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July 26-28, 2022 - Some headshots I did awhile back of a few TES characters.
Individuals images below the cut.
Martin Septim - TES IV: Oblivion
Tolfdir - TES V: Skyrim
Cyrus the Restless - TES Adventures: Redguard
Mistress Therana - TES III: Morrowind
Vanus Galerion - TES Online
Archmaster Bolvyn Venim - TES III: Morrowind
#stellastra's art#six fanarts#The Elder Scrolls#tes fanart#Redguard#Morrowind#Oblivion#Skyrim#ESO#The Elder Scrolls Online#the elder scrolls iii: morrowind#the elder scrolls iv: oblivion#The Elder Scrolls Adventures: Redguard#Dunmer#Altmer#Nord#Martin Septim#Brother Martin#Tolfdir#Cyrus the Restless#Therana#Vanus Galerion#Bolvyn Venim#back when I drew these forever ago one my friends joked that I made Bolvyn Venim look a bit like a Dunmeri Walter White and I can't unsee i#also I remember my old laptop breaking when I first got these requests and it took me forever to actually get around to drawing these
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I fucking love making these
#Skyrim#skyrim elder scrolls#Skyrim memes#the elder scrolls#Dragonborn#dovakhiin#Lydia#skyrimlydia#Skyrim mage#jarlbulgruuf#general tullius#tolfdir
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Ao3 (2800 words)
In Betony, she had flown goshawks with eyes like coins of fire. In the frozen north, she flies stranger birds. When the enormous sea-eagle beats its beak thrice against her windowpane, insistent as a door-to-door peddler, she stands calmly from her desk to let it in.
“Well?” she asks, unsmiling.
The barbarian of air wings in on a gust of wind and snow that whips through her papers, scattering some Synod tract and an adept’s treatise on runestones. Its talons clack on the back of her chair. Beneath the fierce, hoary brows of old men and birds of prey, its mismatched eyes—one brown, the other bluish-green—flash with a question of their own.
She gestures, eyebrows raised, to the cloak hung by the door. Then she turns to close the window. When the click of claws on tile becomes the slap of bare feet, she repeats herself. “Well?”
“He’s as stubborn as ever,” a querulous voice grumbles at her back. Cloth rustles. Her spare chair scrapes across the floor, then creaks. “Heard me out and sent me off. It can’t be done, Mirabelle.”
“If it couldn’t be done, Tolfdir, I wouldn’t ask it of you.” Mirabelle Ervine, Master Wizard of the College of Winterhold, thumbs a smudge from the stained glass. It squeaks. “I would do it myself.”
She would have harsh words, under any other circumstances, for a mage foolish enough to alter his own shape—but her Master of Alteration has walked the world as wolf and otter, elk and wild boar, since she was a child struggling to cast colored lights. When she turns from the window, she almost smiles to see him hunched hawkish in the cloak: a frail old man who, in three days, has flown a journey that would take her several sennights.
“You ought to have gone yourself,” he says anyway, patting his windswept beard back into place. He seldom looks weary after his adventures. The light in his eyes—one brown, the other bluish-green—is the light of one who has outraced clouds. “He never listened to old men. But to old friends, my dear, he may yet unbar his door.”
Mirabelle waves a hand. The sheafs of strewn paper stack themselves on her desk, probably out of order. “I’m needed here. I can’t be long away.”
“Phinis could.” Tolfdir helps himself to her tea. Miraculous, she thinks, that all his flapping hadn’t sent the cup skidding to Atmora. “I remember the three of you knocking about as prentices. Couldn’t separate you.”
Mirabelle tries to picture poor Phinis, who pales when asked to venture into town, on the next karve to the Hjaal. When she surfaces from the fancy, less plausible by far than the Synod’s treasure-maps, the old man’s welkin eyes are watching her.
“Why now, Master Wizard?” he asks, not ungently.
His tea, now, Mirabelle thinks. She goes to the shelf for another cup. “Pardon?”
“Falion left us years ago.” The eagle looks out at her from Tolfdir’s face. “You let him go. Why ask him back now?”
Mirabelle’s fingers pause in midair. Most of her clayware is chipped. Ancano, when she’d interviewed him last, had lifted the cup she’d set out for him with near-imperceptible amusement—as if, she’d thought then, he were indulging thoughts of dropping it.
