meridian_rose: pen on letter background  with text  saying 'writer' (Default)
meridian_rose ([personal profile] meridian_rose) wrote2025-08-23 04:41 pm

Small Fandom Big Bang Round 15



The 10,000-word big bang for small fandoms is coming soon!
Author Sign-Ups Open Sept 1 | Artist Sign-Ups Open Nov 1



Opening soon. Any fandom excluding RPF that has less than 2k fics on AO3 qualifies. Artists always needed!
I'm thinking about signing up again. I completed round 13 but didn't participate in round 14.
magnavox_23: Daniel going down on Jack covered by the text 'sorry we're fucking' (Stargate_Jack/Daniel_sorrywerefucking)
'Adíshní Mags ([personal profile] magnavox_23) wrote2025-08-23 11:41 pm
Entry tags:

Manip: "For Now..."

Title: "For Now..."
Artist: [personal profile] magnavox_23
Character/Pairing: Jack/Daniel
Rating: PG

What better way to procrastinate writing these two than to manip them instead...


(Click to embiggen)

meridian_rose: pen on letter background  with text  saying 'writer' (Default)
meridian_rose ([personal profile] meridian_rose) wrote2025-08-23 11:53 am

Sunshine Revival 2025

Sunshine Revival. So it's almost the end of August, it's been chilly for a couple of days, holiday is over, and I'm behind on many aspects of personal journaling, get your words out, and posting backdated things.
So why not lean in to that and do the Sunshine revival from July!

Sunshine-Revival-Carnival-5.png

Read more... )
meridian_rose: pen on letter background  with text  saying 'writer' (Default)
meridian_rose ([personal profile] meridian_rose) wrote2025-08-22 05:43 pm

Craft project round up

craft post roundup

I made various crafts which I posted about for Lands of Magic challenges but haven't posted to my own journal, so here's a roundup.

1. Sackboy - knitted soft figure from a PS5 game

2. Cat headband - knitted headband

3. Cat - Needle felted cat figure

4. Fox - Needle felted figure

5. Pumpkins - knitted pumpkins for Halloween

6. Penguin - Bauble with needle felt and accessories

7. Ian Malcom - soft toy 'collectible' figure from Jurassic Park

8. Lunar New Year Snakes - papercraft snakes

Read more... )
profiterole_reads: (Nobuta wo Produce - Shuji to Akira)
profiterole_reads ([personal profile] profiterole_reads) wrote2025-08-22 05:36 pm

Justice in the Dark

The BL c-drama Justice in the Dark was fascinating! Luo Wei Zhao and Pei Su investigate violent crimes together.

I'm used to contemporary fantasy being adapted into sci-fi for censorship reasons, but contemporary crime being turned into sci-fi is new to me. This is based on one of Priest's novels, and very Guardian-coded (also by Priest, but I didn't get this feeling with her other works).

The plot is quite dark, but if you like competency porn, go for it. Despite censorship, the main pairing gave me a lot of feels from episode 13 onwards.

Note that the first 8 episodes, released in 2023, have proper subtitles, but the other ones, finally released this year in Japan, have terrible MTL subs.
meridian_rose: tabby cat (Lyra) lying on her back with one paw in the air (cat)
meridian_rose ([personal profile] meridian_rose) wrote2025-08-22 03:27 pm

Icon dump

Icons made for various challenges at now-closed landcomm Lands of Magic.

Fandoms: Jeff Goldblum, The Tudors (TV), Hamilton (Miranda), The Borgias (Showtime), Revenge (TV), Black Sails (TV), The Witcher (Netflix), Westworld (TV), Ghost Whisperer, Game of Thrones, Lost Girl (TV), Dr Horrible's Sing-a-long-blog, Legend of the Seeker, Lucifer (TV), Buffy The Vampire Slayer (TV), 13 Reasons Why (TV), Harry Potter (movies), Mean Girls (2004), Pet Rescue Saga (casual game), Star Wars Lego Star Wars (video game)

Read more... )
skieswideopen: An ice cream cone stacked with eight scoops of ice cream in various colours (ice cream)
skieswideopen ([personal profile] skieswideopen) wrote2025-08-21 10:28 pm
Entry tags:

Dear Crossworks Author 2025

I'm very sorry, author. I'll get my letter up on Sunday. I promise.
settiai: (Critical Role -- settiai)
Lynn | Settiai ([personal profile] settiai) wrote2025-08-21 04:14 pm

Critical Role



Critical Role has released more information about their upcoming fourth campaign, and I'm very curious to see just how things end up going with it.

