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Andrew Linke
@andrew.www.andrewlinke.com.ap.brid.gy
I couldn't figure out how to work full time at Summer Camp, so I spent twenty years making the cultivation of creativity and critical thinking through gaming, nature […]

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Learn to Use Your Tools Recap
**Workshop Recap and Review Guide** Thank you again to everyone who joined me for the **Learn to Use Your Tools** workshop. I truly enjoyed joining all of you to explore the essential composition and focus techniques needed to capture the real beauty in your gardens. Your questions were fantastic! This recap contains some great resources to help you continue learning about the power hidden in your iPhone camera: * **Workshop Study Guide:** A clean, organized summary of everything we covered, from the Rule of Thirds to the Exposure Slider. * **Comprehensive Vocabulary List:** Precise definitions for every term we used, from **Focal Length** to **Portrait Mode**. * **Note-Taking Tool:** A handy outline that links directly to key timestamps in the full video recording, along with suggested questions for AI or Search Engines to deepen your knowledge. ### What’s Next: Pruning Your Photos If you’re ready to move beyond the snapshot and truly shape your photographs into art, join me for the next workshop in the series: Prune Your Photos in February 2026. **Anyone already registered can bookmark and share that page and it will unlock for you soon!** Garden Photography Workshops (2025-26)Gardeners are artists dedicated to cultivating beauty in the world. You see the subtle shift of dawn on a leaf, the perfect curve of a petal. It’s these fleeting moments of magic that make a garden so special. But how often does that magic get lost in a simpleAndrew LinkeAndrew Linke That's right. You can share the workshop page with anyone and they will get access to it as soon as they register. I'm so excited to have fixed my membership system since last time 😄. * **Focus:** This session is highly interactive! Just as we prune a hedge for better growth, we will learn how to **edit a photo** to enhance its story. * **Your Turn:** I will be asking participants to anonymously submit their photos for a friendly group critique to practice our editing and ranking skills. I look forward to seeing the incredible photos you take between now and then! ### Workshop Review Use this guide to follow along with the pre-recorded video session on YouTube: **Garden Photography Learn to Use Your Tools**. I've highlighted three key timestamps for each major concept, along with targeted questions to guide you in learning more about each subject. Participants in the workshop, or those they share this page with, will be able to view the full workshop recording on YouTube. Watch the full workshop now! ## 1. The First Tool: Composition Composition is the first, and in some ways most important, tool for anyone taking photography seriously. It is the art and the science of **where you put things** in your frame. No amount of editing can fix a boring photo, but good composition can make a simple subject fascinating. ### The Rule of Thirds Grid The Rule of Thirds is the foundational guideline for creating engaging photos. * **What it is:** The image is imagined as divided into nine equal segments by two horizontal and two vertical lines. * **Why it works:** Human eyes are binocular. We naturally prefer looking a little to the left or right, rather than staring directly at the center. Placing your subject dead center can feel aggressive or flat. * **How to use it:** Turn on the **Grid** in your iPhone settings. Place your main subject (a flower, a bee, a leaf) on one of the four intersection points where the lines cross. These points are where the eye naturally wants to rest and travel between. _Key Timestamps (HH:MM)_ * **06:00** The grid is drawn and introduced as the basic tool. * **10:00** How to turn on the Grid in your iPhone settings. * **12:00** Explanation of _why_ humans prefer off-center composition (binocular vision theory). **Suggested Further Exploration** * **Google/YouTube Search:** "What is the Fibonacci Spiral and how does it compare to the Rule of Thirds for composing a flower photo?" * **AI Question (ChatGPT/Claude):** "Explain the difference between 'Negative Space' and 'Positive Space' in macro photography and why I should use Negative Space." * **Siri Command:** "Siri, open settings and show me the camera menu." ### Depth & Focus A photo is a 2D copy of a 3D world, so we need to intentionally create depth to make it feel real. * **Create Layers:** Try to