When someone tries to tell you that you have to be pale to be goth, just remember this picture.š
Bringing this back! Someone actually stole this post (as in with my quote, I didnāt make the picture) but took the time to cut my username out and now its being shared all over facebook, ruuude~ So here is the original.:P
Tag Archives: advice
ALRIGHT I saw a tutorial on blood going around earlier and it was just sooo abbreviated that it made me kind of peeved so I set out to give what little blood knowledge to the test to make a slightly more robust tutorial. (Credentials drawing? 4 years of art school plus like 16 as a hobbyist. Credentials with blood? I liked watching Dexter once and I have a period.)
OTHER THINGS FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION:
- Drawing from reference is your friend! If you can find life references to go from, fucking GO HAM. Study the shit out of that, the best way to mimic something is to watch it in action. This was put together very quickly but I made sure to do a couple google image searches while I was doing this to see if I was getting the right ideas. This still isnāt perfect. Iām not perfect, I can be wrong!Ā
- ALSO: Do yourself a favor and look up stuff about Blood Pattern Analysis, I found This PDF while fact-checking and that gives a good overview of the basics, though you can probably find even more extensive information with a good google search. Forensic scientists use this all the time as a crime-solving tool and you bet your hiney thereās gonna be resources out there documenting the information. These make handy reference tools!
- Menstrual blood was added for educational purposes, I donāt know if youād necessarily be DRAWING it but if you have a period, it might be something you see regularly and might want to observe. In that case, I tried to document whatād make the composition different because it IS pretty different than blood coming from the rest of the body, if only because itās usually seen with tissue or other fluid.
- Please fullview these if you have trouble reading my handwriting i tried to do these at a high-resolution for that reason
I really loved Interview With The Vampire, but can I enjoy it as a stand alone book? Are there other stand alone books in the series? I’m really busy and don’t exactly have the time to read 12 books. Should I just read the first three? I need advice help
You can enjoy IWTV as a stand-alone book! You can do whatever you want! Itās your life.Ā

However, The Vampire Lestat is a response to that story, itās all the things Lestat wanted to tell Louis but couldnāt, and it only really mentions IWTV briefly. TVL is almost a standalone book but it ends on a cliffhanger, so it makes you want to go on to the next one. And the next, and the next, so thatās sort of why I read all of them.Ā
I would always recommend reading at least the first 3 bc those are generally, fandom-wide, considered the best.
12 books is not that many when you have a lifetime to read them. Iāve re-read all of them except Vittorio (only 1x for him), so theyāre more like 36+ books for me. I read them for different things when I re-read them. People read the Bible over and over and look for different things in it.
Just about any of the books could be stand-alones, you can pick based on which characters you like best. The Vampire Armand could be a stand-alone book, he goes deeper into his story, which he gave in previous books. Some books give a different perspective on previous events in the series (what we call theĀ āunreliable narratorā).
Most stand-aloney:
The Vampire Armand
Blackwood FarmĀ
Prince LestatĀ
PandoraĀ
Vittorio the Vampire
So we reach into the raging chaos, and we pluck some small glittering thing, and we cling to it, and tell ourselves it has meaning, and that the world is good, and we are not evil, and we will all go home in the end
Yes, my fave is problematic. Your fave is also problematic. I am problematic. You are problematic. We are not all 100% politically correct perfect individuals. Someone saying something ignorant and that person being āthe scum of the earthā are not the same. Please learn to recognize the goddamn difference.Ā
Pixars 22 Rules of Story Telling
9 is worth the price of admission, holy crap.
This is genius. So many great writing tips!
And this is why Pixar is a master in their field.
Why do I feel so weird reblogging this⦠this is the weekend dammit!  Anyway, great advice.
Pixar you have no idea how much this actually helps me.
That last one. Every writer/artist should read #22.
I like Lestat so much purely because of how much he reminds me of myself. I fancied myself as looking somewhat like him before even getting into IWTV, and I just keep finding more reflections of myself in his personality. We have incredibly similar philosophies about life, existence, morality and tradition, and even a lot of the same flaws and difficulties relating to others. The main difference is I’m not brave enough to handle being famous.

