"Tell him he needn't worry about us. That he need no longer hide who he truly is. That he should live his own life to the fullest. And if he would ever find himself reminiscing on the past with a smile, we shall be smiling with him...Will you tell him this?"
95 notes
·
View notes
End of Reflections in Crystal 5.3:
The WoL wakes up G’raha, carries him back to the Rising Stones, drops him in a bed in Dawn’s Respite...
At which point Alisaie, barely able to move, gets up out of her bed despite Krile’s freaking out, limps over to G’raha’s bed, and gives him a flick on the forehead for what happened on the Crystal Tower on the First.
76 notes
·
View notes
summertime when you’re in high school and have nothing to do with your life starring Crystal
1K notes
·
View notes
Happy Solstice!
Today is the December solstice, marking an astronomical beginning of summer in the southern hemisphere and winter in the north. This view from Ostersund in central Sweden, features the midday Sun just above the horizon with a beautiful solar ice halo. Naturally occurring atmospheric ice crystals can produce the halos, refracting and reflecting the sunlight.
Image Credit & Copyright: Goran Strand
1K notes
·
View notes
OHHH that's so fucking dope they're in the center of a god fight between cassandra and galicaea that's so cool
35 notes
·
View notes
SPACEMAS DAY 23 ✨🪐🌎☄️☀️🌕
Since it’s officially winter now (in this hemisphere at least) I thought this picture for today would be fitting!!
What's causing these unusual sky arcs? Ice crystals! While crossing a field of fresh snow near Füssen, Bavaria, Germany, this photographer noticed that he had entered an ice fog. For suspended water to freeze into an ice fog requires quite cold temperatures, and the air temperature on this day was measured at well below zero. The ice fog was reflecting light from the sun setting behind St. Coleman Church. The result was this spectacular image. First, the spots in the featured picture are not background stars but suspended ice and snow. Next, two prominent ice halos are visible: the 22-degree halo and the 46-degree halo. Multiple arcs are also visible, including, from top to bottom, antisolar (subsun), circumzenithal, Parry, tangent, and parhelic (horizontal). Finally, the balloon shaped curve connecting the top arc to the Sun is the rarest of all: it is the heliac arc, created by reflection from the sides of hexagonally shaped ice crystals suspended in a horizontal orientation.
Image Credit & Copyright: Bastian Werner
48 notes
·
View notes