have something in the **foreground** (close to you), your main **subject** in the middle ground, and a **background** that is far away. This mimics how our eyes perceive distance. * **Tap to Focus:** Your iPhone camera guesses what you want to see. If it guesses wrong, **tap the screen**. The yellow box tells the camera "Look here!" and it will immediately adjust the focus and lighting for that specific spot. * * * ## Power Tools: Lenses, Exposure, and Flash Once you have your composition, use these tools to control how the iPhone camera captures the scene outside of automatic mode. ### Avoid Flashing Your Flowers! We looked at the difference between flash and natural light. * **The Problem:** The flash blasts light directly from the front. This fills in all the shadows, and shadows are what show us texture. Without shadows, a pumpkin looks like a flat orange circle. * **The Solution:** Turn your flash to **OFF** or **AUTO**. Adjust your angle or light source to allow natural light to create shadows. ### Exposure: The Sun Slider Sometimes the camera thinks a scene should be bright when you want it moody, or dark when you want it bright. * **The Fix:** Tap the screen to get the yellow focus box. You will see a little sun icon. Slide that sun **up** to brighten the photo or **down** to darken it. * **Use Case:** Slide it **down** on a bright cloudy day to reduce the glare, or slide it **up** at dusk to capture the last bit of light. ### Lenses by the Numbers Those numbers at the bottom of your screen (0.5, 1x, 3x) are not just "zoom." They are different lenses. * **0.5x (Ultra Wide):** Like a security camera. It pushes everything away and shows a huge view. It is great for small spaces or big landscapes. This lens also powers the **Macro** mode, which zooms in close, but at reduced quality. * **1x (Main):** This is your standard view. It is roughly what your eye sees. * **3x (Telephoto):** This brings things closer without you having to move your feet. It is great for isolating a single flower without stepping in the mud, but may not be strong enough for distant subjects. _Key Timestamps (HH:MM)_ * **27:00** The numbers (0.5, 1x, 3x) are introduced as different focal lengths. * **30:00** Explanation of the **Wide-Angle** (0.5x) lens and its use in small spaces. * **48:00** Demonstration of the Exposure "Sun Slider" and how to manually adjust brightness. **Suggested Further Exploration** * **Google/YouTube Search:** "How to balance exposure when taking close-up photos of flowers on a very sunny day." * **AI Question (ChatGPT/Claude):** "Give me three actionable exercises for mastering the exposure slider (the sun icon) in different outdoor lighting conditions." * **Siri Command:** "Siri, how do I capture a close-up picture of a moving bug using Burst Mode on my iPhone?" * * * ## 3. Advanced Modes We briefly touched on the "computer magic" your phone can do. Use this section as a springboard to explore the camera's computer-assisted and pro-level modes. * **Portrait Mode:** Uses **computer math** to blur the background, mimicking the look of expensive professional lenses. It is great for isolating a single bloom. * **Live Photos:** Captures a tiny video with your photo. You can edit these later to pick the perfect split-second moment (like when a bug flies away) or turn them into a "Long Exposure" to make water look misty. * **Aspect Ratio:** The shape of your photo. **4:3** and **8:10** are standard print photos (most prints you have ever held are between these two shapes). **16:9** is wide like a TV or a Landscape Panorama photo. **1:1** is square like a classic Polaroid. _Key Timestamps (HH:MM)_ * **44:00** Exploring different Aspect Ratios (1:1, 16:9, 4:3). * **53:00** Tapping the screen for Focus lock and the effect on exposure/depth. * **59:00** Introduction to **Portrait Mode** and its "math" (artificial background blur). * **1:07** Introduction to **Live Photos** and finding the best "Key Photo" in a sequence, featuring a fly who followed the flowers into my office. * **01:13** Discussion of the **RAW** file format (massive files) versus HEIC. **Suggested Further Exploration** * **Google/YouTube Search:** "What is 'lossless editing' and how does it apply to HEIC vs. RAW photos on an iPhone?" * **AI Question (ChatGPT/Claude):** "What are the common visual glitches that occur in iPhone Portrait Mode when photographing complex subjects like leaves or vines?" * **Siri Command:** "Siri, show me how to turn a Live Photo into a Long Exposure photo." * * * ### Photography Vocabulary List Explore these terms through internet searches, AI companions, or asking questions in the comments