little thing I made




#sam reid#interview with the vampire#the vampire lestat#iwtv
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little thing I made
Stonehenge, 2025
Swordtember 2025
17. Gem
The Hand of Yare
Given by Yare Ninetheth to the newly awoken High Oracle El-Ithaia Euraiðenyth at the commencement of her great journey to reestablish contact with the Gods of the Elven Pantheon.
The Hand of Yare is one of a few swords made entirely of Bluestone, as even for the Yarerin Elves, accurately carving bluestone is a dangerous and difficult undertaking. Though rare, Bluestone blades have several qualities that make them highly prized: they never require sharpening and will occasionally act seemingly of their own volition, usually to protect their wielder from incoming blows they fail to adequately defend from, though the longer a blade stays with the same master, the better at predicting its wielder’s requirements it becomes.
There are in fact several blades with this same name, each intended to be given to an close ally of Yare Ninetheth, the name of these blades is also in reference to the fact that Yare has a prosthetic arm also made of Bluestone Crystal, he has since adopted a blue crystal hand as his sigil.
The largest “bluestone” at the heart of Stonehenge came from northern Scotland, not Wales, according to new research.
This is just about the coolest thing I've read all year.
Fucktard pebble (pebblesona)
Anything interesting about the rocks themselves, geologically?
A model of Stonehenge showing how it is thought to have looked when complete (if it was ever completed but that's another conversation) The big stones are the sarsens and the small ones are the bluestones. The geology of the rocks at Stonehenge is a huge subject and some research is still ongoing. I can tell you that the big stones, the ones most people think of when they imagine Stonehenge, are called sarsens, a local name. Sarsens appear in "drifts" on the chalk land that underlies that part of England. The sarsens are a kind of sandstone with a high amount of silica in them so if you find a newly broken or cut one it will have shiny bits in it. But of course the ones at Stonehenge were cut and shaped long ago and are covered with lichens and a dull patina. Until recently the source of the sarsens wasn't certain, although they knew they weren't from far away, but not that long ago the son of an engineer who had extracted a core from one of them long ago returned that core to English Heritage who are in charge of the stones. The core was tested and analyzed and it was determined that almost all of the 52 sarsens at Stonehenge were brought from an area called West Woods near Marlborough, about 15 miles north. Quite an enterprise 4500 years ago even to bring one 20 ton stone that far and they brought 50+. But the big stones aren't even one third of the stones at Stonehenge and the rest of the story is much more complex. People toss around the term bluestone for many of the smaller stones at Stonehenge but that isn't a geological term and the bluestones are different kinds of stone, mostly rhyolite and spotted dolerite. The closest geological matches for many of these are in outcroppings in western Wales. How they got to Salisbury Plain is contested. Most theorists believe they were brought there for some reason through enormous effort by the builders but there's one fellow in particular who bangs on and on about them having been brought from Wales by glaciers. I find myself hoping he's wrong just because he is unkind about other researchers and well, just generally annoying, but that's no way to do science, haha, and until proof is found one way or another we don't actually know.
There are other stones too, like the heel stone and the so-called slaughter stone, called that because it is flat and the hollows in it look red when they fill with water because of the iron oxide in the stone. There is nothing to indicate that human sacrifice was ever practiced there. That was just the kind of thing people liked to imagine in the Romantic Era and it stuck. For further information on the stones themselves I will refer you to a blog that numbers the stones and talks about each stone and the types of stones : The Stones of Stonehenge. There is no aspect of Stonehenge that isn't researched, talked about, even argued about. The personalities surrounding it are part of what fascinates me.
Large, modern image of a rectangular hot tub in the backyard
Waynesburg Central Elementary Bands
Radiant blue sapphire meets sparkling white zircon in this stunning piece. A blend of elegance and brilliance, perfect for any occasion.