More details from the video and article under the cut. )
profiterole_reads: (Naruto Shippuuden - Sasuke and Naruto)
profiterole_reads ([personal profile] profiterole_reads) wrote2025-08-21 05:29 pm

Captivated, By You

The first episode of Captivated, By You was fun! It's a slice-of-life anime taking place in an all-boys school. As you can guess from the title, there are BL vibes.

It's available on Crunchyroll. It's starting late in the season because there will be only 5 episodes.
impala_chick: (Fic ||  Poly)
impala_chick ([personal profile] impala_chick) wrote2025-08-20 08:02 pm
Entry tags:

Why is she still here?

Feeling like shit emotionally lately, not sure why. Maybe it's because I keep reading my NYT email every morning (and I should stop). Also our closing date for our house keeps getting moved because of all these little inspection-related things that hadn't been completed, and now I have to pay a fee to keep our rate locked or else we'd have to push it back even more. Super frustrating. I just want to get my stuff out of storage and sleep in my own bed and feel like a real adult again :/ My muse has also fled the scene but I've got to get my ass in gear so that I can sign up for [community profile] ficinabox! It's probably my favorite exchange of the year.

In toddler news, she loves to say, "See you next 'morrow!" and she calls Gatorade "Grata", both of which I find very amusing.

I've listened to Reneé Rap's new album Bite Me. It is very high-energy and a lot of the songs are about love triangles and cheating, which makes me super curious about her personal life LOL. It does get a tad bit repetitive overall. My favorite track is Why Is She Still Here? Other stand-outs are good girl and mad.



We have to buy a new washer/dryer for our new house so I've been doing research on washing machines. This article about Washing Machine Settings made me think I've been using washing machines wrong this whole time. I hardly ever used cold setting but I think I should do it more. Also, I want a top-loading machine like we had at our last house but I'm also worried about saving space. Would anyone recommend their washer/dryer?
settiai: (Chipettes -- iconzicons)
Lynn | Settiai ([personal profile] settiai) wrote2025-08-19 11:26 pm

Long Weekend

Welp. I've been posting about this under lock, but let's make a public one too. My younger brother and his wife were supposed to be visiting me this week (with them arriving today), but those plans were cancelled at the last minute due to a combination of several reasons.

I'd already asked off work for the rest of the week, and I'm not taking it back. I'm just going to take a five day weekend and call it a day. Which, you know, I could use the break from work, so it's not a bad thing. And, hey, this way I won't have to worry about a lack of spoons when I have to go back to work like I did when I was off for the Fourth of July and playing D&D all weekend.

Sadly, I don't have much in the way of extra money right now, so I can't do anything fun while I'm off work. I'm fairly stocked on groceries at least, so I won't have to worry about that. I'll take what I can get on that front.

Right now, my plans are to basically switch between playing video games, reading fanfiction, and writing fanfiction (specifically for Black Emporium and the Dragon Age Reverse Bang) for the next five days. We'll see if that changes, but that's what I'm aiming for right now at least.
flareonfury: (Supergirl TV)
Stephanie ([personal profile] flareonfury) wrote2025-08-18 02:24 pm

Fanfic Series: Supergirl (TV): first words spoken (can open a heart)

Title of the Series: first words spoken (can open a heart)
Fandoms: Supergirl (TV)
Pairing: Kara Danvers/Maxwell Lord
Overall Rating: General Audiences
Warnings/Spoilers: Soulmates AU - First Words Spoken, thus Canon Divergence for Season 1. 
Series Summary: Kara/Maxwell Soulmates AU. Takes place after S1 Ep 3 "Fight or Flight". The series will continue to follow the first season as close to canon compliant as I can be until it of course takes turns/twists to focus more on Kara & Maxwell.

