17. visualizing characters
been on ye old pinterest playing around with mood boards for different characters. as someone with very vivid imaginaries, I always appreciate somewhat of a curation of photos, music, and vibes for characters. It gets me to know them more.
I see how various interactive fiction authors introduce their characters and it’s really cool to see the different ways in which a character are introduced to readers depending on the writing style of the author, aesthetic of the story; what features and physical descriptions are given, if there are any concept photos or art, or if there are moodboards and such.
when building characters, they come to me with details, and yet the finer details of their face and appearance are quite vague. with pinterest, I couldn’t help but toy around with looking for inspiration to see what comes to mind when it comes to their actual visage.
It’s also been interesting reading takes on regarding the “faceclaims” conversation in writing spaces on the internet—from interactive fiction, to fanfiction, to roleplayers. my unsolicited two cents: if they are a working professional in the entertainment industry as an actor (and/or maybe model), of which their talents and likeness are used, I feel less weird about it. it feels like fan-casting a live-action for your work. influencers and internet personas? that turns me off simply because of the ethics of people finding random people on social media and aestheticizing them. the common denominator is that those that end up in people’s faceclaim selections can be a little too pretty sometimes lmao
gimme the gremlins, the ordinary, the uglies, the normies, the oddities, the freaks, the spookies.
maybe one of these days I’ll save money to commission an artist to help bring someone to life. I considered using sims or even the rdo character creator to help me fill in the faces of my little ones. picrew has been fun too lol