ā«WE WILL WE WILL ROCK Uā«
Yeah, same here! (except that I donāt look like him at all *cries*) We can go along with him on his journey and gather the reasons for our own philosophical choices and see the mistakes and why he made them, and ask ourselves what we would have done differently, or the same, in his position.
He does have flaws, for sure. Flaws that could spiral anyone into depression. But his lust for life overrides everything ā¤
And I think part of why we all love him against our own better judgment is that even when he royally fracks up, he gets back up, dusts himself off, and careens into the next car.Ā


Things Fic Writers Like:
- nice comments on their fic, even if itās just a smiley face or aĀ āloved this!ā
- kudos on their fic
- people who come into their askboxes to talk about their fic
- photosets made for their fic
- fic rec lists with their fic
- fan art made for their fic
- playlists made for their fic
me, banging your pots and pans together at 3am: the assumption that liking problematic characters means you share their views is toxic. people should not have to constantly defend their views simply because they enjoy a character of questionable nature.
you, attempting to wrestle them from me: indeed, but there comes a responsibility with enjoying problematic characters and it is on those who consume that media to recognize and constantly acknowledge the faults of it rather than sweep them under the rug with a general “i know it’s problematic don’t worry”.
me: it seems both our sides of the argument are valid and hold merit.
you: will you please get out of my house now
your neighbor, shouting through the wall: however when the person enjoying the problematic material is constantly harassed and called out for that content and has to face regular demands to justify their appreciation of that media, then the other party needs to step back and ask what they even want from this confrontation they keep perpetuating. they need to ask themselves if they will be satisfied with any given answer and if not, they need to disengage and deal with their own issues instead of forcing other people to answer for them.
What’s your opinion about the VC lack of PoC characters?
One can criticize a work, create AU fanworks of it, or create an entirely original work. I would encourage everyone to write the story they want to read. Be the change you want to see in the world!

(^Unfortunately, many PoC in VC have unhappy endings. Keep in mind that sheās an evildoer in the book, which wasnāt explicitly stated in the movie. She murdered her clients.)Ā
Iām a straight white lady, but I can understand how frustrating it must be to see one of your favorite authors release novel after novel in one of your favorite series and feel left out of the story bc your race/gender/etc. is not represented (or itās fetishized, or represented negatively). I can understand how it might feel like the author is saying that you donāt exist (or matter enough) to them to place someone like you on their stage. It may be that they would love to write about a character like you but donāt have the knowledge/confidence/etc. to do the character the justice they need.Ā
However, in my opinion, an author is not a vending machine. No matter how successful they are, an author is not required to cater to their readership.Ā Sometimes they make an effort to do so, as in the case with J.K. Rowling supporting her readers in their headcanon of Hermione Granger as a PoC. (Another concise article on that here:Ā X).
AR has always advised us to write the story we would want to read. Publishing houses turned her work down for years until she found one that chose her story for what it was. Knopf felt her story would sell really well so they took the gamble on it. A publishing house doesnāt want to invest huge sums of money in something unless they think the odds are very good that theyāll make a worthwhile profit. I would ask that the criticism be leveled more towards publishers than the authors of stories which lack representation.
In this day and age it is easier than ever before to self-publish and get your story out there. Anna Todd did that with her One Direction fan fiction, āAfterā, and hereās a quote from AR (w/ my underlines) about it bc I feel itās relevant here: [X]Ā

In the same post, AR writes:Ā āAnd in this great world in which we live, no writer is really in direct competition with any other writer. Thereās room for us all. We can each try our personal best to write the books of our dreams and to become the writers of our dreams. And Iām really glad Fifty Shades came along. I am happy for E.L. James. And Iām happy for all the people who like āFifty Shades.ā ā
āā¦The amazing thing about the writing world is that there has always been a lot of room in it, and a lot of heartbreak. Weāre never directly in competition with some one who makes it big; there are so many avenues, so many spots on the bestseller lists of the worldā¦ā¦ Weāre really in competition with ourselves, driven to outdo ourselves. Thatās how I see it anyway.ā
So, write the story you want to see in the world! If itās compelling, others will want to read it, too.
List of more VC PoC under the cut.Ā
(Not including PL characters bc there are so many! And some ppl do not recognize PL as canon.Ā Go to wiki for those.)
David Talbot – he becomes Anglo-Indian
Davis – from the Fang Gang, not explicitly stated other than āblack,ā so African American, possibly.
Merrick Mayfair – mixed raceĀ
Tarquin Blackwood (I think he is, canāt remember specifically), and other supporting characters in Blackwood Farm.
Akasha – from Egypt
Enkil – from Egypt
Khayman – from Egypt
Avicus – from Egypt
Azim –Ā
Himalayan? Maybe? He has bronze skin. Thatās where his temple is.Ā
Benji – Arab, BedouinĀ
Eudoxia – Canāt remember specifically, but I think she is a VoC. She is described as having white skin, but that may be due to her age (centuries old already when Marius meets her).