Thanks! XD I liked the effect of the sepia too, it takes some of the glare off the petals, but I also like the colours of the original version; I always associate Glorfindel with green and gold.
Thanks so much! You make such beautiful banners, it's lovely to hear that from you. Illustrating Tolkien is drawing me back to Tolkien fic, which is no bad thing...
Then how did Glorfindel stand against the black riders at the ford outside Rivendel if he was already dead? Oh, wait, that was Arwen! Right. That's the ticket!
It is a disputed issue. The most common answer is that Glorfindel was resurrected and returned to Middle-Earth by the Valar at some point for, uh, reasons not entirely clear. The second most common answer is that there was a someone else called Glorfindel by the time of the war with the Witch-King of Angmar. (In other words, Tolkien made a continuity error, cobbled together various explanations and now there's a canon fissure.)
Or you can just substitute in Arwen. But then people complain...
Or maybe its a lot of rambling in old notebooks that don't have to be analyzed for consistency.
I know all too well that all the rambling notes and drafts for my own novel can't be reconciled into a single consistent chronology--but that's because they're notes and drafts and not the final version.
Well, that is pretty much what I meant by 'continuity error', yes. There are quite a lot of them, thanks to C. Tolkien's sterling efforts re: HoME and so on.
Yes, it does. Possibly because you have to compensate when imagining the colours.
The continuity errors do at least leave lots of space to play and speculate. I do enough of that sort of thing in RL, though, so I generally prefer to leave it to other people.
Comments 11
- Erulisse (one L)
Reply
Reply
(The comment has been removed)
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Or you can just substitute in Arwen. But then people complain...
Reply
I know all too well that all the rambling notes and drafts for my own novel can't be reconciled into a single consistent chronology--but that's because they're notes and drafts and not the final version.
Reply
Reply
I like the continuity errors in Tolkien, they make it more like real history.
Reply
The continuity errors do at least leave lots of space to play and speculate. I do enough of that sort of thing in RL, though, so I generally prefer to leave it to other people.
Reply
Leave a comment