I’m trying out some gentlier (and print-friendly) palettes and love how these pastel colors look here. Next plan is to draw the older Rayla to match this drawing 😋

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trying on a metaphor

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@ruunaaan
I’m trying out some gentlier (and print-friendly) palettes and love how these pastel colors look here. Next plan is to draw the older Rayla to match this drawing 😋
Ruthari Week Day 7: Jewelry
this drawing reached a whole new level of shiny and sparkly I must admit 🙈
Haven't watched it yet but he's super pretty -- this was for secret santa!
my predictions to the start of the next season of tdp
So many of you on Instagram also requested me to paint Rayla, so here you go ^^ I really enjoyed adding the lighting!
Chibi hubbies!
Chibi Runaan was drawn in October this year and Ethari in December. Not that huge style difference but I like the progress here very much
If you want a really good example of how the “curing the crippled character” trope is beautifully subverted, look no further than the first season of The Dragon Prince (not so coincidentally written by some of the same people who wrote the legendary Toph Beifong):
In the middle of the season, the main characters rush to find a cure for the sacred dragon egg (which had been dropped in icy water). They come across a young girl with a pet wolf, who tells the story of how she found the pup in a trap and how the local veterinarian had to amputate her leg:
Her father responds to this with typical eugenics-based ‘advice’:
So she runs away to keep the village from killing her pet and meets an elf:
One magical spell later, we see that the wolf now has four legs:
So you’ve got this whole tragedy model of disability going, you’ve got the eugenics, you’ve got the magical cure, you’ve got the happy villagers, you’ve got the main characters saying, “Hooray, magical healer, let’s go!”
And it takes several episodes, all of which feature the wolf walking around, running, jumping, etc. for them to finally find this elf, only to reveal:
The whole show threw out an UNO reverse card and revealed that the only magic that needed to be done was an illusion to convince everyone that she was no longer ‘broken’ and thus was worthy of life. Incredible! I mean, the story comes at the worst time because the egg that contains the dragon prince is about to die so they need a healer, but what a story!
Incidentally, The Dragon Prince also features the love of my life:
(The show actually hired ASL interpreters to help with the accuracy.)
The third season comes out next weekend, and will undoubtedly feature more disabled characters with great representation, more nonwhite characters, more LGBT characters, my aforementioned wife, and just a great story/atmosphere in general. If you’ve got Netflix, check it out!
Okay, I agree with everything above—but I’m curious to hear your thoughts on their treatment of Soren’s paralysis. He gets paralyzed from the head down in a fight and told it will be permanent. Claudia is frantic to fix it (I have a sibling, I get that, I’d do anything to help my little sister), she finds a magical solution, and cures him. Just like that. And it’s never mentioned again.
As someone with physical disabilities, this kind of bothered me. It’s exactly the trope of “curing the crippled character” that they managed to avoid so well with the Ava storyline, and it left me wondering how they managed to fall into such a cheap resolution for Soren’s injury. I honestly think they would have been better off leaving that plot point out altogether.
What do you think?
@jaywrites101
@thatoneaceinthecorner
OP here! Not sure if you were asking me or the person you tagged but as a writer in a wheelchair who loves representation and obviously loves The Dragon Prince, enough to make the above super long post, here’s my two cents:
I can definitely see why other people would hate it but I think that it was a perfect example of how morally twisted Claudia’s become. Soren’s initially excited over the idea of being able to move/feel/etc. but 0.2 seconds later, he realizes that something’s not right about the whole ordeal:
To me, seeing how corrupt Claudia’s become in this act is what starts his character development that kicks off in Book Three. Every time Claudia talks, Soren looks away or looks doubtful or looks thoughtful. His whole arc is about how he could genuinely benefit from following the other members in his family (remember how Viren tries to manipulate him by saying he could be the king) but that he knows their actions are questionable, at best, and immoral at worst.
Every time Claudia tries to make excuses for the thing’s Viren does (and, as an extension, the things she’s done), Soren becomes more and more detached from the family, until he’s finally willing to leave the toxic dynamic. As he’s leaving, he points out just how much Claudia has changed, and has made it obvious that the changes she’s made aren’t for the better.
And I think it’s really telling that he uses a crutch at the beginning of the season and that, even at the end, he’s walking only a little better than I can:
Because Claudia’s spell didn’t completely work. I think that’s the whole point. She didn’t heal him, not really, not as much as she thought she could, not as much as the sacrifice was worth. Remember what Harrow said about dark magic being just a short-cut to a half-solution? That’s exactly what happened. Claudia made an impulsive decision, murdered and/or sacrificed a bit of her soul, used that magic to partially heal Soren without thinking it through, and now Soren is basically like, “None of this is right, and it shouldn’t be this way, and even though I can’t change what happened, I’m going to make the best of it and go through a character arc that would make Zuko proud.”