"You look taller on TV."
"Where is he?"

- Maxwell and Kara, "Fight or Flight"

Notes: Title comes partly from "Fight Song" by Rachel Platton. Since the song seems so beloved by Supergirl vidders when the series first started, I kinda felt compelled to name this series after it as well as the type of Soulmates AU I'm writing. This is the most recent series that I'm still actively working on - and it's been slow going from 2016.


 


AO3 URL for the Series
jazzy_dave: (bookish)
jazzy_dave ([personal profile] jazzy_dave) wrote2025-08-17 11:06 pm

Book 42 - Lisa Jardine "Worldly Goods"

Lisa Jardine "Worldly Goods: A New History of the Renaissance" (Papermac)



This fascinating book is essentially a look at how important things, and money, were in shaping what we now think of as the world of the Renaissance.

It starts with an analysis of the National Gallery Crivelli annunciation, a "meticulous visual inventory of consumer goods" from across the known world as well as a beautiful work of art - and itself a desirable possession. Renaissance artists were craftsmen for hire, working to order for the rich and powerful - and sitting at table with the tailors, musicians and other salaried members of the household. Others who fell into this category were people who would now perhaps style themselves as lifestyle consultants. You could have a man to advise you on what paintings, antiquities or books to buy to display your wealth and taste. You could even have someone to pre-read the books for you - Sir Philip Sidney had a private reader who annotated a copy of Livy for him with marginal notes referring to modern parallels to the events in the text, and a number of cross-references to modern works on political and military theory.

Conspicuous consumption was an essential aspect of prestige and authority, often backed up by borrowing on a massive scale. Christopher Columbus' proposal to seek a shorter route to the Indies - and therefore bypass the mark-ups which the spice traders put on their goods - was attractive to Ferdinand and Isabella because they were deeply in debt after a series of costly military campaigns. (For the weddings of two of their children in 1495, Isabella had to redeem her crown of gold and diamonds which had been pledged to raise money for the war against Granada.) And fortunes were made for entire families of bankers because they had received trading concessions in return for loans to popes or kings - the Medici wealth was based on monopolistic access to alum, vital for dyeing cloth. You could also make a fortune by having access to the right piece of information - for example, if you knew that two great houses were planning a wedding, you could stock up on fine fabrics while they were relatively cheap.

I think that since this book was published in 1996, its thesis has become much more widely accepted. But even so, Jardine finds some eye-catching links between things - consumption and discovery - and broad historical changes. The rebuilding of St Peter's Church in Rome, involving some of the greatest artists of the day including Michelangelo and Raphael, was so expensive that Pope Leo X issued a particularly grandiose indulgence, granting remission not just from sins already committed, but "purchasers and their relatives were forgiven every conceivable sin they had committed, or might commit, and exempted from all suffering in Purgatory, advancing immediately to Heaven". The indulgences were sold particularly hard in Germany, because the papacy had agreed that half the proceeds would go to paying off the debts of the Archbishop of Mainz. It was after the issue of this particular indulgence that Martin Luther nailed his theses to the church door at Wittenberg.

This is definitely a macro-history, ranging across the European continent from Scotland to the Ottoman Empire and in time across a couple of centuries. I am not sure that there was a coherent argument running all the way through it - it's more of a bag of delights, studded with interesting facts that you feel Jardine couldn't bring herself to leave out. I particularly liked the story of a map which deliberately placed the Molucca islands in the wrong place to back up Spain's territorial claim to them - and the related treaty stated that "during the time of this contract, {the Moluccas} shall be regarded as situated in such place" as shown on the map. Even that was only a bargaining chip - as soon as the claim was established the Spanish relinquished them in exchange for cash - "far more valuable to Charles, beset, in established Hapsburg fashion, by enormous debts to his bankers, than monopoly trading rights on the far side of the world".