below. I'll do my best to reply! **Aperture** * On a large camera, this is a **physical opening** in the lens. * On an iPhone, the term refers to the **simulated lens adjustment** used in **Portrait Mode** to control the depth of field. **Aspect Ratio** * The **shape** of your final photograph, based on its proportional width versus its height. * Examples include **1:1** (square like a Polaroid) and **16:9** (wide like a modern TV screen). **Composition** * The foundational art and science of deciding **where you put every element** in your frame. * Good composition is the key to an interesting photo, even without editing. **Cool/Warm Mode** * A feature in the "Styles" setting used to adjust the **color mood** of your photo. * **Cool** adds blue tones (for a calm or chilly feeling). * **Warm** adds yellow and red tones (for a cozy, vibrant, or autumnal feeling). **Depth** * The illusion of **three-dimensional space** in a flat, 2D photograph. * It is created by setting up **three layers** : foreground, subject, and background. **Depth of Field** * The specific **area of the photo that is sharp and in focus**. * **Shallow Depth of Field** is when you intentionally blur the background (often using Portrait Mode) to make your subject look crisp and defined. **Exposure** * The measurement of **how bright or dark** your entire photo is. * You manually control this by tapping the screen and using the **"Sun Slider"** to increase or decrease the light. **Focal Length** * The technical term for **"zoom,"** which determines the lens's field of view. * The camera's **1x zoom** is equivalent to a standard 35mm film camera view. **Focus** * The act of getting a subject to look **sharp and clear**. * If the camera's automatic brain chooses the wrong focus point, **tap the screen** ; the yellow box that appears confirms the camera is following your manual instruction. **Gridlines/Grid** * The two vertical and two horizontal hairline guides that divide your screen into nine sections. * Used to help you align your subject according to the **Rule of Thirds** and keep your **Horizon** straight. **HEIC/JPEG** * Standard file formats for digital photos that are **automatically compressed** to save storage space. * **HEIC** is Apple's newer, more compressed and higher quality format. **JPEG** is an older, universally compatible format. **Horizon** * The level line where the land or sea appears to meet the sky. **Leading Lines** * A compositional tool that uses existing lines in the scene (like a path, a fence, or a row of planters) to **guide the viewer's eye** directly to your main subject. **Live Mode/Live Photos** * A camera feature that captures a standard photo plus a short **three-second video** clip around the moment you press the shutter. * Useful for capturing the **perfect split-second moment** or creating a **Long Exposure** effect. **Long Exposure** * A style of photo that makes moving things look **blurry and soft**. * Often used to make running water look like mist or blur traffic lights into streaks. **Mirror Front View** * A setting in your camera options that ensures text and signs in a **selfie** are flipped correctly in the final image, rather than appearing backward like in a mirror. **Panorama** * A special photo mode used to capture an **extra-wide picture** by sweeping the camera horizontally or vertically across a scene. **Portrait Mode** * A camera mode that uses **computer math** to create an artificial **shallow depth of field** , blurring the background while keeping the main subject sharp. **RAW** * The **raw, uncompressed data** from the camera's sensor. * These files are **massive** and are generally only used by professionals who plan to edit photos extensively on a computer with software like Photoshop. **Rich Contrast** * A "Style" setting that intensely increases the difference between the light and dark parts of your image, resulting in richer, deeper shadows. **Rule of Thirds** * The foundational compositional guide stating that photos are more interesting when the subject is **off-center** , placed at one of the four grid intersection points. **Styles/Filters** * Pre-set color and tone adjustments you can apply to a photo, like applying a **color gel** over the lens. **View Outside of the Frame** * A camera setting that shows the content _just_ outside the edges of your photo with a blur, helping you predict if a person or animal is about to enter the frame. **Wide-Angle Lens** * The **0.5x zoom** setting. It captures a large field of view, making objects look farther away. * Excellent for shooting in small or tight spaces, like a densely packed flower bed.
