Dragaera

Purple-blue stones and purple-blue marbles.

Tue Apr 5 08:56:04 PDT 2005

On Apr 4, 2005 11:17 PM, FRIEDA2133 at aol.com <FRIEDA2133 at aol.com> wrote:
> Hi Rion,  ( www.opusfest.com )
> 
> While you are working on the T-shirt idea, maybe you can
> work out something with Steven and some artists for this:
> 
> 1.  Clay rolled into a perfect round ball, fired, painted with
> a milky blue glaze and/or a milky purple glaze. Iridescent or
> two colors or one solid color??  Fired again.
> 
> 2.  A suitable pouch. Should it be gray for Jhereg or
> another color for an Easterner?
> 
> 3.  Some suitable text explaining by Steven what it is and the dangers of
> misuse.
> 
> Or ... if a glass bottle was used instead of a ceramic bottle
> ...I wonder if you would get a marble instead of a stone?
> 
> Bye.
> 
> Linda G.
> 
> "ceramic bottle"
> 
> Issola, paperback, Chapter 8 "Fishing Etiquette" , page 128
> 
> "It took the form of a small stone, perfectly round and about an
> inch in diameter; it was very heavy for its size, and had a sort
> of milky hue somewhere in between blue and purple."
> 
> Issola, paperback, Chapter 8, page 130.
> 
> "'Pure amorphia, I said, 'but in a form that can be worked with.'
> 
> Issola, paperback, Chapter 8, page 131.
> 
> "a small, purple-blue stone, smooth as a pearl"
> 
> Issola, paperback, Chapter 12 "Exercising Due Care for the
> Comfort and Safety of Others", page 182.
> 
> 
Wow, that would be an awesome idea! If knew how to do that, or had the
material... Damn. I know I would buy some!

-- 
-C

"Many people hear voices when no-one is there. Some of them are called
mad and are shut up on rooms where they stare at the walls all day.
Others are called writers and they do pretty much the same thing."
-- Meg Chittenden,