“It seems to me,” she says, her voice hard for all its softness, “that we have invited enemies into our house, and shut friends outside.”
“Ah.” Tolfdir’s cup clinks on her desk. “I saw a knarr sailing this way, you know, while I was up.” He pauses, then clears his throat. “East Empire Company, I thought.”
* * *
When she takes the stairs of the Archmage’s tower two by two, wound tight with the news, Ancano is already in yarak. Perhaps he has his own eyes in the air.
“No good will come of a Haafing ship testing these waters,” he’s saying when she slips into the Archmage’s study. She’s come to know Ancano better than she’d like; whenever he’s pressing a point, as he’s doing now, his voice takes on the high, humming urgency of a kite’s whistle. “We must signal at once for it to turn about.”
“Turn about?” Savos Aren’s hand is already tangled in his beard. The bewildered crease in his brow unbends when he sees Mirabelle, but does not disappear. “The College of Winterhold is not a port authority, Emissary. Nor is it a lighthouse.”
“Indeed,” says Mirabelle crisply, taking a stand beside his chair, “I should think that much good will come of a merchant ship, under the circumstances—this is the first,” she points out, “since the leads opened in spring.” They’d lasted the winter, as usual, on lutefisk. Even she is beginning to tire. “Our stores are running low.”
Savos, heartened, tries weakly for a joke. “Much goods?”
Ancano’s golden eyes glint up at Mirabelle. He and the Archmage are at table, lit blue by the drifting magelights: Ancano leaning forward, Savos huddled in his robe of office like an old man in his shawl. He never drinks anything stronger than the watered-milk tea favored so far north, where vegetal life is scant. His cup sits untouched. Ancano has supplied, from some shelf of his own stores, a jug of wine.
“Mistress Ervine,” he says with a courteous smile. The magelights chase a shadow across his narrow face. “You must sit.”
She must do nothing. She holds her face immobile.
“I was sharing my concerns with the Archmage.” If Ancano sees the pack-ice in her eyes, he gives no sign of it. He waves a black-gloved hand. His servant, an ancient elf with a blotch like a winestain on his cheek, hastens forward to fill a third cup. “I fear that this vessel, if it persists in its course, will be seized by the Jarl as a prize for the Stormcloak fleet.”
Mirabelle ignores both the wine and the servant, who always smiles in terror when acknowledged. “Korir lacks the men.”
“Then the ship will blunder into Ulfric’s blockade.” Ancano’s smiling again, close-lipped and motionless as an Aldmeri bust. “That it hasn’t already is miraculous.”
“The College is not party to the recent—rising tensions, shall we say, between Haafingar and Eastmarch,” says Savos, who has as many euphemisms for civil war as a skald has kennings. “I fail to see how the requisition of a knarr—by either fleet, Emissary—is a matter in which we have any right to intervene.”
Ancano’s face falls into a prim, prudent frown. “You must see, Archmage, how a disturbance in Winterhold’s waters would endanger the College’s neutral position—”
* * *
“—and on it went, like that,” Mirabelle finishes, stoic. “The Archmage remains undecided.”
“Of course he does,” says Faralda, reaching for the pitcher. “More blaand?”
She’d come to Faralda’s gatehouse to compare admission records—and, she admits, to cool a headache in the courtyard’s frigid wind. She’s stayed for supper. Her Master of Destruction is the terror and delight of the village’s braver children, who rattle her gate and barter foodstuffs for feats of witchery: fountains of sparks, sky-whales shaped of smoke, magefires juggled from hand to hand. One small petitioner had traded a fat square of blubber, now cubed and salted in Faralda’s only bowl, for a field of ice on which she and her siblings could play stickball.
Faralda refills their cups with the Vetrings’ creamy whey-wine, then takes another morsel from the bowl—with finger and thumb, as the villagers do. Her elbows brace the table like an old salt’s. “Company knarr, Tolfdir said?”
“Yes.” Faralda had been a ship’s mage, once. Mirabelle studies her for a moment—her hair that musses in all weather, the rigging-lines of laughter in her face—then rubs her forehead, resolving to drink no more blaand. “This ship. Why would it—”
Faralda, looking pained, says, “She.”
