by Bill Tiepelman
Tide of the Thunder Queen
When a storm goddess remembers she was once human, the ocean itself must change. Tide of the Thunder Queen is a mythic tale of grief, power, and the courage it takes to feel deeply after loss.
by Bill Tiepelman
Tide of the Thunder Queen
When a storm goddess remembers she was once human, the ocean itself must change. Tide of the Thunder Queen is a mythic tale of grief, power, and the courage it takes to feel deeply after loss.
by Bill Tiepelman
The Rooted Sage
In a twilight forest where the air is thick with the scent of pine and damp earth, a colossal tree rises, ancient and revered. Its roots, vast and knotted, snake across the forest floor like ancient veins of wisdom, gripping the ground with a fierce resilience born of centuries. These roots wind through stones, dip beneath fallen leaves, and disappear into the soil, creating an intricate web of life and memory. Each root tells a story, bearing witness to the passing of countless seasons, holding within them the secrets of the earth. But it is at the tree's heart where the mystery deepens. There, nestled within the gnarled bark and rough wood, a face emergesβsolemn, ageless, and profoundly human in its serenity. The faceβs eyes are closed, lips gently curved in a tranquil expression, as though lost in deep meditation. This is no mere tree; it is the Rooted Sage, an ancient being whose presence carries an air of silent wisdom and boundless peace. In its stillness, the face embodies an unbroken communion with the cosmos, as if it has reached an understanding that transcends words, thoughts, and time itself. Above, the treeβs branches stretch upwards and outwards, reaching toward the heavens in a symphony of organic curves and twists. Each branch seems to follow a path set by an unseen hand, curling skyward as if drawn by the stars themselves. As twilight deepens, the branches blur into the night, merging with constellations and swirling galaxies that twinkle against the darkening sky. The boundaries between sky and earth dissolve here, as if the treeβs branches have become an extension of the cosmic dance, a link between worlds. In the shadow of the Rooted Sage, a lone figure sits, cross-legged and still, enveloped by a soft, ethereal glow that seems to emanate from the very bark of the tree. The figure is draped in simple robes, face calm and eyes closed, mirroring the expression of the treeβs face above. In their silent communion, the seeker and the tree become reflections of one another, two beings bound by a shared reverence for the mysteries that pulse through this timeless forest. As the figure sits in meditation, the forest itself seems to hold its breath. No birds call from the trees, no leaves rustle in the wind. Silence blankets the grove, a deep, resonant stillness that speaks to something far older than human memory. In this quietude, the seeker feels the boundaries of self begin to dissolve, senses attuning to the slow, steady rhythm of the Rooted Sageβs presence. There, beneath the starlit sky, the seeker begins to understand that they are not separate from this place; they are as much a part of the forest as the roots that burrow beneath them, as integral to the cosmos as the stars overhead. Time flows differently here, stretching out into an unbroken stream that neither rushes nor stalls. Moments pass, but they carry no weight. The seeker senses the treeβs stories within the silenceβancient tales woven into its very bark, whispers of cycles and seasons, growth and decay, birth and rebirth. They realize that the treeβs roots connect them not only to the soil but to the endless march of time, a reminder of the delicate balance between life and death, creation and destruction. The Rooted Sage invites all who enter its realm to listen, not with ears but with a quiet, inner awareness. Here, the questions that often gnaw at the human soulβWho am I? Why am I here? What is my purpose?βbegin to dissolve, replaced by an acceptance that transcends the need for answers. In the presence of the Rooted Sage, the seeker discovers a truth beyond language, a wisdom that doesnβt reside in knowledge but in the deep, abiding peace of simply being. Hours, perhaps days, might pass as the seeker sits with the Rooted Sage, enwrapped in the silent symphony of the forest. Here, under the canopy of stars and cosmic dust, they feel a connection not only to the tree but to the universe itselfβa delicate, invisible thread that binds them to everything that was, is, and will be. They come to understand that they are a single note in a grander, cosmic harmony, a part of a timeless song sung by stars, trees, rivers, and mountains alike. In time, the seeker opens their eyes, feeling a profound change withinβa clarity, a lightness, as if