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November 18, 2025 at 11:30 PM
Obligatory note that I'm being rather cautious with my steps back into the social web. It's been a rough ... Sorry, why is my watch running in three directions at once?
November 4, 2025 at 4:05 AM
Wow. I think I actually have my website up and working again and a solid foothold in the Fediverse again.
November 4, 2025 at 3:49 AM
Photography in an Autumn Garden
You might be thinking, "Why would I want to do garden photography _now_?" Halloween's already passed, Thanksgiving is racing towards us, and the stores are already playing Christmas music. In the garden, the big show of spring and summer is long over and the few remaining plants are struggling to put on one last display. But there is still so much beauty to find, especially if you are willing to work in golds and browns and grays. This week, I challenge you to take a stroll through your garden, even if you think it's a wreck. Look closer and you will find the bright spark in the colors of the last few flowers. The intricate, alien structures of seed pods getting ready to burst, not to mention the sort of gloriously withering vines that a wedding venue would proudly advertise as "timeless" to drum up some cold weather business. This is the real magic of garden photography. It's not just about capturing the peak moments of perfect blooms. It's about learning to see and appreciate the beauty in every stage of a garden's life. And the best tool for the job is the one you already have in your pocket. ### We're One Week Away! I'm so excited for our Learn to Use Your Tools Garden Photography Workshop. We're going to spend 90 minutes together (via Zoom) diving into the features of your iPhone camera. We'll explore: * **The Story of Focus:** How to control depth of field to make your subject the star. * **The Story of Time:** Using Live Photos and other settings to capture motion and mood. * **The Story of Composition:** Using simple tools like the Rule of Thirds to tell a more powerful story. My goal is to demystify the tech so you can focus on the art. If you've ever felt frustrated trying to capture the magic you see with your eyes, this class is for you. We still have a little space remaining. If you'd like to join us, you can register at the link below. Remember to check your email and send me a message if you don't see the password. You can also click here and sign in with the e-mail you registered with to skip using a password. * * * **A Note on Process:** You may notice a bit of wind noise in the video. I made a deliberate choice to shoot this entire promo _only_ on my iPhone, with no external microphones or fancy gear. I wanted to practice what I preach and demonstrate exactly what we can do with the simple, powerful tool we'll be mastering together, even on a windy day.
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November 4, 2025 at 2:11 AM
Learn to Use Your Tools
This workshop is designed to demystify the art of garden photography, focusing mainly on the powerful camera in the iPhone. Learn to make your photos blossom by mastering focus, depth, and composition. Perfect for any gardener who has ever felt frustrated trying to capture the magic of a bloom. Online Workshop **10 November 2025** at 1:00 pm. Estimated length: 90 minutes Presentation and interactive workshop are estimated to take about one hour. The meeting will end between 2:30-2:55pm. Questions posted in the ** _Zoom Chat_** will be answered after workshop winds down around 2pm. Estimated time for Q&A is half an hour, but Linke can remain on the call until 2:55pm to answer any additional questions you may have. Square Purchase Link: _https://andrewlinke.square.site_ ## Workshop Details Check your email or sign into AndrewLinke.com with the same e-mail address you used to sign up for the workshop. The Zoom meeting details are all available on this page (once you are signed in) or on the documents attached to the email. Registered members can use the details below to ask questions, join the meeting, and get access to our after-meeting resources. Workshop Document: _https://craft.andrewlinke.com/workshops/202511101pm_ Workshop Document Password: **10November25** Text questions, photos you want us to discuss during the meeting, and screenshots of any phone issues you are having to Linke at **(443) 487-6077**. All questions must be submitted by 48 hours before the meeting to be considered for inclusion. * Zoom Meeting ID: **824 4949 6640** * Zoom Meeting Password: **928861** * Click Here to Learn How to Join a Zoom Meeting **Privacy and Attendance:** This meeting will be recorded and posted to an unlisted (but shareable) YouTube link._If you prefer not to be seen in the recording you are welcome to keep your camera off during the meeting._ Please return to this page one week after the meeting date to watch the recorded meeting and get custom worksheets and meeting notes. Any questions submitted before or during the meeting will be answered in a post-meeting supplimental video. I am happy to offer a refund for any purpose **until 48 hours before the meeting**. Please reply to your order receipt or email me at andrew@alinke.com with subject "Garden Photography Refund Needed" including your full name and the e-mail address you registered from. Contact **andrew@alinke.com** if you have any questions. Please use the subject line "Garden Photography Workshop Question" to ensure a speedy response.
