House Of Finwe - Tumblr Posts

4 years ago

Can someone please take all the elves from Tolkien’s works and give me a list of there heights because I’ve been curious as to how tall all of them were. If there is already a list please let me know. Oh and that includes the Valar and Maiar if possible.


Tags :
1 year ago
But Aredhel Said: 'I Am Your Sister And Not Your Servant, And Beyond Your Bounds I Will Go As Seems Good

“But Aredhel said: 'I am your sister and not your servant, and beyond your bounds I will go as seems good to me. And if you begrudge me an escort, then I will go alone.’”


Tags :
2 years ago
House Of Finw Family Tree, Based On The Later Version From HoME. I Chose To Stop At Elrond & Elros' Generation,
House Of Finw Family Tree, Based On The Later Version From HoME. I Chose To Stop At Elrond & Elros' Generation,
House Of Finw Family Tree, Based On The Later Version From HoME. I Chose To Stop At Elrond & Elros' Generation,
House Of Finw Family Tree, Based On The Later Version From HoME. I Chose To Stop At Elrond & Elros' Generation,

House of Finwë family tree, based on the later version from HoME. I chose to stop at Elrond & Elros' generation, but later added Arwen as a side note, which is why her brothers are not included.


Tags :
8 months ago
IT'S FINALLY DONE...... SILMARILLION FAMILY TREES!
IT'S FINALLY DONE...... SILMARILLION FAMILY TREES!
IT'S FINALLY DONE...... SILMARILLION FAMILY TREES!
IT'S FINALLY DONE...... SILMARILLION FAMILY TREES!
IT'S FINALLY DONE...... SILMARILLION FAMILY TREES!

IT'S FINALLY DONE...... SILMARILLION FAMILY TREES!

this was mostly for my own reference, but i spent a really long time on them, so i thought i'd share it. and here's a google drive folder with all the files, because the quality is shot to hell here. i hope the names are at least a little legible.


Tags :
8 months ago

Headcanon Crafts for Everyone I Missed Last Time:

Idril: a sculptor. She worked with every kind of stone imaginable, and often went looking for new material in Gondolin’s mines with Maeglin. (Look my Maeglin head canons are complicated but they should get to be friends the narrative has hurt them too much already) She actually preferred not to make elvish figures, instead focusing on strangely beautiful stone landscapes and various animal-like figures. She was actually responsible for Middle-Earth’s version of the gargoyle, having carved several to stand guard over Gondolin. Several elves swore that the statues moved, but she never addressed those rumors. She also liked to paint her work with bright colors, which would’ve been seen as odd back in Valinor, but fit right in in First Age Middle-Earth.

Maeglin: a smith, but his craft was more in-line with Avarin practice than Noldor practice; with much less focus on the idea of making gems and heavier focus on understanding natural geology and the properties of various gems and metals. He knew the mines of Gondolin better than anyone, and wrote plenty about the the earth under the earth. His work also had fairly significant Dwarfish influences. He liked to make mechanically complex pieces, with moving parts or even some internal gear work.

Finduilas: a hunter. Her and her father were both nature people, just in very different ways. She was silent, with all the grace of a dancer, and quick enough to outrun most of what she hunted. She preferred to go after more aggressive animals– wild boar, wolves, bears, even wargs– and leave the deer and rabbits be. She was born in Beleriand, and had never met the Valar, but sometimes, privately, offered up prayers to Orome. She liked to imagine she could’ve been in his hunt, if things had turned out a bit differently.

Celebrimbor: a smith, in the very traditional Noldor sense. Gemworker, specialized in jewelry, made various famously beautiful pieces, etc. Was never quite happy sticking to hairpins and necklaces. Longed to try his hand at imbuing his work with real power, but always talked himself out of it. A whole binder of concepts for works of power sat locked away in a chest in his workshop for centuries. He never talked to anyone about it. He was as ashamed of his feelings for his craft as he was of his feelings for his family. By the end of his life, he’d made peace with only one of those things.

Earendil: a mariner? Alright, he was definitely a mariner, and he loved the ship life– he even built a few boats of his own, in a similar fantastic style to Turgon’s architecture– but he also had a longstanding fascination with the natural world, and filled volumes and volumes of journals with information on various plants, animals, and minerals. But natural lore isn’t a recognized Noldor craft, since it involves learning but doesn’t really produce tangible results. Still, it was a passion he got from afternoons spent learning about geology with “Uncle Mole,” and one he shared with Elrond. Researching the beauty and wonder of nature gave Earendil something to do with his immortal life, and was a big part of the reason Elrond chose to be immortal at all.

Gil-Galad: a king. No, really, he’d been the high-king of the Noldor since he was a child, and hadn’t really had time for trivialities like “finding a life purpose” or “having fun.” He was too busy learning how to stay alive in late stage Beleriand (read: hell) and learning to rule the least cooperative group of elves imaginable. He wanted to be a painter, and while he found enough practice time to get good at his chosen craft; because of how long detailed paintings can take, he almost never had time to actually make anything. He tried not to let it bother him too much. He didn’t always succeed at that.

Elrond: in a bit of a weird spot. Elrond is most associated with lore and healing; but, as discussed, “lore” isn’t considered a craft. And, well. Healing had to be Elrond’s craft, right? He’d been doing it since he was seven, and just about the only person in Amon Ereb who could still use healing powers. And it was good work, and it was rewarding, even if it often left him feeling so burned out and worried that he forgot to eat or sleep. It took him a long time to admit to himself that healing for him was what fighting was to many other elves: a necessity. Truth be told, he’d rather be gardener, working with the earth to create a place of peace and beauty. Also, Elrond is basically a nature spirit. So. It was something he began to explore in the peace of the early Second Age. He found that his Ainuric powers had all sorts of interesting effects on plant life. He also learned how to breed new varieties of fruits, vegetables, and flowers. Still, he never really considered that it could be a proper craft for him. At least, not until he first saw the valley that would one day become Rivendell.

Headcanon Crafts for Finwe and his Children, the House of Feanor, the House of Fingolfin, and the House of Finarfin.


Tags :
2 years ago
House Of Finw Family Tree, Based On The Later Version From HoME. I Chose To Stop At Elrond & Elros' Generation,
House Of Finw Family Tree, Based On The Later Version From HoME. I Chose To Stop At Elrond & Elros' Generation,
House Of Finw Family Tree, Based On The Later Version From HoME. I Chose To Stop At Elrond & Elros' Generation,
House Of Finw Family Tree, Based On The Later Version From HoME. I Chose To Stop At Elrond & Elros' Generation,

House of Finwë family tree, based on the later version from HoME. I chose to stop at Elrond & Elros' generation, but later added Arwen as a side note, which is why her brothers are not included.


Tags :