something heavy has fallen away. They rise slowly, one last look passing between them and the Rooted Sage, a silent exchange of gratitude and understanding. The tree remains as it always has, silent, ancient, steadfast, its face gazing into eternity. The seeker turns and steps away, leaving the grove with a heart full of the forestβs secrets and a soul touched by the timeless wisdom of the Rooted Sage. This is the gift of the Rooted Sage: a reminder that peace lies not in answers but in connectionβto the earth, to the stars, and to the silence that holds all things. And as the seeker fades into the shadows of the forest, the ancient tree stands guard, waiting patiently for the next soul ready to embrace the stillness, and listen. Β Β Bring Home the Wisdom of the Rooted Sage If you found yourself drawn into the timeless peace of the Rooted Sage, consider bringing a piece of this serene world into your own life. Each product is thoughtfully crafted to echo the spirit of connection, wisdom, and tranquility embodied by the Rooted Sage. The Rooted Sage Tapestry β Transform any space into a sanctuary with this stunning tapestry, designed to transport you to the starlit forest where the Rooted Sage resides. The Rooted Sage Beach Towel β Carry the peace of the Rooted Sage with you, whether youβre basking by the ocean or finding solace by the pool. This vibrant towel adds a touch of cosmic serenity to any setting. The Rooted Sage Yoga Mat β Step into your practice with the wisdom of the Rooted Sage beneath you, grounding each breath and movement in tranquility and connection. The Rooted Sage Phone Case β Keep a reminder of peace close at hand with a phone case available for iPhone and Android. Let the ancient treeβs calm expression accompany you through your day-to-day. The Rooted Sage Cross-Stitch Pattern β Stitch the wisdom of the Rooted Sage one deliberate thread at a time. This downloadable pattern invites you to slow down, breathe deep, and bring the starlit forest to life through mindful, hands-on creation. Discover more ways to connect with the serenity and timeless beauty of "The Rooted Sage" by visiting our shop.
by Bill Tiepelman
The Rabbit with Wings of Wonder
On the edge of a forest so old that even the oaks had started to forget their own names, lived a rabbit named Wren, who was, by all accounts, quite normalβexcept, of course, for her wings. They werenβt real wings, exactly. Not feathery, flapping things, anyway. No, Wrenβs ears had somehow taken on the shape and color of butterfly wings, complete with swirls of indigo, emerald, and ruby, each vibrant pattern seeming to dance whenever she so much as twitched. Her mother had always told her to be careful with her ears, lest she attract curious foxes or hungry owls, but Wren never listened. She liked to hop to the edge of the forest each day, where the humans lived, just to see what they were up to. One day, as Wren was watching a group of humans gather in the meadow, she overheard a snippet of conversation that piqued her curiosity. βThe Great Gardenia Flower Festival is tonight,β a young human with a mop of red curls said excitedly. βI hear theyβll even be giving out prizes!β Wrenβs ears perked up (or, at least, her ear-wings perked up in a rather flamboyant fluttering display). A festival, she thought, eyes wide. With prizes! Sheβd never been to a human festival before, but if there were prizes involved, she was all in. In a flurry of excitement, Wren bounded back to her forest friendsβa squirrel named Grimble, a wise-cracking crow named Speckle, and a hedgehog called Ivy. βIβm going to the humansβ festival!β she declared with a flair. Grimble, who was nibbling on a nut, paused mid-chew and stared at her. βYouβre going where?β βTo the festival! There are prizes, Grimble! Imagine all the treasures I could win!β Speckle cawed a laugh. βDo you even know what a βprizeβ is, Wren? What if itβs a net? Or one of those boxes that goes βwham!β?β Wren huffed. βYou just donβt understand. Humans love a good show, and Iβve got the most show-stopping ears this forest has ever seen.β βBut what will you do?β Ivy piped up, peeking out from behind a mushroom. βHumans are bound to notice a rabbit with butterfly ears.β Wren pondered this for a moment, then grinned. βThen Iβll simply become a butterfly!