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November 4, 2025 at 12:36 AM
Myrtifact
https://moxfield.com/decks/ZGsQ7VAud02ZKNYSh5lR4w Commander 1 Urtet, Remnant of Memnarch Deck Cards 1 Alibou, Ancient Witness 1 Alloy Myr 1 Boros Charm 1 Brudiclad, Telchor Engineer 1 Buried Ruin 1 Command Tower 1 Copper Myr 1 Counterspell 1 Crib Swap 1 Crumbling Necropolis 1 Cryptolith Rite 1 Crystal Quarry 1 Culling Dais 1 Dance of the Manse 1 Darksteel Myr 1 Dispatch 1 Eldrazi Monument 1 Elspeth, Storm Slayer 1 Enlightened Tutor 1 Etherium Sculptor 1 Evolving Wilds 1 Exotic Orchard 1 Forest 1 Foundry Inspector 1 Frontier Bivouac 1 Gold Myr 1 Goldmire Bridge 1 Hovermyr 1 Iron Myr 2 Island 1 Jhoira, Weatherlight Captain 1 Knighted Myr 1 Leaden Myr 1 Lightning Greaves 1 Lux Artillery 1 Manifold Key 1 Mirage Mirror 1 Mirrodin Besieged 1 Mirror Entity 1 Mirrorworks 1 Mistvault Bridge 1 Myr Battlesphere 1 Myr Convert 1 Myr Galvanizer 1 Myr Kinsmith 2 Myr Propagator 1 Myr Reservoir 1 Myr Retriever 1 Myr Turbine 1 Myrsmith 1 Mystic Monastery 1 Nevinyrral's Disk 1 Nomad Outpost 1 Opposition 1 Opulent Palace 1 Organic Extinction 1 Palladium Myr 1 Path of Ancestry 1 Plains 1 Power Depot 1 Proteus Staff 1 Prototype Portal 1 Razortide Bridge 1 Rith's Grove 1 Rustvale Bridge 1 Sandsteppe Citadel 1 Savage Lands 1 Sculpting Steel 1 Shimmer Myr 1 Silver Myr 1 Silverbluff Bridge 1 Simic Ascendancy 1 Skullclamp 1 Slagwoods Bridge 1 Sol Ring 1 Staff of Domination 1 Steel Overseer 1 Swamp 1 Swords to Plowshares 1 Symmetry Matrix 1 Tanglepool Bridge 1 Tempered Steel 1 Teshar, Ancestor's Apostle 1 Tezzeret, Master of the Bridge 1 The Antiquities War 1 The Flesh Is Weak 1 Thornglint Bridge 1 Unwinding Clock 1 Urza, Lord High Artificer 1 Vanquisher's Banner 1 Vivid Crag 1 Vivid Creek 1 Vivid Grove 1 Vivid Marsh 1 Vivid Meadow 1 Wake the Past 1 Witchbane Orb
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October 12, 2025 at 12:24 PM
An Evening in the Faded Raven
[[Lynn Gattes]] was in a low place when he arrived at `[[The Faded Raven]]`. His search for his long-lost companions in `[[Barrowcrest]]` had proven fruitless, a string of dead ends in a city of stone and wind. He had spoken to countless shopkeepers and followed whispers into every tavern, his charm and performance failing to enchant the truths he sought from the grim-faced locals. His final effort, a cautious exploration of the ruined `[[Vampiric Venue]]`, had revealed only a lingering scent of blood magic and the unsettling sight of corrupted armor, a temptation he was wise enough to resist. The journey from the city had been