That’s my two cents, anyway. Use it to get the ferry to Adelaide’s pasture.
“Finally, he told me his name. I have never heard a name like his, but I also never imagined an elf like him. He is stronger, older, and wiser than any other magical being in Xadia. Though others look down on us, call us inferior, he sees potential in us. When we receive the gifts Aaravos has promised us, they will pay for their conceit (ugh they spelled that wrong, it’s supposed to be indbildskhed). They will be forced to see us as equals. And when we are equals, we can take our fate into our own hands and build our future. I see it…” Okay I’m not going to even try to translate the Arabic(?) page - Danish is easy enough since I’m Swedish. If anyone can translate that page I would be forever grateful but since this is all I have for now - it’s plain to see that Aaravos did help humans in some way against Xadia, perhaps even invented dark magic (or the idea of it anyway). What do you guys think?
Still can’t get over how hard they went on his design. Pretty Bastard. 10/10.
The entirety of the the Human World’s opposition to Viren originates from his own lack of noble blood and nothing else. Amaya distrusts him (Harrow’s closest friend) because she assume he is trying to supplant Harrow’s bloodline. The Pentarchy doesn’t like him because he’s not a king (as opposed to the 5 year old dumbass who is).
And then there’s Opeli who just doesn’t trust him because she’s a legalist and he’s a pragmatist.
TDP rewatch: pragmatic
Why nine years? Why does Harrow wait nine whole years before he takes his revenge on Thunder for Sarai’s death?
I think it’s because that’s when Viren heard that Thunder had an egg.
Okay, here we go: Viren saw Thunder smack three queens to death like it was nothing. The Sky Archdragon also zapped his way out of Viren’s Aspiro Frigis spell in less than a minute. Viren was trying to help Katolis, and he’d brought his biggest magics. But he got slapped down by a dragon with almost no effort at all.
Viren needs power. He may not love it. But he doesn’t feel useful without it. And to see all his efforts to save Katolis so easily endangered by a single dragon? Viren would never forget that feeling.
But how do you combat a nearly ageless dragon? How do you possibly fight for Katolis’s safety, for the equality of humanity, against something like that?
The solution is simple. You get a Sky Archdragon of your own.
Viren bided his time, making his plans and doing his research, until one day he heard about the existence of the egg of the Dragon Prince–and how he did that, I really want to know. Only then did he begin to urge Harrow to strike. The banners that the humans flew on the Eve of Winter’s Turn were Sarai’s–their symbol is her crown. But that was only part of the reason they were there.
Yes, Viren probably wanted to avenge Sarai. Maybe because he was loyal to her. Maybe because Harrow loved her so much. Maybe because she was human and Thunder wasn’t. Maybe all of the above, and more. But Viren was absolutely after that dragon egg the whole time.
He never told Harrow his plans to take the egg. Harrow really did think it had been destroyed.
That egg was always going to be Viren’s ultimate prize. His way of making sure that no one–no dragons, no elves, no one–could mess with the safety and security of Katolis ever again.
That’s why he called the egg a powerful weapon, and why he taught Claudia the same idea. Not only had Viren seen Thunder in action, but he fully intended to turn Zym into a similiarly powerful weapon to defend Katolis.
He’d been working on hatching large eggs in his dungeon oven, trying to get Zym out so he could begin training him and earning his loyalty. Thunder had been killed, after all. Viren’s a smart guy. He had to know that Xadia would retaliate sooner or later.
Do you think Viren knew that storm dragons can only be born in the heart of a storm? Because he very well may have. Yet, he really didn’t want to sacrifice his Sky primal stone, not when Xadia could attack at any moment. Perhaps his eggy research was to seek yet another shortcut, where he could get Zym hatched and also keep his primal stone.
If Viren had broken the primal stone and hatched the egg of the Dragon Prince, he’d already have himself a loyal, adorable, pragmatic, teleporting baby dragon by the time the assassins arrived at the castle.
How’s that for scary?
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The Dragon Prince S2 | Ep 9 | Aaravos using his powers
Oh, how the tables turn…
I finally get to post the art from the print i did for @dragon-prince-zine ‘s print!! woohoo! I really enjoyed this :D hope you guys do too!
June’s Patreon fanart is Aaravos from the Dragon Prince.
If you’d like to suggest what I draw next, please consider supporting me on Patreon!
aaravos is so beautiful guys, im weak for purple, and especially this color palette….
✨🌟 mr starman, bring me a dream✨🌟