Entry tags:
Magic Monday

The image? I've decided to trace, as far as I can, my own occult lineage in photos. We're still tracing Juliet Ashley's end of the lineage. Two weeks ago I posted an image of her fourth teacher, Arthur Edward Waite, the Golden Dawn alumnus who passed onto her the rituals that became the foundation for the Fellowship of the Hermetic Rose. Waite, in turn, got his knowledge from the founders of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Last week I posted an image of one of these, the redoubtable William Wynn Westcott; this is Westcott's partner and rival in the project, Samuel Liddell Mathers. Another Freemason with a passion for the occult, and like Westcott a genuine scholar and mage, Mathers didn't have the organizational skills to keep the order together once Westcott stepped down from the leadership, and the Golden Dawn promptly blew itself to pieces in the squabbles that followed. Mathers remained in charge of one of the fragments thereafter, and he and his branch of the order will appear again once I get into some of the other ends of my lineage.
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***This Magic Monday is now closed--as in, no further comments will be put through. See you next week!***
Re: Writing as Magic and Miniature Theaters
1) Most D&D players these days don't make a ton of use out of miniatures, so if you go searching for mini stuff using terms like "D&D" you might have trouble finding what you want. Miniature wargames, on the other hand, are all about this. The word "terrain" is used for the scenery, rather than the figures, and there are all kinds of tutorials on how to make everything from hills to ruined buildings to yes, standing stones (high-density pink/blue insulation foam is a good choice for getting the look, but maybe not as good magically!).
2) Scale can be useful to know about if you're tracking down/making such things. The most common scale is "28mm" which means that a human figure is roughly 28mm tall. This method is not as accurate as the ratio scales preferred by folks who build model vehicles (like 1:144 or the like), but is more immediately relevant to folks focused on "how big are the figures?". Games Workshop makes the most popular fantasy miniature game, Warhammer, and its back catalog has a lot of mostly D&D-relevant stuff, but they're pricey. More recently, apparently 3D printers have become popular, especially for less common scales like 15mm.
I've been into the miniature side of the hobby almost as long as RPGs, so feel free to hit me up if you'd like to discuss!
Cheers,
Jeff
Re: Writing as Magic and Miniature Theaters
I noticed the wargames influence. Took a lot of searching to find a figure without a weapon or clear intent to kill something/someone. Been looking on Etsy, too. It has a number of shops selling neat figures without the mean faces or weapons. Lots of 3D printed figures from what I can tell.
Terrain! Got it. Will look around for tutorials.
Instead of having a game board I am looking at putting together a wooden cube frame. The idea being I can hang things as part of the scene. Lights, ribbons, symbols, and the like.
Thanks again,
Eric