a trial in itself. The ancient stone `[[Windy Bridge]]` spanned the `[[Ghost Chasm]]`, a canyon so deep that legends claimed it reached all the way to the Void. A constant, ghostly mist rose from its depths, carrying with it sorrowful whispers that chilled the soul more than any wind. To raise his own spirits, he had pushed into the tavern already playing a defiant song on his lute, only to be met with a dirty look from the house musician, the enigmatic and banjo-playing `[[Bunny Bard]]`. _(A failed Charisma [Performance] check; the stage was already occupied)._ A professional recognizing another, Lynn respectfully yielded, strapping his lute over his shoulder and approaching the bar. "I see that you made a little bit of a fool of yourself," the bartender, a weathered ex-adventurer with the weary eyes of a man who had seen too many Chaos Isles, remarked. Lynn attempted to parlay the moment into a negotiation for a room, but his eloquence was a nearly as numb as his fingers and a deeper, internal weariness. The bartender was unmoved._(A failed Charisma [Persuasion] check; this crowd was too grim for his usual flair)._ As the `[[Bunny Bard]]` played, his fingers a blur across the banjo, Lynn began to nod in time with the music. Soon he was leaning on the bar, his mind lulled by the surprisingly complex melody, and the whole room, caught in the spell, joined in stomping along. The `[[Bunny Bard]]`, distracted by the unexpected intrusion of... something more than a mere performer... nearly broke a string but saved the chord with the skill of a master who had once owned an inn before it was mysteriously overrun by butterflies. For a moment, a shared respect passed between the two musicians, a silent acknowledgment of craft in a place that valued only survival. `[[Lynn Gattes]]` knew he was on the right trail. A strange magic compelled him, a persistent echo of his friends in his mind that had grown louder these past weeks. Olanda's laugh in the morning, a sound of pure, unadulterated discovery. Gid's grumbling at night, a familiar litany of complaints about unoiled leather and dull blades. After so many long years, something was pulling the sundered companions back together. He paid for a room and more drink than he normally would, the banjo music a soothing balm on his frayed nerves. He settled in to listen, content for the moment to be just another shadow in the corner of a room. He would find them. Whether in `[[Gold Sands]]` or the corrupted city of `[[Sundrop]]`, he would find them. And together, they would make right whatever it was that had gone so wrong...
