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#atrix crafts
atrixfromice · 4 years
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Why I’m investing on this...I have no idea I must say XD
Frankly, it all started as a hobbie because of the quarantaine, and cos I like making miniatures with clay. But my mom gave me the idea of making them to sell them, so now I’m trying to sell them locally.
But I can also sent them to other countries out of mexico, well some of them at least, the ones that aren’t on quarantine. So if you would like to ask about prices, feel free to dm about!
These are &15 usd, because of their parts made of gold. I didn’t wanted to choose other kind of metal because I have a very sensitive skin, when it comes to earrings, even silver sometimes makes my ears swell and get itchy. And I’ve seen there are a lot of people who also suffer from this. So on all my earrings the metal pieces are made of gold. 
I would like to thank my mom, cos she knows I have no money since I lost my job due the covid, and she has been so nice to buy me the metal parts for this artcrafts. Which its realy cool, cos before with all what happened due the covid I felt a bit depressed (also because of personal issues ) but making this kind of stuff makes me feel more happy and motivated. It warms up my heart to do this kind of art ^^
Here I experimented to do a water effect with these marine turtles, although I’m not sure if it’s good enough, what do you think?
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persephinae · 6 years
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The Book of Atrix Wolfe by Patricia A. McKillip
“There was a drop of human blood in her, and in her father . . . it brought both of them visions at times, living dreams of the world beyond the wood. Her father had learned to ignore them, for they meant nothing to him. She, still learning words for her own world, did not make such distinctions: Everything was new, everything spoke to her and had a name; she had not yet learned that something could mean nothing.”
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ravenya003 · 2 years
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A friend brought it to my attention late last night that fantasy author Patricia McKillip passed away on May 6th, and though there is an obituary in Locus, the news sadly seems to have been overlooked by other on-line fantasy outlets.
She was one of my favourite writers, having penned well over twenty novels across the course of her career and being the recipient of several awards, including the World Fantasy life achievement award in 2008.
She's perhaps most famous for her Riddlemaster of Hed trilogy, though for my money her best work was written between 1995 and 2010, decades in which she wrote the likes of Winter Rose, The Book of Atrix Wolfe, Song for the Basilisk, The Tower at Stony Wood, Ombria in Shadow, In The Forests of Serre, Alphabet of Thorn, Od Magic, The Bell at Sealey Head and The Bards of Bone Plain – all standalone fantasy novels that melded her distinctive poetic-prose with stories based on fairy tales, mythology, ballads and other fantasy inspirations.
As a younger reader, there was seriously nothing else like them. The cover art featured above was done by Kinuko Y. Craft, and they’re a perfect visual compliment to McKillip’s dense, ornate prose. Oftentimes reading her books was like trying to unravel a tangled knot – but a lot more fun. No matter how complicated things got, you knew you would eventually land on solid ground.
“Night is not something to endure until dawn. It is an element, like wind or fire. Darkness is its own kingdom; it moves to its own laws, and many living things dwell in it.”
― Patricia A. McKillip, Harpist in the Wind
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