“—why would she sail into Stormcloak waters?”
A pause.
“You seek counsel,” says Faralda, a slow smile sharpening her face, “from your future Master Wizard—”
“Faralda.”
“East Empire Company,” says Faralda, as if that explains everything. She waves a hand that shines with grease in the firelight. “The Imperial Fleet can fit in a puddle. Mede could float out his toy ships to be rammed to flinders by Ulfric’s drekar—or,” she says, longships burning in her eyes, “he could let Cousin Vici and her mercenaries defend their searoads.”
Mirabelle frowns. “With one knarr?”
“A maiden to lure out the dragons, perhaps.”
Always evocative, Faralda’s fancies. Mirabelle pictures a line of dragon-headed longships gliding to the knarr, their oars churning, their painted snarls crusted with ice—and their hulls splintering, brittle as kindling, beneath the bolts and prows of a host of Company ships.
“Let us not speak of dragons,” she says, reaching wearily into the bowl. Since the recent news from Helgen, she’s caught herself eyeing the sky every time she crosses the quadrangle. “Ancano has the right of it, then, that this ship is likely to stir trouble.”
Faralda sniffs. “You ought to do the very opposite of whatever he suggests.”
“His counsel is often sound. That’s the trouble. If it weren’t, Savos—the Archmage,” Mirabelle corrects herself, “would not entertain him.” She thinks of dragons settling on the ramparts, crushing the crenels between their toes. “What can he want with us?”
“Remember how he tried to cram that monstrous desk up the stairwell? The one he brought out of Valenwood?”
“Solid graht-oak.” Enthir, pacing her office, had almost wept with rage. She can’t laugh, now, recalling how the thing had rained drawers on several Aldmeri attachés.
“He wants what that knarr wants.” Faralda’s smile is thin and taut. “Something costly to bring home.”
* * *
Evening creeps early, on misty feet, into the lumber-town of Morthal. The watchmen have been jumpy, of late, as well they should; their torchlights bob past the wizard’s window in twos, like great eyes gleaming in the dark, as they creak up and down the bridge. The fog muffles their steps. The wizard, going about his evening chores, smiles and listens.
“Is he in there?” asks one of the watchmen.
“Aye,” says another, and spits.
If he were out, they’d spit at that, too. The wizard raises his eyebrows, nonplussed, and scrubs a crust of pottage from a pewter plate—
Falion.
The plate clatters to the floor. When the wizard whirls with a spell on his lips and a washrag in his hand—anticipating fiends, fire, fool neighbors with pitchforks—he finds his hearthroom empty.
He stares about him at what his sister, with twinkling eyes, calls his instruments of sorcery: the great cookpot, the garlic-strings, the besom and staff by the door. Then he sighs and flicks the rag aside. “You would bespeak me while I’m scouring dishes.”
The voice, cool and familiar, rises in his mind like a wry notion of his own. I trust I did not catch you unawares.
“I will tell you what I told Tolfdir, and no more.” Things stranger than Mirabelle Ervine have spoken into Falion’s mind. He stoops for the plate. “My talents are much needed here. Much maligned, as well, but no matter—I have found in the marshes of Morthal my masters, my mystic tomes, my métier.” His own stern, seamed face frowns back at him from the pewter. “If Aren himself groveled at my feet, I would not return.���
Apprentices had been awed, once, by his dire proclamations: heed my words, and meddle not with each other's summoning-circles, and so. Never Mirabelle. Perhaps I wished only to speak to you.
“Speak to me, then, of the sorcery of Winterhold.” The face reflected in the plate would make a bitter meal. He sets it aside. “Of the marvels its mages have wrought. Of Mirabelle Ervine”—his voice gentles, then—“and her miracles.”
He can almost see her desk, cluttered with distractions of all description, and her terse smile. She strikes back. How is Agni?
“My young ward,” says Falion, after a pause, “shows some promise.”
To clasp one's mind with the mind of another mage—master, pupil, friend—is to do more than converse. He’s known Mirabelle since she was a prentice; the keen and steady stare that had followed him in his youth passes through him now, insubstantial, searching his mind for the child. The byre in which he’d found her—the reek of damp, the rotting straw. The murrain she’d spelled from Eivor’s cattle. Her first magelight, bright and startled as her smile. His terror that he’ll teach her ill, that she’ll end like his last pupil—
That, says Mirabelle softly, was not your fault.
