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#faniel
cyclonestudios-alt · 1 month
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The last three I only found out about a few days ago sooooo...
Reblogs would be greatly appreciated!!
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brighter-arda · 2 years
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Melanesian Descendants of Indis
Day 1 Tolkien of Colour Week: Family, Connection to Lands, Connection to Waters
Information about who and what the photos are is in the image description below, thank you to @the-quiet-fire-of-defiance for helping with it
Part 1 of toi's indigenous tolkien series
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[Image description: four graphics with eight images each.
Graphic 1 is mostly in shades of gold, yellow and brown. The images are
1: a Ni-Vanuatu woman looking to one side, smiling. She has mid-brown skin and curly blonde hair with dark roots. Text says "Indis". 2: a golden mask from Maluku 3: a golden cowrie shell necklace from the Solomon Islands 4: Bosra Frazier, a West Papuan woman. She has light brown skin and curly hair that fades from dark to blonde. Text says "Findis". 5: a smiling Ni-Vanuatu woman with dark skin and coily black hair. She wears white, red and green facepaint. Text says "Lalwen". 6: a cropped image of a Kanak wood carving 7: a tinted image of Fijian masi (patterned cloth made from bark) 8: Marylou Mahe, a Kanak woman with brown skin and gold-brown hair. She wears a garland of leaves and flowers on her head. Text says "Faniel".
Graphic 2 is mostly in shades of green and brown. The images are;
1: a Sepik Papuan man with dark skin and black hair. He wears shell necklaces around his neck, orange paint on his face, and a headdress with black cassowary feathers. Text says "Fingolfin" 2: a Roro (Papua New Guinea tribe) headdress 3: Maluku wood carving 4: a Papuan woman with dark skin and a black afro. She is smiling at the camera and has a circlet of grasses on her head. Text says "Anaire" 5: a Solomon Islander man with dark skin and curly hair. His hair is brown at the roots but quickly becomes blonde. Text reads "Finarfin". 6: another example of Fijian masi (patterned cloth made from bark) 7: the inside of a Fijian chief's vale (house). It is decorated with many patterned cloths. 8: A Ni-Vanuatu woman with brown skin and light hair. Text says "Earwen".
Graphic 3 is mostly black. The images are
1: a Papuan boy smiling widely. He has dark skin, coily dark hair and a yellow headdress made of grasses. Text says "Fingon" 2: a small hut on stilts 3: a Warup drum from the Torres Strait islands. It is carved from wood and painted dark. 4: a serious-looking Korafe Papuan boy. He has yellow-orange ceremonial facepaint, many necklaces of stones and shells, and a feathered headdress. Text says "Turgon" 5: a young Sepik Papuan girl with dark skin, black hair and white face paint. She is holding a very small baby crocodile and grinning at the camera. Text says "Aredhel" 6: a Maluku wooden carving of a boat with two figures 7: a photo from Vanuatu of a large tree covered in vines and with a hut perched up in the branches. A boy stands in front of the entrance.  8: a young Papuan boy with dark skin and black hair. He has stripes of white paint on his face, layered decorative necklaces, and a hat lined with what looks like fur. Text says "Argon".
Graphic 4 is mostly in shades of blue. The images are:
1: a Solomon Islander boy in a canoe on strikingly blue water. He is looking up with a smile. Texts says "Finrod". 2: light streaming down through a large hole in a cave ceiling. The beam highlights a figure standing on a rock underneath, surrounded by shallow blue water. 3: a tinted blue version of this art by Matilda Nona who is from Badu Island in the Torres Strait. There are six turtles of various sizes swimming in spirals of water. 4: a Solomon Islander boy holding part of a coconut. He has dark skin and curly hair which is darker at the roots and lighter at the ends. Text reads "Angrod" 5: a grinning Solomon Islander boy. He has dark brown skin and wavy blond hair. Text reads "Aegnor" 6: five Fijian camukau (traditional boats) in shallow water. 7: a photo of the Marovo lagoon from above, showing small green islands in a vivid blue sea. 8: a Solomon Islander girl smiling. She has dark brown skin, wavy blonde hair, and a pink flower tucked behind her ear.
End image description.]
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russingon · 2 years
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FINWEAN LADIES SERIES: FANIEL
After the births of Findis and Nolofinwë, Indis bore Finwë another daughter whom they called FANIEL. Faniel was tall and strong of body and dearly loved to roam the wilds of Aman. She was often joined in this pursuit by her younger sister Írimë. It is written that both Faniel and Írimë crossed the Helcaraxë during the Exile of the Noldor, however, their ultimate fates are unknown.
