turn her. What remains but to kill her?”
“I don’t know!” he growls, his voice a far departure from its usual smooth baritone.
Cassandra falls silent, contemplating the situation you were in, and Valek does much of the same.
“You could ask her,” she offers after a few minutes of deliberation. “Ask her what she wants, I mean. You said yourself that Y/N hasn’t had the opportunity to be an independent person, in charge of her own life.”
“You think that I should ask what she would like to do once we have slaughtered everyone she has ever known?” Valek asks, raising an eyebrow.
“No, though I imagine she has already come to that conclusion herself. She is clever, and has likely determined why we have remained so close to their city,” Cassandra says, her tone almost proud as she compliments you. She had become nearly as fond of you as Valek himself over the past couple of weeks.
Nearly.
“We could ask her hypothetically, though she may see through the ruse. Either way, you’d have your answer.”
Valek considers the option. It did seem like the fairest alternative for you.
“Very well, but it can wait until after I’ve confirmed that she does not have some larger role to play for the Church. We cannot let a potential threat–”
His words die out in his throat when a bone-chilling sound echoes through the castle.
“VALEK!” your scream is so loud and piercing that it manages to reach him through the layers of stonework between you.
He and Cassandra move so fast that the other vampires in the castle could hardly see them running past as they sprint up the stairs to your tower, their feet barely touching the stone. He makes to open the door, but your voice rings out again.
“No, don’t come in! I haven’t covered the windows!” you exclaim, and he immediately lets go of the doorknob as though it burned him.
“Y/N, what is it? What’s going on?” Cassandra demands, her voice wild in panic.
“The Slayers, they’re coming! I can see their trucks from my window!” you cry out, and through the battle lust that immediately starts to thrum through him, Valek also notes with no small degree of pleasure that you sound scared rather than relieved. Perhaps the affection he and Cassandra had come to have for you was at least somewhat reciprocated, after all.
But there would be time to dwell on that later.
“Cassandra, go inform the others that we will soon be under attack. Lock down the castle, make use of all of the iron doors and shutters; we cannot allow them to get inside or expose us to the sunlight. Do everything you can to conceal the Berziers Cross.”
The small woman briefly places a hand against the wood of your door, as though hoping she could transfer comfort to you, before nodding and disappearing down the steps.
“Y/N, I will leave the door unlocked. Come downstairs and we will find somewhere to keep you.” He flits down the steps after giving you the instructions, knowing that you would obey. Sure enough, you come running down the spiral stairs a moment later, nearly tripping in your haste. He steadies you, his arms reaching out to catch you without him even considering it, and you look up at him with a concerned expression.
“Keep me where? What are you going to do?”
“We only need to hold out until nightfall; after that, we can get you somewhere more secure before staging our counterattacks.”
“Counterattacks?!” you repeat incredulously, emphasizing the plural. Your eyes flit from side to side as you process the information, trying to put the pieces together. He sees it on your face the moment you register what his plans were; he had known that you were clever, after all.
“You’re going to attack Monteriggioni?!” you his at him, your ire and horror bothering him more than they should. “Valek, you can’t! Most of the people there aren’t active Slayers! What about the children?”
You had clearly not lived through the brutalities of war, your skin turning pale as you come to the correct conclusion.
“Valek, no…” you whisper in a horrified, broken voice. “Please, you can’t do this! They didn’t do anything wrong!”
Yet, Valek thinks, though he does not speak.
“Cassandra!” you scream, and the woman appears by your side at an instant, seeming concerned. “You can’t, you can’t kill all those children, it’s not their fault! They had no choice!” you sob, pleading with the woman. Valek has to give you credit; you are certainly adept at using the information gleaned from others against them, targeting Cassandra’s longing for motherhood. Sure enough, the shorter woman hesitates, her eyes flicking from you to Valek.
“Please, leave the city alone,” you beg, your eyes staring into his, and he finds himself compelled by the emotions stirring within them. “Leave the children alone. You’re not a monster, Valek, I know you aren’t.”
He loses himself once more in your eyes, trying to decide on the right course of action. Finally, he comes to a conclusion that best serves his interests.
“We will not lay siege to the city,” he begins, and your eyes light up in response.
“…provided that you accompany me to parlay with your father. It would appear that you are more valuable to him than you thought.”