“I know.” Falion flicks a taut hand. The fire in his hearth bursts up; the dishes, clattering like a draugr’s mail, stack themselves on the shelf. “And you know. And the rest of you, chasing shadows and squabbling over chairs—Mirabelle,” he murmurs with ferocity, sweeping his arm in an arc that rattles every shutter, “how can you stay?”
A pause.
These are tempestuous times. Mirabelle’s voice, to his surprise, is tinged with weary humor. If a dragon lands in the forecourt, who will remind it that we wizards are beyond worldly affairs?
Falion blinks. Then, despite everything, he smiles.
“If you need me,” he says to the empty room, “truly need me, my old friend—I will come.” He shakes his head. “But not before.”
“Falion,” calls a small voice from the doorway, “are you talking to dwarves?”
He turns. The child, picking sprigs of heather from her hair, greets him with a hesitant smile; she’s been in the marshes again, loosing coneys from his snares. The presence in his mind, with mingled frustration and warmth, flickers out.
“Agni.” He’ll scold her later. He raises an eyebrow and plucks a twig from behind her ear. “I was speaking with—a former colleague.”
“A wizard?” Her grin has a gap in it; the loose tooth must have come out. “A College wizard?”
“Were the snares empty again?”
“A College wizard, Falion?”
She’d been baking bread with Jonna when Tolfdir arrived. Small mercies. “Perhaps not for much longer.”
His apprentice still believes, somehow, in wonders: need-fires and marshfires, fish that grant wishes, wizards in the north that make the skylights dance. She frowns as if betrayed. “Why?”
“If you saw the College, child,” says Falion, kneeling to help her with her boots, “you would know.”
* * *
On the deck of the Valravn, the knarr creaking through the ice off the Vetring coast, a man in shabby furs smiles in surprise. His eyes have frozen shut.
“Sten, lad,” he calls to the steersman who’s been kind to him, kinder than he deserves, on the long, careful journey through the leads: a young man, quick to laugh, whose brothers have all gone south to war. They could be in his daughter’s centuria, he thinks, joking with her over a supper of mashed grain. They could be heads on spears. The wind saws his face like a carving-knife. “My pipe’s out.”
“Here you are, then, Master Clerk,” says a good-natured voice by his ear, followed by the mineral clack of struck flint. A hand swathed in fishskin turns his face for inspection. “Kyne caught you a nip, has she?”
“Don’t fuss.” His face is nearly too stiff to force a smile. “It’s only the lashes.”
“Well”—the hand tugs gently at his sleeve—“come away from the side. You’ll have your last cold bath, sir, if we meet a floe and pitch. And I want to watch you sell snow to those Vetrings.”
Lumber, in fact, and gruit, meal, mead. None are why the clerk is here; someone else will get rid of them, in due course. He doesn’t move. “In a moment. I want to see the school.”
Sten brushes the snow from his shoulders—fuss—and bustles off to haul some line or other. The wind that freezes men solid in their sleep closes around the clerk, whirling away the creak of rigging, the grumble of ice, the boatswain’s busy shouts. He’s alone with it again. When he breathes in deep, it burns on the way down like a clean, destroying flame; when he holds his pipe-bowl to his eye and waits for the lashes to thaw, the warmth is no different than the chill.
The dead in their doorways of fire, he thinks, must feel this way: blind, bright, with all that they love behind them. He leans forward a little. Let this sermon be consolation to those—
Something trickles down his face. His eye unsticks.
“Ai, cardehni,” he says, appalled. A great grin cracks the ice of his face. He steps back, leaning on his cane, and cranes his head to better see. “Sten, lad—what happens if a wizard sneezes?”
The boy’s laugh bursts over the ice. High above them, rearing out of a screaming cloud of kittiwakes, towers the wizards’ school: a fortress leaning, on its chunk of frozen rock, as though a sudden noise might knock it over.