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thelordofgifs · 11 months
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Obscure Tolkien Blorbo: Round 1
Pearl Took vs. Faniel
Pearl Took:
The eldest sister of Pippin Took.
Ok but can you IMAGINE being Pippin Took's eldest sister. This girl DEFINITELY has eldest daughter syndrome. She dealt with it by casually murdering an elderly relative :)
Faniel:
The dubiously canonical third daughter of Finwë from an early draft of the legendarium.
Finwe's daughters supremecy
Round 1 masterpost
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yellow-faerie · 1 year
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Ok so, follow up poll from this one (since I'm curious):
(please add any extra info on why/headcanons in the tags, I really wanna know since more people than I expected counted them among the best)
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light-of-the-two-trees · 11 months
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The (Inherently Incomplete) House of Finwë
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Sorry for the bad quality!
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arofili · 2 years
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elves of arda ✺ house of finwë ✺ headcanon disclaimer ✺ @finweanladiesweek​​ day two: findis
          Findis Vórimë was the eldest daughter of Finwë Ñoldóran and his first child with his second wife, Indis of the Vanyar. She was golden-haired as her mother’s people and gentle in spirit, fond of dancing and singing and in all ways like unto Indis. Findis was cool toward her elder half-brother Fëanáro, especially when her younger brother Arakáno was born and received a greater portion of Fëanáro’s ire. She did her best to protect Arakáno from Fëanáro’s wrath while they were young, but increasingly felt alienated from both her brothers, and retreated into her studies of music and religion.           Her younger sister Lalwendë was bold and loud, in many ways Findis’ opposite, and though the sisters loved each other they had few interests in common and spent little time together. Of all her siblings, Findis was most alike to Ingoldo, the youngest, but by the time of his birth she had already made up her mind to forsake the cruel intricacies of the Noldorin court, and upon her fiftieth birthday she quit Tirion and made for Valmar, settling with her grandmother Alcariniel, a priestess of Varda.           Findis spent her days in contemplation of the Music and praise of the Valar, happier now than she had ever been in Tirion. Her family’s tensions and squabbles were no longer her concern, and she thrived among the Vanyar, ever more grateful to take after them in appearance as well as mood.            While visiting Taniquetil with her grandmother, Findis befriended Elemmírë, a Vanyarin minstrel of great renown, and the two soon became close companions. When Findis’ half-nephew Makalaurë Fëanárion showed great musical talent in his youth, Findis introduced him to Elemmírë, who became his tutor. Unfond as she was of Fëanáro, she could bear no grudge against his son, and indeed hoped that perhaps a Vanyarin-trained musician in the House of Finwë might do some good to heal the rift between the children of Indis and Míriel.           Elemmírë moved to Tirion so he might teach Makalaurë, and Findis offered to accompany him, for she loved him greatly. Together they removed from Valmar, though they returned often to perform among the Vanyar, Makalaurë in tow. It was in this time that Elemmírë discovered there was a discordant chord within the Song of his fëa, and first of anyone turned to Findis with the hesitant revelation that she was, in fact, a nís. Findis supported her friend wholeheartedly, and stood by Elemmírë as she transitioned into a new social position.            Soon Findis and Elemmírë realized their profound love for one another, and were glad. Though two níssi were not permitted by the laws of the Valar nor the customs of the Eldar to wed, the confusion around Elemmírë’s true identity allowed for a loophole wide enough for Findis and Elemmírë to join in marriage with the blessing of Manwë and Varda, and none spoke against their love.            Within only a matter of years, Elemmírë and Findis were blessed with a child: Laurefindil Alcarinquë, named like his mother for a shining star. As he grew, Laurefindil took a great interest in his Noldorin kin, and much to his mothers’ grief he would follow his dear friend and cousin Turukáno Ñolofinwion into Exile when the Noldor rebelled against the constraints of the Valar.            When the Two Trees were killed and Valinórë fell into Darkness, Findis and Elemmírë clung to one another in their grief, mourning the departure of many loved ones into the East, far from the protection of the Valar. Though Findis’ faith in the Powers was shaken by her father’s death and the subsequent Darkening of Valinor, she trusted High King Fëanáro even less, and refused to follow him. She welcomed Indis her mother into her house in the wake of the Flight of the Noldor, and though once they had been estranged, now they grew close in heart and mind.           