He could have mesmerized you to achieve the same result, he knows that, but it was important that you be clear-headed for the conversation so that he could determine where your loyalties lay. It also helped that he knew you would agree to any terms he set if it meant sparing the lives of the children.
“Anything, Valek,” you promise him immediately, looking up at him with gratitude and relief. “Just please don’t hurt the children.”
“Very well. Cassandra, go and tell the others that we will be keeping our forces united and focused on protecting the castle.”
The woman flits away again, and Valek looks down to you, offering you his hand. You take it without hesitation, and he pulls you close, his other arm curled around your body, holding you to him. He feels your heartbeat rapidly increase at the sudden movement, or the proximity to him; he’s not sure which.
“And you are going to have to trust me, little one,” he croons, and you lean further into him despite yourself, the magnetism his species had on your kind taking hold. The dazed longing that fills your eyes is due to nothing more than the chemistry and biology of predator and prey, but he cannot deny that he enjoys the sight of you gazing at him in such a way.
“You will make an effective bargaining chip after all.”
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Chapter 4 | Chapter 5 | Epilogue
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operafantomet · 1 year
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I thought the Westend production closed a few years ago. When did it start again? (Sorry I've been out of the Poto loop for quite some time and off of tumblr 😅)
The original West End production closed for good in March 2020. Covid was the only stopping it...
A revival was however launched in August 2021. This production feature half the size of the orchestra (from 27 to 14 or thereabout), it does no longer have the Golden Angel in the proscenium, the candelabras and travelator has been simplified, and there's some tweaks in both design, staging and lyrics. I consider it a revival due to these quite visible and audible changes, but others consider it the same. Up to your own interpretation. The producers shift between celebrating its 30-something history and calling it brand new, so they seem just as confused heh! The biggest visual changes is, apart from the candelabras and candles in the First Lair scene:
Circular chandelier without fringed bulbs, and a proscenium without the Golden Angel:
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Pegasus sculpture in the Rooftop/Phantom's curse, replacing the Golden Angel curse:
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Silvery Mirror Bride:
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Also many wig and costume changes, but not something I think the general audience would ever notice.
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Another September has come and gone, and for the 3rd year in a row I’ve participated in the Swordtember drawing prompt! 30 days, 30 pixel art swords. This year I upgraded programs from the Piskel app I was using previously, and (through some trial and error) compiled an Aseprite copy, less out of feeling feature-limited and more out of wanting to learn the more powerful program. And it did come with a couple of tools that I was able to put to good use!
All in all, I’m once again very proud of my offerings, and I have a lot of fun being an artist for one month of the year. Hopefully you enjoy them too!
Sword descriptions and blurbs for each, as always, under the cut.
Crystal: An amethyst crystal blade with a hilt based on an open geode. It was tricky to get it to read with the proper depth and translucency, since I was just getting back into the swing of it and also getting used to a new program.
Candle: A hilt in the style of a bronze candelabra, with a tall, drippy, lit candle for a blade, and two smaller candles in the candelabra arms forming the crosstree. I really ended up liking the texture of the dripping candle.
Gears: A sleek, filigreed blade with two spiked gearwheels mounted at the base of the blade. The design language of this one borrowed pretty heavily from the artifice design of the Kaladesh world in MtG.
Elemental: A blade with air gusts wrapping around the edge, flame and water curling around the crossguard arms, and an earthy chunk for a pommel. Each section of the blade has the corresponding symbol for its element, and the center bears the sigil for quintessence or aether. Hey did you guys know, I really love alchemical symbols.
Edible: A long, rectangular blade shaped like a partly-eaten chocolate bar, with a banana and whipped cream (and a cherry on top) crossguard, and a waffle cone forming the grip. I was thinking about that one food-based level in Super Mario Galaxy when I made this one.
Liquid: A blade shaped like a decorative fountain, with the shape of the blade formed by water cascading from the spout at the tip to the basin at the hilt. Really proud of both the detail work on the fountain and also the low opacity making the whole blade look like water flowing over the fountain body.
Mirror: Two short swords, the exact same shape, one with a silver and gold coloring, one with a red and dark blue coloring. They are separated by a mirror splitting the canvas horizontally in two. The mirror reflects each blade as the tip of the blade seems to bury itself in the mirror.
Veined: A long, craggy sword meant to evoke stone, with veins of ore laced through it. A pickaxe forms the hilt. The (very silly) original concept for this sword was to have a blade shaped like a muscley arm flexing, mounted on a dumbbell hilt. I couldn’t get that to look good, so I’m happy with this alternative.