β Grimble muttered something about βrabbits with butterfly delusions,β but Wren was already bounding off, planning her entrance to the festival. That Eveningβ¦ When the sun dipped behind the trees and lanterns began to twinkle across the meadow, Wren hopped into actionβquite literally. She had draped herself in trailing vines and wildflowers, and with a sprig of lavender tucked behind her ear, she looked about as close to a butterfly as a rabbit possibly could. Speckle, whoβd begrudgingly agreed to accompany her, perched on her head, hoping to lend some air of credibility to the whole spectacle. As they approached the festival grounds, they saw booths lit by candlelight, humans twirling in dances, and long tables piled high with sweets, cakes, and puddings of every imaginable flavor. βOh, this is fantastic,β Wren whispered, wide-eyed. They slipped through the shadows and crept closer to the main stage, where humans were gathering for what looked like some sort of contest. A voice boomed over the crowd, announcing, βNext up, our beloved βMost Magnificent Creatureβ competition! Prepare to witness marvels!β Wrenβs ears shot up in excitement, nearly knocking Speckle off his perch. βThis is my moment!β she whispered, gathering her courage. She took a breath, hopped onto the stage, and struck her best βmagnificent creatureβ pose. The humans gasped. Then they began to applaud, whispering things like, βOh, itβs some sort ofβ¦forest spirit?β and βA rabbit fairy?β Someone handed her a tiny flower crown, and she adjusted it proudly on her head. As the competition continued, Wren put on a full performance, twirling her ear-wings dramatically, twitching her nose with expert timing, and even doing a little rabbit jig. She winked at the humans, delighted as they clapped and cheered. For a moment, she forgot she was supposed to be a butterfly entirely and simply basked in the glory of the moment. When the contest ended, the announcer awarded Wren the title of βMost Astonishing Forest Spirit,β which she accepted with a gracious bow, doing her best impression of a sophisticated butterfly curtsey. A Surprise After the Show As Wren was nibbling on a celebratory cookie sheβd swiped from a dessert table, she heard a voice behind her. βA rabbit with butterfly wings?β it said, full of curiosity and just a hint of suspicion. She turned to see a young human woman dressed in a long, dark cloak. βAre you real?β the woman asked. Wren straightened up, putting on her most mysterious smile. βI am as real as any magic you believe in.β The womanβs eyes sparkled. βI like that answer.β She crouched down to get a closer look at Wrenβs ears. βWould youβ¦ like to come back with me? I run an enchanted garden. I think youβd fit right in.β Wren tilted her head. βAn enchanted garden, you say? Will there be more prizes?β The woman chuckled. βNo prizes, but thereβs a feast every night, and youβd have all the dandelion greens you could ever want.β Wrenβs ears wiggled with interest. βIβm listeningβ¦β Grimble, Speckle, and Ivy had found her by now, overhearing the conversation. Speckle muttered, βWhat about us, then? You going to leave us for a dandelion buffet?β Wren looked back at her friends and then up at the woman. βOnly if you all come with me,β she declared with a flourish. And so, in a surprising twist of events, Wren and her little gang of misfit forest creatures went to live in the enchanted garden, where they spent their days as the βofficial keepers of wonder.β Wren became something of a local legend among the humans, who would come to the garden, hoping to catch a glimpse of the mysterious rabbit with butterfly wings. She would occasionally perform for visitors, twirling and prancing with the same flair she had at the festival. And every so often, when the moon was high and the night was still, sheβd gather Grimble, Speckle, and Ivy, and together, theyβd put on their own little show just for fun, a celebration of the quirks that made them uniqueβand the magic theyβd created together. In the end, Wren did get her prize after all. Not the sort you can hang on a wall, but something betterβa life filled with friendship, laughter, and all the dandelion greens she could ever want. And maybe, just maybe, a little bit of magic, too. Β Β Bring the Magic Home If Wrenβs whimsical world captured your heart, you can bring a touch of this enchanting tale into your own space. Our exclusive "The Rabbit with Wings of Wonder" collection offers a variety of beautiful products featuring this captivating artwork. From cozy tapestries to intricate puzzles, each item celebrates the magic of Wren and her butterfly wings, perfect for dreamers and nature lovers alike. Tapestry - Transform your space with a stunning tapestry that brings Wrenβs world to life on your walls. Puzzle - Lose yourself in this whimsical image as you piece together Wrenβs story, one detail at a time. Greeting Card - Share a bit of magic with friends and loved ones with this charming greeting card, perfect for any occasion. Framed Print - Hang Wrenβs tale on your wall with a high-quality framed print, a timeless addition to your art collection. Each piece is crafted to add a touch of whimsy to your life, making it easy to keep a little bit of Wrenβs wonder with you every day.
