(Source: keepcalmandshiptiva, via lostandfounddreams)
(Source: keepcalmandshiptiva, via lostandfounddreams)
my dad hid in the shower once with a jar jar binks mask and a knife just to scare me and got it on camera
(via stillfuckingydgn)
(Source: anotherkindamagic, via helloitsabbie)
(Source: jennalouisecoleman, via wasarahbi)
Sometimes you want to write, but you have no plot ideas. Perhaps your fingers are itchy to write, you want to meet a submissions deadline, a character is bugging you to tell their story, or a single image, phrase, or scene is sitting heavy in your head. But you still can’t find the whole story.
So what can you do?
- Start with characters: find their names, their backstories, their relationships. Create detailed descriptions, draw them, build their family trees. Get them interracting, put them into a room together, or bump them into each other in the street. Read their diaries, their love letters, their bank statements. Get to know them inside out. This is one place where you may find your story.
- Start with a world: create your map, name the towns, lakes, forests, and mountains. Work out the trade routes, position the markets, the ports, and the industry. Find the history, predict the future. Draw out the borders, bring war, re-draw the borders. Get down to street level and see who lives there. Walk the streets yourself. This is one place where you may find your story.
- Start with a room: stand in the middle of a room and open your eyes. What does the room look like? What’s in it? How many doors and windows are there? What is the room used for? Who uses it? What has happened here, and what is going to happen here? This is one place where you may find your story.
- Start with an object: pick something up into your hand. What is it? What is it used for? Who owns it, and who owned it before them? What is it worth, either monetarily or sentimentally? Has it been lost, found, stolen, given away? Why is this object important? This is one place where you may find your story.
(via jencaiah)
Does anyone else think it’s amazing that Annabeth’s first line in the Lightning Thief is “He’s the one,” and that she was talking about Percy?
I do.
(via lukecastellaning)
[x]
Outtake of Matt/Karen. They kept having to reshoot it because Matt would kiss back. Ooh girl.
(via intoasylum)
Somewhere George RR Martin is snapping in Z formation.
(Source: victorianhooker, via cadairidris)