#skyrim#microfic#college of winterhold#mirabelle ervine#tolfdir#faralda#ancano#savos aren#falion#agni#oc tag#ravi#and...sten :)
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Tolfdir
Art for The Elder Scrolls: Legends
*Artist Unknown* if anyone knows the artist comment below
#the elder scrolls#tes#art#concept art#fantasy#skyrim#tolfdir#college of winterhold#the elder scrolls legends#theme day
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Tolfdir: Is anyone going to tell me what's going on in here?!
Onmund: It's kind of complicated, but J'Zargo—
Tolfdir: Got it. Forget I asked.
#i feel like I've done this wuote before? but not with these people??#tolfdir#onmund#j'zargo#college of winterhold#nerevar queue and star#incorrect quotes#incorrect elder scrolls#incorrect skyrim quotes#tes#the elder scrolls#skyrim#the elder scrolls v: skyrim#source: tumblr
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"show me what you've got, Dragonborn"/The guys of skyrim who give the quest(TES:V)
#the elder scrolls#skyrim#aela the huntress#nazir skyrim#galmar stone fist#tolfdir#mercer frey#brynjolf#legate rikke
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Am I completely oblivious? Has Tolfdir always had heterochromia?
#skyrim#the elder scrolls v: skyrim#elder scrolls#modded skyrim#tes#tesblr#college of winterhold#Tolfdir
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"All right, let's settle down. I suppose we can try something practical..."
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okay you know what. fuck it. tolfdir thirst thursday.
(it is wednesday.)
bonus: me when i uh. when um. when im looking at that old man's hands
#do you see my vision. do you understand why i think hes hot#if you dont i cant explain myself any further youll just have to take my word for it#anyway#sketches#skyrim#tolfdir
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Incorrect Skyrim Quotes
Yep, we’re doing these again
Tolfdir: Arch-Mage, I don’t recognize that voice! Who was that?!
Circe: A friend Tolfdir! I do have more than one.
Urag: No you don’t!
#elder scrolls#skyrim#tes#the elder scrolls#elder scrolls skyrim#incorrect quote#incorrect quotes#incorrect skyrim quotes#incorrect Skyrim#incorrect college of Winterhold#Skyrim oc#oc#oc post#urag gro shub#Tolfdir#source: trollhunters#Circe is highly antisocial#vel talks
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finally attending school after all this time
#skyrim#tes skyrim#the elder scrolls#fae's skyrim screenshots#tolfdir#onmund#j'zargo#lucien lachance#erandur
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https://archiveofourown.org/works/59215213
Talvas could not breathe. This continued, Talvas choking and coughing desparately, trying to catch a single breath, spasming uncontrollably. He could hear Neloth berating him, perhaps even yanking at his shoulders and hair, but could not make out any words or actions over the ringing in his ears and his own attempted retching. The world around him turned monochromatic and dim as he struggled for breath before everything: the walls, the floor, his hands, Neloth’s voice, all vanished completely.
He did not know exactly what happened between then and when he opened his eyes next, but he was immediately aware of Neloth lurched with his hands on him as he was laid out on a table usually reserved for dissecting spriggans. A stream of irate consciousness continued from the elder mer’s lips that Talvas had clearly missed the first half of. He knew what he was saying, though. He’d heard it before.
“-irresponsible to continue your apprenticeship if you continue this self-destructive behaviour! There will be NO more of it in my Tower, and should I find you abusing it at the blasted Retching Netch I shall personally tear you apart and feed you to the ash hoppers!” He screeched in anger, hand yanking back after being spread squarely in the middle of Talvas’ chest for however long it had been magically keeping the younger mer’s heart beating.
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#x#haela#ancano#tolfdir#skyrim#skyrim screenshots#skyrim screencaps#tesv#skyrim scenery#tesv screenshot#tes v skyrim#oc#college of winterhold#good intentions#dragonborn#dovahkiin
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Tolfdir browser history
> How to turn off adaptive brightness on Magelight spell
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Ancano, about Tolfdir and the Eye of Magnus: Talking to someone about a shared interest and realizing they're a common enjoyer while you're demented.
#thatskygame#ancano#tolfdir#eye of magnus#college of winterhold#nerevar queue and star#incorrect quotes#incorrect elder scrolls#incorrect skyrim quotes#tes#the elder scrolls#skyrim#the elder scrolls v: skyrim#source: twitter
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