Laurefindil son of Findis marched across the Grinding Ice in the train of Findis’ brother Ñolofinwë, and arriving in Middle-earth accompanied his son Turukáno to the hidden city of Ondolindë, where he became a great Lord and the head of the House of the Golden Flower. Mighty were his deeds in Endórë, and there he found the freedom to love his long-time friend Ecthelion, a fellow lord. Yet Laurefindil, known now as Glorfindel, found his end at last in the Fall of Gondolin, slaying a Balrog to protect the fleeing survivors of the once-great city he loved.            When Findis and Elemmírë learned of their son’s death, they mourned deeply, and knew not if he would ever be returned to them. Taking strength in one another, they resolved to bring another child into the world, and soon thereafter Findis bore a daughter, Faniel Luinil, named as her brother had been after one of Varda’s stars.           Faniel grew up hearing stories of her brother’s bravery and heroism, and always yearned to visit Middle-earth where he lived and died. Her mothers feared for her safety, but reluctantly allowed her to sail to the isle of Númenor, a halfway point between the East and West. There Faniel fell in love with the Secondborn, and became a frequent patron of the arts in the port city of Andúnië. She fell a second time for a common-born weaver, Indilzar of Andúnië, and though it troubled her mothers’ hearts she and Indilzar were wed on the shores of Elenna during the rule of Lady Moruinë and the Queen Tar-Telperiën.           Laurefindil returned to life unlooked-for, but much to his family’s joy. Elemmírë and Findis were eager to introduce him to his little sister, and many tears were shed at their meeting. Laurefindil traveled to Númenor to meet Indilzar, now aging and infirmed, and found himself melancholy thinking of his own beloved: he and Ecthelion had plighted their troth upon the very eve of Gondolin’s fall and their own deaths, and though he lived and breathed again, Ecthelion yet remained in the Halls of Mandos.           Laurefindil did not long remain in Aman, for as the Shadow lengthened once more in Middle-earth, the Valar looked to a champion among the Eldar to serve as an emissary to those left in the far lands. Laurefindil was an obvious choice, for he was a hero of old and faithful to the Valar’s teachings, so far as they knew. It was difficult to leave his family, but with Ecthelion still lingering in death, Laurefindil found a new purpose in this charge and departed to Endórë again, this time to serve the great-grandson of his King, Elrond of Imladris.           Though she was deeply grieved by the passing of her spouse, Faniel remained in Númenor long after Indilzar’s death, for though they never had children she considered all Andúnië as her family. Her heart did not truly break until the sentiments of resentment toward the Eldar forced her to depart Númenor forever, and when its eventual demise came, she wept long and bitterly for the downfall of the people she had come to call her own.            Not long after Númenor’s fall, Ecthelion was at last reborn, but Laurefindil was not there to greet him. Instead Faniel took her would-be law-brother into her home, and together they built a new life in Aman, waiting alongside Findis and Elemmírë for Laurefindil’s eventual return.           It was not until well into the Fourth Age that Laurefindil at last sailed for Valinor, bringing with him Elrond’s twin sons Elladan and Elrohir as well as his dear friend Erestor, and at long last he and Ecthelion had their happy ending. They reunited on the blessed shores and were finally wed beneath the Sun, their loved ones bearing witness, and hope and gladness were born anew for all.
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mxmia · 2 years
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lepenya (fifth)
Rating | Warnings; G | No Warnings Apply Relationships; Gen | Findis & Faniel Characters; Findis, Faniel
“I can teach you some games, if you want. I asked uncle Ingwë to teach me the oldest game he could recall.” Findis explained, and Faniel let out an excited squeak. “Yes yes yes!!” She said, and Findis smiled, pulling a chair next to the bed and sitting. “Well, Uncle Ingwë said it was called lepenya…” Findis said, and Faniel nodded, shifting slightly on the bed—not without a hiss of pain—so she could face Findis better. [Or, Findis and Faniel spend the afternoon playing card games.]
Read on AO3!
(or below the cut)
Notes;
For more thoughts/hcs on Faniel, check my post here: The game, lepenya, is a copy of the Spanish game of cards "Cinquillo (Little Five)"; the names of the suits are also copied from that. Here, it's a Vanyarin game that Findis learnt from Ingwë. Quenya Glossary: - Nésaya = (My) sister, sis - Lepenya = Fifth
Findis entered the room and walked towards her sister, who was lying on her bed with a very unamused look on her face. The blankets around her seemed to be perfectly tucked in, so their mother had probably left a few minutes ago. Upon seeing her, however, Faniel’s eyes lit up.
“Findis! Nésaya! I didn’t expect you to come!” Faniel said, and Findis threw her head back with a laugh.
“Ai, you think so lowly of me, Faniel? I wouldn’t miss my sister’s begetting day!” She replied, showing her the box she was holding. Faniel gasped.
