1K follower give-away portrait done of @meantsomewhereelse ‘s beautiful druid Thaylea!
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@shanny-tired
1K follower give-away portrait done of @meantsomewhereelse ‘s beautiful druid Thaylea!
Akemi and @shanny-tired‘s Shanaris by the lovely @rooku ! Thank you so much for bringing them to life! I love them!
Hey friends. It’s Friday. Have a great weekend. Be kind.
why am i only motivated to sort my life out at 3am
My druid, Gaia! I recently rescued her off my dead account. She’s the only BC character I have left, and it never felt right to leave her there.
A Call For Assistance
Assistance for Slick’s Medical Bills
I know this post is different from what would normally be on this guild’s Tumblr, but this is a guild effort right now. Slick, the lovely sweetheart you see above, belongs to one of our members. Their two cats, Slick and Apple, have been such a featured part of our guild that they have become, in a way, members of our community just as much as any of us.
And Slick right now needs us. The full story is on the gofundme, and the goal is within reach. If you can not donate, please consider spreading the word. Slick is a member of the Collective, and Coldwall will be behind him and his family 100% in this.
Thank you for reading, and for checking out the gofundme. Thank you for any donations, or for help spreading the word. Help us bring Slick many more years of healthy, happy life.
Dealing with time in your writing
This is going to be quite an eclectic post, but I’ve received a few questions relating to time in creative writing. So, I thought I’d just make a post to address a few things.
1. Keeping track of narrated time
You as a writer need to keep track of the time that passes in your story and what happens when. Inconsistencies and incontinuities will pop up if you don’t have a good knowledge of your WIP’s time-line.
The easiest way to do this is to keep track via a visual time-line. If you outline, you can use that to make a rough time-line ahead of time. If you’re a pantser, then you can fill in the time-line as you go along.
Use this time-line to keep track of holidays, seasons, lunar cycles, healing time, travel time etc.
This is especially crucial for parallel storylines, where you might want to draw separate time-lines that you can hold up next to each other to ensure that everything matches up.
In certain instances it might also be necessary for the reader to keep track of the passing of time. You can either ensure this subtly within the writing (by sprinkling in little references to the season/date/time) or expressly by getting creative. Maybe each chapter starts with the date or the phase of the moon. Maybe your book is divided into seasons etc. If you do something like this, though, you have to be sure that the information plays a crucial role in your story.
2. Time-lapses between scenes
Time will inevitably pass in-between your scenes. But how do you communicate that time to your readers?
Firstly, you have to ask whether it’s relevant. If all your character did in the in-between time was brush her teeth and put on a nightgown, you don’t have to tell the reader that. You can use a simple sentence at the start of the next scene to familiarize your reader with the time of that scene e. g. “The next morning” or “After a night of tossing and turning”. This way the reader knows that time passed, but that nothing particularly important happened during that time.
If there are important points that you don’t want to dedicate an entire scene to, you can use the technique of telling. This should be used with circumspection, but can be a great way of relaying lots of information in a few sentences. E. g. “That morning after breakfast she had decided to head to the library to continue her research. She’d combed through shelves upon shelves of manuscripts only to end up back at square one.” Then, you can truly start the scene with the character sitting in the library, despondent. This way, the reader gets a quick catch-up as to where the story is at that moment, but you don’t have to spend too many words on it. You can also use this technique for deeply emotional events that the character may not want to spend a lot of time talking about e. g. “Lorna did not wake up that afternoon. She would never wake up again. And all Nancy had done all evening was weep.”
Comment if you guys want me to do a post about showing vs telling.
3. Flashbacks
I love flashbacks, but they have to be done well and they have to be necessary.
Flashbacks are a great way of telling a long, complex story in less words. It’s also a very valuable tool for revealing plot twists and character backstory.
Ensure that your flashbacks are adequately separated from the rest of your scenes. I don’t mean that they have to exist in a separate chapter (although this is an option), but at least use a different formatting style so that it’s clear to the reader when they’re dealing with a flashback.
Make it as easy as possible for the reader. Achronology can be disorienting and confusing. So, if you’re working with different timelines, make sure the reader knows which timeline they’re reading at the moment. You can do this by clearly indicating the time of the flashback at the beginning or woven into the writing of the scene.
Remember that these flashbacks should be relevant to your story/character arc. Don’t just throw in flashbacks for the hell of it. These scenes should reveal something important about the character or the plot.
4. How do the characters tell the time?
This is a bit of a weird one, but it should be taken into account nonetheless.
If you write contemporary fiction or historical fiction set in recent(ish) history, you don’t have to worry about this. However, those of us writing in made-up worlds or ancient/futuristic times have to think about this shit.
Have wathes/clocks been invented? Do your characters have micro chips in their brains that have them knowing the time automatically? Do they use a sundial? Are there calendars (and do they differ from the contemporary one) etc.
If your characters live in a Stone Age world, but they know when it’s 13:45, you’re gonna have to explain how the hell they know that.
Keep historical accuracy in mind if you’re not writing your own world e. g. if you’re writing a book set in Ancient Rome, you should do some research to figure out how they told time.
5. Consistency in time periods
This cannot be stressed enough. Keep healing time, travel time, seasonal changes etc consistent and realistic.
If you’re writing something set in the real world, you should research how long it takes to heal from certain wounds or how long it takes to travel between places etc.
Even if you made up your own world, own creatures and own laws of physics, you should keep the times consistent throughout the work.
That’s all I have for you on time. I hope that this very random post can be helpful.
Reblog if you found these tips useful. Comment with your own questions/ideas around time in writing. Follow me for similar content.
(doorbell) (door opening sound) Greetings, my name is Tyrande, and this is sister Shandris. Do you have some spare time to talk about Elune? Here, take this pamphlet. (door slams) Oh! Hello?
TAKE 👏 THE 👏 PAMPHLET 👏
Bonus current day Tyrande and Shandris showing up at ur door:
due to personal reasons *screams in the middle of a forest*
Ysera`s redesign
Jardin de la villa Ephrussi de Rothschild - St Jean Cap Ferrat | de Provence et d'ailleurs
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Character Portrait for @shanny-tired :) Congratulations!
Lil gift for a frand, giveaway well spent
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self-love is the one of the most radical things you can practice in a society that wants you to be apathetic and self-loathing. learn to LOVE yourself! you’re fucking worth it!!!
a couple versions i couldn’t decide between, but here’s Galasia after she ruined a lovely black dress
I S2G ol’ Claw could pretty much pass as a Zandalari, but he’s a bona-fide Kaldorei, pff.
He DOES, however, date a Troll, so go figure.