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October 4, 2025 at 1:22 PM
A Deal Before the Fall of Lodesoon
Gid Evyn stared across the table at the artificer, Ingus Restif, his hand resting on the pommel of his hammer. He had been fighting his unease ever since setting foot in the impossible city of Lodesoon. The city, a colossal feat of engineering, hung suspended by mighty chains over a mine that descended into the Void at the heart of the world, the very thought of which felt like a profound blasphemy to Gid's faith. “I’m not going to pay you for them,” Gid said, his voice flatter than he felt. “They’re clearly fake.” The words were ash in his mouth, a revulsion at the lie that conflicted with his very nature and Oath. (A fumbled Charisma [Deception] check; the dice did not favor him). Ingus laughed, a sharp, grating sound. “You think I believe your lie? A child could see you have no authority here, Paladin.” He glanced over his shoulder at Olanda, who stood cloaked and still near the damaged, sparking portal at the center of the workshop. “I know an interloper when I see one”. While the two men faced off, Olanda was lost in her own world. The portal fascinated her. The runes framing it kept breaking their patterns in a way she had never seen, a puzzle that resisted her years of study. She was utterly unable to understand their meaning. (A failed Intelligence [Arcana] check; the magic here operated on a logic she had never encountered). The very physics of this place felt wrong, as if everything energetic was pulled up towards the cavern's unseen ceiling, while everything cold and atrophic was drawn down into the darkness below. Her reverie was broken by the rising tension. She saw Gid failing to negotiate, his frustration a palpable force in the room. She stepped forward. “Excuse me,” she said. "You are a skilled artificer." "I would never pump myself up in such a way," Ingus replied, a glint in his eye as he sized her up. Olanda understood the tension now: one man dedicated to uncovering corruption, the other to profit and a magic she did not yet understand. "I'll make you a deal," she said. Ingus grinned. He was a man who couldn't resist a deal, a simple transaction of profit far removed from the sinister business of The Keepers who held so much sway in this city. Gid’s hand tightened on his hammer, a fire of passionate rage burning in his chest. (A difficult Wisdom Saving Throw; he needed to master his shadow). He took a slow breath, the anger receding, and gave a grimace of assent, trusting Olanda to find a path forward. The deal for the barely-functional gloves was concluded without violence. As they left, Gid felt a desperate need to get off the cursed rock hanging above Oblivion. They joined the queue for a sky bridge, a series of magical plates held in place by chains of silvery-purple light. Just as their feet touched solid rock on the other side, the cavern shuddered. A mighty, soul-shaking *CLANG* echoed through the city as one of the great chains holding Lodesoon aloft snapped, whipping away into the darkness below...
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October 4, 2025 at 12:54 PM
Olanda, South of Sundrop
The desert air was surprisingly cold that morning, and Olanda pulled her robe tighter against the unsettling chill . It was as though a rolling fog of discontent had tumbled across the entirety of Osterns Breath to settle on the outskirts of Sundrop, the glittering city of dreams she had read about in mage school. Opening a battered leather book, its pages worn by the tiny, story-eating fey that haunt old libraries, Olanda held up a small crystal shard. Such cost had been paid for it, a cost of mind and spirit to learn its proper use. With a precise flick of the fingers that most would not even see, the crystal flared to silvery light, revealing the hidden map within the wizard's tome. (A successful skill check, either Intelligence [Arcana] or a tool proficiency check with calligrapher's supplies). Three days Olanda had been waiting at The Last Bone, and the time for uncertainty was over. It was time for courage. (A successful Wisdom Saving Throw, marking a shift in the character's emotional state). Strengthening her vision, Olanda beheld the scene ahead. A day's journey away, the southern hovels of the city were a place of chaos. Jerky, shadowy shapes moved amidst smoke and fire. Glass-Eyed Jackals prowled an oasis, while massive Ash-Winged Vultures circled the bridge leading into the city. This should have been a safe place . (A successful Wisdom [Perception] check, the high roll of 16 providing a wealth of detail). Olanda's eyes traveled up to the city walls, and for the first time, she truly saw the corruption. The gargantuan crystals, the stones of light and magic bound in bronze and runes, were wrong. They flickered with uneven color and brightness. Overwhelmed, her mind racing for a spell or rune to explain it, Olanda felt a surge of frustration at the old paladin, Gid Evyn, who was supposed to have met her. (A failed Intelligence check; her [[Theorist]] shadow self is confronted with the limits of its knowledge). No matter. She pushed back the doubt and fear. Olanda stepped forward, leaving a trail of footsteps in the sand, and wondered what lay ahead... _This scene is part of my ongoing project to teach literature, storytelling, and role playing through fiction._
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October 4, 2025 at 12:05 PM
I've got my website upgraded to Ghost 6. Now to try and stay focused on writing and videos instead of being distracted by the new features.
August 26, 2025 at 12:57 PM