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Ah crap, of course the more important part of the ask was what didn't send. What I had typed was say, whether placing it on the homeowners person or leaving it there yourself, you got perhaps a lock of hair, or a taglock, or whatever it is that relates to you inside of someones home. Do you think it could be counted as an open invitation, since you were technically "invited in"/"You never left", and you could enter and leave the home freely so long as that item of yours remains in the house?
Oh, that's really sneaky. I like it.
Of course, you'd have to be real careful about letting tokens like that out of your sight. You don't want someone finding it and using it against you.
(Part 1) So an idea popped into my head the other day, and I was wondering of what the mod's personal thoughts were to it. With the whole threshold thing, I know a fae can't enter someones home without being invited but I was curious as to what counted as "inviting them in". Would it have to be them specifically saying "You can come in" or is it a little more vague? If it were more vague, then do you think it would be possible for particularly sneaky fae to sneak their way into someones homes...
We only got one part of this ask, but I’d say yes, fae love being sneaky, and they love rules lawyering.
Whatever dirty tricks you’ve seen vampires use to get over a threshold - impersonating people and getting invitations under false pretenses (come on in, you say, to the person who looks like your mom), working in a profession where people are routinely invited in (moving company, delivery service, electrician), securing invitations to activities that happen inside the house (sure you can use my bathroom, it’s upstairs), taunting until you go “come here and say that to my face,” hypnotizing members of the household - I’d apply those to fae as well.
Artemis Fowl even rules lawyered that someone shouting “somebody help me” could be considered an open invitation to come in, if you can’t help from outside, but most fae don’t go that far.
I’m looking forward to seeing part 2 of this ask!
Thank you friend :))
no problem!
I have a question regarding fashion designing and all that, and you seemed like one of the better people to ask that I follow I guess. Do you have any tips when it comes to designing things so that they look like they're the from the same culture/theme/whatever but still keeping it obvious that they are different outfits or worn by different people? I hope that makes sense?
Research! Tons and tons of research into different variations on the same sorts of cultural garb! collect tons of images on your computer!
Also- a unified colour palette can go a long way in making your designs seem connected. Also! keep in mind the needs of your characters in their costume design! Like if a character spends a lot of time baking, then long trailing sleeves make a lot less sense than shorter sleeves or sleeves that hug the arm!
Aight tumblr was a bitch and deleted the ask but this was from undyinkylin. Scarlet - I like you. I like you too friend! Yellow - You’re amazing. You think too highly of me but thanks. Lavender - give me your mortal soul/skype. Friend you already possess both of those things.
I kind of sort of accidentally headcanoned Chinese/Dominican Sun, Korean/Hispanic Neptune, Japanese Scarlet, and Filipino Sage. Oops.
oHHHHHHHH
What do you do in Art history/whatever the class is actually called anyway? Like, what do you study and get tested on?
historical pieces of art. important art things from the past like
we have to know the artist name, if known, the name of the piece, the period in which the piece was created, and why the piece was created.
the history of the world told through the art.
it gives us a context in which we create our own work or whatever.
it's terrible and hard to learn and I hate it.