Illustrated with monochrome and colour plates, which adds to the appeal of the book, I would heartily recommend this as a good read.
jazzy_dave: (books n tea)
jazzy_dave ([personal profile] jazzy_dave) wrote2025-08-17 10:52 pm

Book 41 - Simon Reynolds "Retromania"

Simon Reynolds "Retromania: Pop Culture's Addiction to Its Own Past" (Faber & Faber)



Fittingly, there's a lot in "Retromania" that will strike many readers as pretty familiar. Reynolds engages in some righteous boomer-hating, asking if we'll ever be free of sixties-era musicians and their needless, endless nostalgia tours. He also goes neo-Luddite for a while, bitching about newer technologies' reduced fidelity and disregard for the album format. Though Reynolds presents his arguments well, you can get this stuff elsewhere. "Retromania" really gets interesting – perhaps even vital – when Reynolds posits that artifacts and music of the past function as a species of cultural capital and examines how rock scenes look to both their own pasts and society's collective future for inspiration. In doing so, he neatly turns some well-worn rock narratives on their heads. He's not afraid of the obscure, either, examining the role that vintage clothing and record shops played in the development of both the punk and hippie subcultures and delving deep into the history of Northern Soul, a scene I'd only heard about in passing. The problem – as Reynolds sees it – is that the technological and stylistic obsolescence that drove this economy is, thanks to YouTube, MP3s and torrents, now itself a thing of the past. Are new things, or even fresh takes on old things, a possibility in a world where the entirety of the past is available to all of us?

Reynolds doesn't really have an answer, of course, and I think he might have done well to include a clearer definition of what constitutes "newness." It doesn't seem that Reynolds is himself a musician, so much of his discussion, like so much rock criticism, seems to be a discussion of musical style rather than content. His arguments seem to chase each other around the text, too, perhaps even contradicting each other, but that is part of the book's appeal: the past, as Reynolds sees it, can either trap musicians in a permanent yesterday or provide inspiration for forward-thinking projects.

In the last chapters of the book, he examines how some retrophiliac acts like Broadcast and Boards of Canada have used the twentieth century's own ideas of the future to create hauntingly personal music that takes advantage of modern technology's ability to preserve large chunks of the recent past more or less indiscriminately. He also seems to argue that pop culture, and perhaps people in general, have lost faith in the future: while we get excited about techno gadgetry, most of us no longer believe that the future will be better, or substantially different, than the present. Still, when he examines the astonishing quantity of bravely experimental electronic music that followed the launching of Sputnik in the late fifties and the nineties' explosively creative, ruthlessly futuristic rave scene, he seems to conclude that a link exists between creativity and the belief that our tomorrows will be better than our yesterdays.

I can't say that I always found the author's case entirely convincing – indeed, I found myself arguing with him throughout the book – but he's provided some genuinely fresh ideas about pop music's relationship to its past and future that people who take their music collections as seriously as their mortgage payments won't want to miss, and from me , an addicted music collector this book is highly recommended
profiterole_reads: (Nü Er Hong - Shi Yi and Hua Yu Tang)
profiterole_reads ([personal profile] profiterole_reads) wrote2025-08-17 05:41 pm

A Wild and Ruined Song by Ashley Shuttleworth

A Wild and Ruined Song by Ashley Shuttleworth was amazing! It's the fourth and final book of the Hollow Star Saga, a modern story mixing fae courts and Greek mythology.

This was a splendid finale from start to end, tying up many plotlines from the previous novels and making all the protagonists shine at one point or another.

There's a new non-binary main character, major f/f and double m/m, with one of the m/m pairings being ace4aro.
magnavox_23: Jack and Daniel are huddled together in a ditch, weapons drawn, ready to fight. The caption reads "With you". (Stargate_Jack/Daniel_with_you)
'Adíshní Mags ([personal profile] magnavox_23) wrote2025-08-17 10:38 pm
Entry tags:

Tensity...

Question: do you find it harder to read/follow fic written in present tense?