“That’s for… me?” She asked, and Findis nodded, giving her the box. She knew Faniel would like her present no matter what—because she was here to give her a present, unlike other years—but she hoped she’d chosen correctly. Faniel tucked a strand of pale-blonde hair behind her ear and opened it, revealing a set of cards. They were quite worn, but Findis knew how much she appreciated historical things with use, and this was exactly the case.
“I can teach you some games, if you want. I asked uncle Ingwë to teach me the oldest game he could recall.” Findis explained, and Faniel let out an excited squeak.
“Yes yes yes!!” She said, and Findis smiled, pulling a chair next to the bed and sitting.
“Well, Uncle Ingwë said it was called lepenya…” Findis said, and Faniel nodded, shifting slightly on the bed—not without a hiss of pain—so she could face Findis better.
“Fifth?”
“Yes. You must put all the cards in order, starting with the Fifth of Coins. The cards are the same as the ones in the Vanyarin deck, the ones we have are just older. From Cuiviénen, actually.” Findis said, before adding, “They somehow survived the Journey!”
“Woah! That is— Amazing, thank you, Findis.” Faniel said, wiping her eyes dry with the back of her sleeve.
“Hey, I’d do everything for my little sister.” Findis said, squeezing Faniel’s hand until the girl smiled.
She cut the deck in half, handing some to Faniel to shuffle and shuffling the other herself until she was satisfied. Then, she shuffled the two halves and dealt half the deck to Faniel, keeping the other to herself.
“The one who has the Five of Coins has to start, then we have to build up by adding the Four or Six or putting another Five.” Findis explained, and at Faniel’s slow nod she continued, “Such as the Five of Cups, or Swords—”
“Or Wands. Alright. What happens when you finish a suit?” She asked, voice more cheerful than Findis had heard since Faniel had come back from Estë’s Gardens with no apparent remedy to her pain. She could only imagine in how much pain her little sister was, but she knew she’d do anything to remedy it.
“Nothing, actually. The one who finished the last one is the one who wins. You can skip turns to mess with people, though.” Findis said, grinning.
Faniel’s eyes lit up mischievously. “Ohhh, I’ll definitely ask Lalwen to play with me next time she comes. Oh, and Ara!” She said, and her smile was incredibly wide.
“But before that you have to learn how to play, little lady! Come on, let’s start.” 
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4threset · 1 year
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‘ oooh baby we’re gonna burrrnnn’
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monichou · 8 months
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࿙࿚ ︶ ᧔ ✧ ᧓ ㅤ☕ㅤcome kiss me
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࿙࿚ ︶ ᧔ ✧ ᧓ ㅤ☕ㅤand bite me
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gwaedhannen · 2 months
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🦆 I am very interested in anything from your Helcaraxë or Elwing wips especially!
-@outofangband
🦆 asker's request (what do you want to see? from a specific wip, a specific mood, a specific ship or character...?)
From the "Fëanor takes the Helcaraxë" AU:
But Fëanáro is not blind. His half-brother follows his eldest son, and Findecáno will follow Maitimo.
And he knows the loyalty of the rest of his half-family. Lalwendë and will follow her full-brother, Turukáno and Angaráto and Aikanáro will follow Findecáno, Findaráto and Ar-Faniel will follow Turukáno, Arafinwë will follow Findaráto, Arakáno will follow his father, Artaresto will follow his grandfather, Itarillë and Telperinquar are yet carried by their fathers, Artanis will follow him and pretend she makes her own path.
So really, he just needs to make sure Findecáno is happy.
His own sons will follow him to the ends of Eä. They have no choice now. It is so sworn.
And for Elwing, from So small a thing:
But he sees: The little lift of the right side of her lip when she thinks of his father, the twitch just under her left eye when she’s holding back tears. Not that she’s been doing much holding back, not now. Not as she once did around him and Elros, hoping futilely that they, for at least a little longer, could be spared the knowledge of her grief. But the pile of handkerchiefs on the table is starting to get a little silly.
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vurlient · 1 year
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Sk8 in the streets ’06
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samthecookielord · 1 year
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his real name is faniel daniel
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dialux · 2 years
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Írissë Fenyellë - Desired daughter, reed-bells
Women of the Elves, 8/?
...
Born Írissë Fenyellë, Aredhel was the only daughter of King Fingolfin and his wife, Anairë. Her father-name, Írissë (desired daughter) referred to the circumstances of her birth, for Anairë and Fingolfin had slowly grown estranged as Anairë disliked Fingolfin’s refusal to answer his half-brother Fëanor’s provocations in kind, and it was only Aredhel’s conception and birth that pushed them to rekindle their marriage. Aredhel’s mother-name was Fenyellë (reed-bells) after the sound of her cries when she was born, akin to the sound of the old bells crafted in Cuiviénen from dried reeds.