Floral: A helix-shaped blade made of two twisting intertwining vines, protruding from a large pink plant bulb. Another twisting, thick vine forms the grip, with a mouthlike root clamp as a pommel. This sword is pretty heavily based on the Terraria boss Plantera. (As a side note I feel like this theme is the most common recurring prompt... I must have done like 5 plant/flower-based swords in all these challenges.)
Snake: A winding blade made to look like a diamondback rattlesnake. The triangular head forms the guard, with the snake’s forked tongue wrapping around the grip. I like to represent local flora/fauna when I can, so the choice of the western diamondback felt like a good way to do that.
Neon: A tall blade meant to evoke the classic vertical neon sign seen outside an establishment in the city. The text reads, “Joe’s.” I also made an animated version of this for the neon flicker effect, not pictured here. Sadly I didn’t get to do as many animated blades as I did last year, so that’s something I want to improve.
Woven: A blade resembling a hanging tapestry, with a wooden frame at the top and for the hilt. The tapestry’s design is the Master Sword, fairies surrounding it, and the Silent Princess flower below it. I will always find an excuse to put my favorite sword into these challenges, even if it takes a little swordception to do.
Hidden: A black sword cane with the head carved in the shape of a goat. The head is partly lifted, revealing a couple of inches of the blade inside. The symbol for Capricorn is in the base of the cane. This is one of a series of zodiac weapons I made in high school- I still like to revisit some of those old designs, since I drew a *lot* of swords in high school and college.
Witch: A small blade designed after the movie Kiki’s Delivery Service. The body of the blade is a broomstick, the crosspiece is Kiki’s bow, and the center has a small image of Kiki and Jiji designed after the sign in the movie. Kiki’s radio is wrapped around the blade close to the hilt. I just had fun with this one.
Dual-Purpose: A short sword with the USB trident symbol on the blade, and a short wire and USB dongle extending from the hilt. Also a very silly sword. Possible suggested applications of the USB functionality include uploading combat data, installing cybersecurity, or loading up with battle tunes.
Shell: A tall, spiraling blade designed after an auger seashell.
Smoke: A wispy, undefined blade with the body made up of roughly sword-shaped smoke. The smoke seems to emit from a glass phial with more smoke inside, that forms the hilt. One cool new tool I got familiar with in Aseprite was the blur and diffusion tools.
Glass: A long blade composed of several panels of various brightly colored stained glass, not forming an image but more a geometric pattern. Technically a rework of an idea from a previous sword, but this blade definitely feels like its own take on the stained glass idea. I’m quite proud of the pommel.
Family Heirloom: A broad blade with a family tree design winding its way towards the carved wood hilt. Various portraits are attached to the tree, two portraits are on either end of the crosstree arms, and a mirror forms the centerpiece. Meant to be a weapon passed down generations, the tree design grows to add the portrait of each successive wielder. The mirror symbolizes the current bearer.
Leaf: A longsword surrounded by autumn leaves. A swirl of seasonal energy emanates from a gem in the crosspiece and wraps around the blade. The grip is made of twisting wooden roots. This sword is actually based on the “Forest” blade from last year’s Swordtember, given an overhaul and an autumn flair.
Lantern: A hollow stone lantern form the hilt. Inside is a ghostly will-o-wisp, whose ghostly green energy emits from both sides of the lantern to form a two-pronged blade.
Horn: A rapier with the spiral pattern of a unicorn horn forming the blade, and a small unicorn head figure forming the hilt.
Chain: A blade made of red and blue intertwining in a helix, the space between linked with colored pairs. A purple gem sits in the center of the hilt, and the base of the grip is the helix beginning to separate. This is a rework of a blade themed after the pokemon Deoxys, borrowing its coloration and its connection to DNA chains.
Coral: A pitted, encrusted blade covered in marks and accretions. Several bright orange bunches of tube coral extrude from the blade. The idea with this one was a sword left underwater to be overgrown by coral, algae, and other sea life.
Spider: A menacing blade with a hooked tip and eight sawteeth down the inner edge. Two spider decals decorate the blade, and the crosspiece is shaped like a web. The pommel has the black widow hourglass on it. This is also from the collection of zodiac blades, which I'm remembering now was part of a friend's fan TWEWY setting which used the western zodiac. Been a while since I thought about it...