Past tense is the standard, and I don't know why, but a handful of times I have just automatically started writing in present tense. No particular reason, but I am curious if it presents an issue for anyone? I am toying with whether to change this whole thing to past tense (not terribly difficult) to see if it reads better?

Thoughts?

rogueslayer452: (Firefly. Malcolm Reynolds.)
rogueslayer452 ([personal profile] rogueslayer452) wrote2025-08-15 10:35 pm
Entry tags:

Fanvid Friday: Firefly, Part Deux

We've done the impossible, and that makes us mighty. )

My Comments: A little late to the party with the announcement of brand new shiny updated Funko Pops (of all the Serenity crew this time), I wanted to share another round of Firefly fanvids that I rediscovered and remembered from years ago, to give that sense of nostalgia once again. The first one is by [livejournal.com profile] heresluck, who I remember back during LJ created some fantastic fanvids from various fandoms. This one is my favorite in regards to Firefly, the song fits the tone and mood the vidder was going for, and it's just very beautifully done. The second fanvid is set to "Mal's Song", an iconic Firefly filk song. There had been various fanvids set to this, but this one really matches the scenes to the words of the song nicely.
flareonfury: (Bucky Barnes)
Stephanie ([personal profile] flareonfury) wrote2025-08-16 01:19 am

MCU100 - a weekly drabble challenge

 mcu100
[community profile] mcu100 is a weekly drabble challenge for the Marvel Cinematic Universe!

o1. Join the community & you can JOIN AT ANYTIME!!
o2. Read the rules/FAQ. THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT.
o3. Once you're a member and have read the rules, be prepared to join a team.
o4. Start writing once the prompt is posted! & Earn points for your team to win!
o5. If your team wins, you get a badge!

This first prompt will last two weeks, from August 16th to 30.
settiai: (Kes -- settiai (TriaElf9))
Lynn | Settiai ([personal profile] settiai) wrote2025-08-16 12:22 am
Entry tags:
jazzy_dave: (books n tea)
jazzy_dave ([personal profile] jazzy_dave) wrote2025-08-14 06:16 pm

Book 40 - Richard King "How Soon Is Now?"

Richard King "How Soon Is Now?:: The Madmen and Mavericks who made Independent Music 1975-2005" (Faber & Faber)



This is a dense and involving tome of roughly 600 pages. Even though this book is very long and took me two months to finish, it doesn't feel overlong; in fact, I felt it glossed over certain people and labels (Mute gets a chapter all to itself towards the beginning, then is barely mentioned until the end when it's sold off; meanwhile 4AD and Factory all get multiple chapters).

That said, this is a very interesting book on a subject I really had never thought about prior to reading. I loved the music covered in the book, and had never considered the people who ran the labels it came out on. I thought the book might get bogged down in business specifics, being about labels and all, but the author smartly focuses on the individual label heads and their sort of "character arcs" rather than deals and money (though that shows up too, of course).

In many ways this reads as a sort of British version of Our Band Could Be Your Life. That book, one of my favorites, profiles 12 bands in the 80s American Indie scene, but since many of those artists either ran their own labels or were close to the label heads, it ends up covering the business side as well. This book definitely focuses on the business end, but there is plenty of info about the bands as well (and when Blast First shows up, it even covers the same bands as OBCBYL).

I'm not sure I could recommend this book if you weren't at least interested in some of the bands mentioned on the back cover of the book, since it is quite long, but this expansive history of independent record labels is definitely not as dry as it may seem at first glance, and as with all good books about music, it inspired me to go away and explore or revisit some of the key tracks from the era.

For example, I'd completely forgotten about Colourbox despite loving their music when it was released - thirty years on they still sound wonderful. I was also very interested to read how a massive hit single effectively stopped their career in its tracks.

It was a remarkable era for popular music and this book is a compelling reminder of a glorious and important musical era. The book concludes in 2005 when, in a reverse of the rest of the music industry, many modern independent labels are prospering relative to the major labels. That said, if this book proves one thing, it's that it is very difficult to run a small and successful independent record label - and always has been.