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#green elf
model2watch · 4 months
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astervoidtheartist · 1 year
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I made a drawing of the two little renaissance elfie girlies me and my friend made <3 the lil doodles are so skrunkly lol
they're so cute I can't 😭
Side notes: this is my first time trying to draw locs, I tried my best, but they look a little too noodly for my liking. Also, if you're wondering why there are so many close-ups it's because the big picture doesn't capture the detail and my eyesight is terrible.
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dinaalena · 1 year
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join date me you take all
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freetriumphanchor · 1 year
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Date With Me.
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riayuun · 9 months
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リューさん by HAONI
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uwmspeccoll · 11 months
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Andrew Lang Fairy Stories
With this semester - and my internship - coming to a close, I wanted to hop back into my wheelhouse for the remainder of my time in Special Collections.
The Elf Maiden: And Other Stories is a collection of eleven tales edited by Scottish poet and novelist Andrew Lang (1844-1912) and illustrated by Henry J. Ford (1860-1941). The book was first published in London and New York by Longmans, Green, & Co. in 1906. The stories in this edition first appeared in three of Lang’s popular “Coloured" Fairy Books:  The Yellow Fairy Book (1894), The Pink Fairy Book (1897), and the The Brown Fairy Book (1904). Lang’s Fairy Books were a series of 24 children’s fairy tales, the most popular being the 12 Coloured" Fairy Books, that Lang’s wife, Leonora Blanche Alleyne (1851-1933) helped collaborate and translate.
Lang was considered to be one of the most versatile writers of his time. While he was a poet, historian, journalist, and critic, he was best known for his publications on folklore, mythology, and religion. Lang took an interest in folklore at a young age; he read John Ferguson McLennan before going to Oxford and was heavily influenced by Edward Burnett Tylor. 
Henry J. Ford was a prolific and successful English artist and illustrator. While he began exhibiting with historically-themed paintings and beautiful landscapes at the Royal Academy of Art in 1982, it was his contributions to illustrated books that raised him to fame. I was excited to find that he was most famous for the illustrations he provided for Lang’s popular Fairy Books, which captivated an entire generation of children in Britain; these books saw translations and republications during the 1880’s and 1890’s.
View more posts on books by Andrew Lang.
View more posts on fairy tales.
View more posts from our Historical Curriculum Collection.
-- Elizabeth V., Special Collections Undergraduate Writing Intern
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myxomycota · 9 months
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Chlorociboria cup fungi and Hemitrichia decipiens slime mold by Alison Pollack
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littlebirdy0301 · 9 months
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anonbeadraws · 2 years
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illustration commission for Grace of Kythan ⌛ ⌛commission info in source ⌛
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jonasgoonface · 5 days
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Tiny little labor of love. I'm dropping this porn parody short story of lusty land defenders on this blessed Earth Day as an affectionate tribute to some of our favorite tierrarists past and present.  There's a link. It's free. It has dicks so be mature k thanks 🧐 
If you're unacquainted with the ELF, today is a great day to beef up on ur green scare lore. Here's an episode of Cool People Who Do Cool Things that lays it out really well ^_^ ps. to all the electric car merchants using this day to sell more problems, go enjoy the natural beauty of the bottom of a lake.
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hedgewitchshit · 7 months
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Happy Autumn Equinox! The shrine got a visitor this evening 💫
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freetriumphanchor · 1 year
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Date With Me.
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ride-a-dromedary · 5 months
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I like using bits and pieces of 2e lore when making HCs and analyzing things in BG3 for spice (and also because BG1 and 2 followed 2e lore and rules), and while this was completely retconned in 3e and on, one thing about wood elves that particularly catches my fancy:
"Their eyes are generally light brown, although bright green is not uncommon. Hazel or blue eyes are exceptionally rare, cropping up only two to ten times in an entire generation."
Y'know who has hazel/grey-blue eyes (with central gold heterochromia)?
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dnd-smash-pass-vs · 3 months
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On the left, Green Dragon! Adults are in the 20-80 foot (6-24 m) range. Green dragons are great at sweet talking, enjoy taking exceptional people into thier fold, have all sorts of wonderful emerald hues, and thier breath has a chlorine scent! Because it's chlorine gas, don't breathe too deep. Look, even the dragon god opposing them said that in some ways they're the most dragonlike of all dragons! Unfortunately that does include sweet talking and manipulation, and thier favorite targets to corrupt and/or devour are elves, so maybe be careful if you're an elf.
On the right, Quaggoth! 6 ft (1.8 m) tall, notably athletic, just get stronger as they wear down, and some can even use psychic powers to cast spells like mage hand and Enlarge/Reduce! They also have basically no fear. Forest dwelling creatures driven underground by elves, where they were enslaved by mindflayers and drow. Some have escaped, and all have 0 fucks left to give. Also maybe be careful if you're an elf, they remember they're supposed to be arboreal.
Actually come to think of it, maybe just be careful in general if you're an elf. One will be hate sex and the other considers you thier favorite kind of victim. This is just anti-elf poll I guess.
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