Wooden: A worked wooden blade with green ornamentations on the blade, and a crosspiece carved in the shape of antlers. The goal with this one was to make a wooden sword that wasn't simple or basic. I took a few cues from the Forest Dweller weapon set in BotW.
Pattern: A brightly colored blade resembling moth wings. Several eyespot patterns are found on the body of the sword. A small set of moth antennae extend from the pommel.
Asymmetric: An ancient Egyptian khopesh, a curved sword in the shape of a crescent. This one goes out to some of the truly wild sword designs found in history.
Crown: A recreation of the Kingdom Key D, King Mickey's keyblade from Kingdom Hearts. Did it blow anyone else's young mind when they noticed that the kingdom key's teeth have the shape of a crown, and Sora's crown pendant fits exactly? That's such a cool detail to me.
Skull: A blade that protrudes from the mouth of a skull of some large draconic creature. I liked working on the shape of the skull on this one. I also found this being the final prompt an appropriate way to transition towards the month of spooks. (A friend told me this could be a straight up Yugioh card, so that's cool.)
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vintage-tech · 1 year
Video
Flame light bulbs:
LED purple fire candelabra [Amazon, $12]
Flicker flame [Big Lots, $2]
1970s Balafire carbon filament bulb [rummage sale, $3]
LED yellow fire standard [Walmart, $5]
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sigynpenniman · 1 year
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25. Think of one of the people you follow. Why did you follow them originally? Did the reason change overtime?
26. What accent do you have now and What accent would you have if you got to choose one?
27. what's your favorite color of nightlight?
28. Quick! come up with a name for a music album!
29. Strangest thing you ever looked up a tutorial on?
30. What's something you've known existed for a long time, but only gained a interest in recently?
25. OOF idk…I think most people I follow I either follow because we share a fandom or because we’re friends. I guess the ones that changed are the people who i initially followed for a fandom, probably ds9, and who are now in a different fandom but I’m still following them because we’re friends/I like them
26. I sound like Ellie May Clampett but toned down a little. I love Scottish accents but I don’t think one would sound good on me. I like the way I sound, actually. I can’t really imagine myself differently you know?
27. DARKNESS. Pitch black darkness. If I have to choose, a nice warm white. Those little dollar tree ones with the candelabra bulbs…that’s the good shit.
28. The IT office always said we were going to release a metal album called “Unholy meat obelisk; electric flesh of doom” or something like that. Other than that…I think if I were ever to really honestly try to make music, it would probably be some kind of answer to Passion Pit, so I think I would just call it “For Michael.”
29. Probably something at work. How to set the IP address on a gas chromatigraph maybe?
30. 🎶My Chemical Romance🎶
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brilapse · 2 years
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Put the tree up last night 🌲🧝🏻‍♀️⛪️❄️☃️🛷🎁🎅🏻🧑🏻‍🎄🎄
Gotta fluff her out a bit on the top and then I ordered a set of jewel tone bulbs (like ruby, emerald, sapphire, amber, amethyst, etc), a new star, a big rectangle 40 oz Christmas candle and cute little stocking hooks for the fireplace mantle w/ my bed bath and beyond wallet (I remembered I had like $50 in reward points- love when that happens lol) last night and they’ll be ready for pick up today, so I’ll finish decorating it tonight ❤️
I also decided to go with coloured lights & decorations on the tree this year as I think it goes well with my living room vibes- more “vintage”
I’m also gonna break out the Christmas lights for the front of the house today and break out the miscellaneous decorations for the kitchen and rest of the living room. Add my Christmas couch pillows & runners for the coffee table and kitchen table too & put the candelabras in the window 🥰
I freaking LOVE Christmas decorations lol
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cantankerouscatfish · 2 years
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Allen has been going out into the hallway the past few nights and wailing and crying, so sad and lost in the dark. oh. the nightlight blew out. so I put a different light there (a color LED since I have no more candelabra bulbs rn) and he's been quiet so far.
is. is the cat afraid of the dark.
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breneon-pantry-1976 · 21 days
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Whether casting light down over the kitchen sink or stylishly brightening the entryway, pendant lights are hardworking luminaries in any abode. The perfect pick for offering a touch of rustic charm to your home, this luminary features a distinctive cage design with six 60 W candelabra-style lights inside (bulbs not included). #Decoratingstyles
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mydesignangek · 1 month
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Romantic Dining Table Lighting Solutions
Dining together is more than just sharing a meal; it's an opportunity to connect, unwind, and create lasting memories. And when it comes to setting the mood for a romantic dinner, lighting plays a crucial role. Whether you're planning a cozy date night at home or a special anniversary celebration, the right lighting can elevate the experience from ordinary to extraordinary. Here are some romantic dining table lighting solutions to help you set the scene for an unforgettable evening.
