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I CANNOT JO
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“Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them” buddy I already know where to find them; apparently it is literally anywhere on Hogwarts grounds because so far I’ve seen a three-headed dog, a basilisk, a bunch of acromantulas, four dragons - five if you count Norbert! - a giant squid, hundreds of dementors, a herd of thestrals, and worst of all, Dolores fucking Umbridge
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I feel like one of the most wonderful things about being in the Harry Potter fandom is knowing that tomorrow may be the end of the timeline as we know it–and an epic nineteen years later–but even after September 1st, 2017, this fandom will go right on creating and writing and editing and imagining, and I think that’s so, so beautiful that we’ve come this far and yet we continue to show our endless love for this world. 
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JK Rowling photographed at London King’s Cross Railway Station, England, 1999
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Lupin continued to stare at the map. Harry had the impression that he was doing some very quick thinking.
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Luna Lovegood September request from my Patrons
Do you want to support me and my art? ♥ Patreon ♥ Offer me a coffee ♥ prints ♥ Instagram | Twitter | Tumblr
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“Hermione took out a list of subjects and titles she had decided to search while Ron strode off down a row of books and started pulling them off the shelves at random. Harry wandered over to the Restricted Section.” 
Okay but this is legit a summary of how the trio works: Hermione is methodical and organised, Ron is “fuck this I’m winging it #yolo”, and Harry looks for something illegal to do.
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danascullys:
tumblr: “550 words to say instead of said”
me: do you know what happens……if you’re afraid to use “said”??????
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This has to be true😂
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That first day we were trying to get Dan’s eyes to be green because that’s what they are in the book. And Dan was wearing contact lenses. He was allergic to them and after we made the decision to remove them, but the first day we tried to work through it. So for the last scene when he’s saying good-bye to Hagrid you can see almost his eyes tearing and his eye a little bit swollen and it feels like he’s about to cry. He probably was but he never complained. We removed the contacts and he’s never had green eyes since.
-David Heyman
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Houses as Quotes from my Physics Class
Gryffindor: "It's not just a sword, it's a weapon."
Hufflepuff: "C'mon, what's the point of having a pet giraffe if you don't put it in roller skates?"
Ravenclaw: "Yes, the cow- and what kind of cow is it again? That's right, a chocolate milk cow. That is obviously very important to the question."
Slytherin: "You'd make a good detective. You have those serial killer instincts that could help you figure out their motives."
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I wonder what a Hogwarts graduation ceremony looks like.
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The Harry Potter franchise is kind of interesting because it never really had a uniform aesthetic style. This is most likely because of director and crew changes over the course of the series but is interesting because the first two films have a very medieval look to them with everything appearing very old and with adult wizards wearing flowing robes and grander costumes than the later films which have a Victorian tint to them in terms of style and costuming. I think another reason for the differences is the time span, the movies were filmed over the course of years and so were bound to be influenced by real life fashion. My favorite was the Prisoner of Azkaban which had lots of little magic going on in the backgrounds and to me felt very magical. The film is the jumping point between the original look and the new look that comes to fully be what it is in the fifth movie. Moving away from ancient and medieval the design takes on a more modern style and looks to me very Victorian and perhaps a little 1940′s at times. The design also makes the later films seem sleeker and more urban fantasy. The changes in the third and fourth are less dramatic than in the fifth which also makes use of light tinting a lot more. It’s interesting that such a huge franchise never set a visual tone and later directors were just able to pick and choose what they wanted everything to look like with only a few things being truly fixed in place. 
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The Harry Potter franchise is kind of interesting because it never really had a uniform aesthetic style. This is most likely because of director and crew changes over the course of the series but is interesting because the first two films have a very medieval look to them with everything appearing very old and with adult wizards wearing flowing robes and grander costumes than the later films which have a Victorian tint to them in terms of style and costuming. I think another reason for the differences is the time span, the movies were filmed over the course of years and so were bound to be influenced by real life fashion. My favorite was the Prisoner of Azkaban which had lots of little magic going on in the backgrounds and to me felt very magical. The film is the jumping point between the original look and the new look that comes to fully be what it is in the fifth movie. Moving away from ancient and medieval the design takes on a more modern style and looks to me very Victorian and perhaps a little 1940′s at times. The design also makes the later films seem sleeker and more urban fantasy. The changes in the third and fourth are less dramatic than in the fifth which also makes use of light tinting a lot more. It’s interesting that such a huge franchise never set a visual tone and later directors were just able to pick and choose what they wanted everything to look like with only a few things being truly fixed in place. 
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The Harry Potter franchise is kind of interesting because it never really had a uniform aesthetic style. This is most likely because of director and crew changes over the course of the series but is interesting because the first two films have a very medieval look to them with everything appearing very old and with adult wizards wearing flowing robes and grander costumes than the later films which have a Victorian tint to them in terms of style and costuming. I think another reason for the differences is the time span, the movies were filmed over the course of years and so were bound to be influenced by real life fashion. My favorite was the Prisoner of Azkaban which had lots of little magic going on in the backgrounds and to me felt very magical. The film is the jumping point between the original look and the new look that comes to fully be what it is in the fifth movie. Moving away from ancient and medieval the design takes on a more modern style and looks to me very Victorian and perhaps a little 1940′s at times. The design also makes the later films seem sleeker and more urban fantasy. The changes in the third and fourth are less dramatic than in the fifth which also makes use of light tinting a lot more. It’s interesting that such a huge franchise never set a visual tone and later directors were just able to pick and choose what they wanted everything to look like with only a few things being truly fixed in place. 
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I’d bet five galleons that George Weasley asked McGonagall out to the Yule Ball on a dare.
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