Aredhel was a renowned hunter and tracker, having apprenticed to the Vala Oromë at a young age; she also learned spear-dancing from her aunt Lalwen and woodworking from her older cousin, Angrod, both skills she made much use of in Beleriand. Always close to her half-cousin Celegorm, also a follower of Oromë, Aredhel distinguished herself in the hunt by fletching her own arrows in feathers of pure white and breeding birds of prey that were, in her own words, “like a white death.” For her mastery, Aredhel hunted a bear blessed with strength by Tulkas himself, and wore its pale hide with pride for the rest of her life. In Tirion, ever after, she became known as the White Lady.
But as Fingolfin’s relationship with Fëanor deteriorated further, Aredhel cared little for building bridges or reconciling with them. Indeed, Aredhel cared little for politics at all, and family politics even less. She never spoke to Celegorm about his support of Fëanor despite their close relationship. Even after Celegorm followed his father to Formenos following Fëanor’s banishment, Aredhel never commented on his absence to any of her family.
During the Darkening, once it became clear that Fingolfin would follow Fëanor to Beleriand to avenge the death of the father and king, Finwë, Aredhel was imprisoned in her own rooms by her mother to ensure she would not follow her father or brothers into the unknown. Aredhel escaped by setting fire to the rooms and scaling the enormous oak tree outside her window, and arrived only after the pronouncement of Námo’s doom to the Noldor. Thus she was innocent of the Kinslaying at Alqualondë.
When Aredhel first heard of the Kinslaying, she was appalled, but kept her own counsel as they crossed the Helcaraxë. She focused instead on helping to raise her brother Turgon’s daughter, Idril, after Turgon’s wife Elenwë died on the Ice. In Beleriand, after her younger brother Argon died at the hands of orcs and her eldest brother Fingon disappeared—though he would eventually return, bearing the tortured body of their half-cousin Maedhros—Aredhel finally met Celegorm when they were both out hunting. They never spoke of the words they said to each other that day, but Celegorm later confided in his brother Caranthir that Aredhel’s fury seemed enough to burn down the entire forest.
Still furious, Aredhel chose to follow her brother Turgon, who also hated the Fëanorians, first to Vinyamar and then to the mountain-city of Gondolin. There she lived for some time in joy and peace, helping to establish the House of the Wing, one of the twelve Houses of the Gondothlim. When she left Gondolin, Aredhel asked Idril to take up the duties of leading that house while she was gone; Idril would eventually pass that responsibility on to her human husband, Tuor, when he arrived in Gondolin.
Centuries later, Aredhel’s anger cooled enough for her to speak once more to Celegorm and his kin, and so she left Gondolin to meet them with a small escort of lords for protection. But she was lost on that journey in Nan Elmoth, a dark forest on the border of Doriath that housed Eöl, a renowned Sindar smith and kin to King Elu Thingol. Captured by Aredhel’s beauty and light, Eöl forbade her from ever seeing any of her kin for fear of her leaving and never returning. Though uneasy, Aredhel enjoyed Eöl’s attentions and the many gifts he showered upon her; they courted for a short time before wedding and conceiving a son that Aredhel named Lómion and Eöl named Maeglin.
But Eöl grew colder and crueler as the days passed, and Aredhel found fewer redeeming features in him as time went on, particularly in his harsh treatment of their son. She and Maeglin fell into a habit of taking long walks through Nan Elmoth in Eöl’s absence, where Aredhel told Maeglin many stories of her childhood adventures and family troubles, extolling the beauty of both Aman and her kinfolk’s achievements. When Maeglin asked to see Gondolin despite Eöl’s hatred of the Noldor, Aredhel responded with pride and joy, and they left Nan Elmoth swiftly.
Eöl, however, followed them. He was captured by Gondolin’s guards when he arrived there and offered mercy by Turgon if he remained in Gondolin, but Eöl would not accept this judgment. Instead, he chose death both for himself and for Maeglin, and threw a poisoned javelin at his son. Aredhel shielded Maeglin and was wounded in the shoulder, and later begged Idril to ensure Turgon showed mercy to Eöl, but passed soon thereafter due to the poison. Her funeral pyre, it is said, left such great smoke that all of Gondolin was enveloped in it for weeks on end.
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ot9000 · 1 year
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Faniel & Fils Agapane Brut Champagne N.V. France - Champagne
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pankiepoo · 2 months
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faniel
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