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1. Candlelit Elegance:
There's a reason why candlelight is a classic choice for romantic dinners. The soft, flickering glow creates an intimate ambiance that instantly sets the mood for romance. Arrange a cluster of pillar candles in varying heights as a centerpiece on your dining table for a dramatic effect. Alternatively, place tealights in decorative holders or floating candles in glass bowls filled with water for a touch of elegance. Opt for unscented candles to avoid overpowering the aroma of your meal.
2. Dimmable Pendant Lights:
Pendant lights offer a stylish and versatile option for illuminating your dining table. Choose fixtures with dimmable bulbs or install a dimmer switch to adjust the brightness according to your desired ambiance. Opt for pendant lights with frosted or tinted glass shades to diffuse the light and create a soft, romantic glow. Position the lights directly above the table to ensure even illumination and to highlight your culinary creations.
3. Edison Bulb Chandeliers:
For a vintage-inspired look with a modern twist, consider Edison bulb chandeliers for your dining space. These filament-style bulbs emit a warm, inviting glow that adds a touch of old-world charm to any room. Choose a chandelier with an adjustable height to suit the scale of your dining area and adjust the ambiance accordingly. Pair the chandelier with a dimmer switch for added versatility, allowing you to create the perfect mood for your romantic dinner.
4. Fairy Lights and Twinkling Stars:
Create a magical atmosphere with the enchanting glow of fairy lights or twinkling string lights. Drape them across the ceiling or around the perimeter of the dining area to mimic the starry night sky. Incorporate sheer curtains or drapes to diffuse the light and create a soft, ethereal ambiance. For an extra touch of romance, weave fresh flowers or greenery into the light strands to add texture and color to your dining space.
5. LED Candelabras:
For a modern take on traditional candlelight, consider LED candelabras for your dining table. These battery-operated fixtures offer the timeless elegance of candlelight without the worry of dripping wax or open flames. Choose candelabras with adjustable settings to control the brightness and flicker effect, allowing you to customize the ambiance to suit your romantic dinner. Arrange them in the center of the table or along the length of a runner for a sophisticated centerpiece.
6. Star Projectors:
Transport your dining experience to a romantic outdoor setting with a star projector. These innovative devices project a mesmerizing array of stars and constellations onto the ceiling, creating a magical backdrop for your romantic dinner. Pair the star projector with ambient lighting such as candles or dimmable pendant lights to enhance the romantic atmosphere. Adjust the projector's settings to change the color and intensity of the stars, allowing you to create a truly personalized dining experience.
Conclusion:
When it comes to romantic dining, the right lighting can make all the difference. Whether you prefer the classic allure of candlelight or the modern elegance of LED fixtures, there are plenty of options to suit every style and setting. By incorporating these romantic dining table lighting solutions into your next dinner date, you can create an enchanting atmosphere that sets the stage for an unforgettable evening of romance and connection. So dim the lights, light the candles, and let the magic begin. Cheers to love, laughter, and happily ever after! Visit our online store to explore our wide selection of dining table lights, and dining table lamps and find the perfect fit for your space.
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ktzangpostudios · 10 months
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La Belle Époque: Baiser d'une Rose
(The Beautiful Era: Kiss from a Rose)
Fitting I finished it today, on my anniversary with Rosemary; who goes by Rosie but I’ve always called Rose. Of course I make every piece for her, in a way. They’re my labors of love and she is my beloved.
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This Antique Bronze Metal Stained Glass Lantern features a bronze finish with cut-out details, Pink Streaky Opal Glass and one Purple Streaky Stipple glass Mackintosh Roses surrounded in Purple rough-rolled glass with a hinged door on the front accented with a heart charm. Illuminated with a vintage
style led bulb in a candelabra base socket using 5W and producing a 300 lumen beautiful soft glow.
Book: 11 7/8 x 8 1/4 x 2 7/8, Lantern: 4 1/2 x 4 1/2 x 10 1/2, Overall: 11 7/8 x 8 1/4 x 13 1/2
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