by Bill Tiepelman
The Guardian of Blossoms and Butterflies
Once upon a time in a meadow far from anywhere youβd find on a map, there lived an unusual creature who was known simply as βThe Guardian.β She had the body of a snow leopard cub, but her ears had sprouted a pair of colorful butterfly wingsβbrilliant, fluttering things that added a whole new layer of flair to her already adorable appearance. A Peculiar Job with Peculiar Responsibilities Now, you might wonder how a leopard cub with butterfly wings on her head wound up as the "Guardian of Blossoms and Butterflies." Well, the truth is, it wasnβt exactly a job she applied for. In fact, she didnβt even know she had a job. One day, she was just out there in the meadow, lounging amongst the wildflowers, when a particularly opinionated bumblebee declared her βthe perfect candidate for the role.β βA Guardian must be fierce but also look like theyβve been dipped in a rainbow!β he buzzed importantly. βYou, my dear, are perfect.β Our young leopard cub had no idea what any of this meant. She wasnβt even sure what a βguardianβ was, but she liked how it sounded. So, she puffed out her chest, wiggled her antennae, and accepted her new role with a modest but slightly smug smile. The Duties of the Meadowβs Guardian As The Guardian, her responsibilities were quirky at best and utterly baffling at worst. For instance, she was tasked with "protecting the harmony of the meadow." But in practice, this mostly meant scaring off creatures that disturbed the peace. βShoo, you rowdy rabbits! Less thumping, more hopping!β sheβd say, waving her butterfly ears at a group of cottontails who had taken to slam-dancing on the flowerbeds. The rabbits were generally unimpressed by her authority, though, and often bounced away while giggling about her βpretty butterfly hat.β But The Guardian also had her moments of triumph. There was the time she convinced a whole swarm of caterpillars to "cross the meadow in an orderly fashion," arranging them into a caterpillar conga line that stretched from one end of the meadow to the other. It was a sight to beholdβand quite an improvement over the usual stampede of wriggling chaos. The Butterfly Misunderstanding Things took a turn for the bizarre when she met a butterfly named Myrtle who mistook her for a distant cousin. Myrtle was an overly chatty butterfly with a penchant for melodrama and an impressive lack of personal boundaries. βOh, darling, I simply must introduce you to the family!β Myrtle exclaimed, looping around The Guardianβs ears in dizzying circles. βWe have so much in common! The colors, the wings, the flair!β Before The Guardian could protest, Myrtle had organized a full butterfly family reunion around her head. At one point, no fewer than twenty butterflies had gathered around her ears, chatting about wing maintenance, petal gossip, and βthe latest trends in pollination.β The Guardian didnβt understand a word of it, but she nodded politely as the butterflies fussed over her βexquisite antenna styling.β Enter the Grumpy Toad and a Quirky Friendship Just as she was beginning to think the butterfly brigade would never leave, a squat, elderly toad named Reginald hopped up to her. βOy! Guardian! Could you kindly inform this swarm of flying color-splashes that some of us are trying to enjoy a peaceful nap?β he croaked irritably. Reginald was notorious in the meadow for his grumpiness and the suspicious way he regarded anything even remotely cheerful. But The Guardian found his sour attitude oddly endearing, and they quickly became unlikely friends. βIβll handle the butterflies, Reginald,β she said in her most official Guardian voice. She cleared her throat and turned to Myrtleβs clan, who were mid-discussion about pollen prices. βAll right, everyone, thank you for visiting! Please find your nearest flower and take a seatβquietly!β To her amazement, the butterflies actually complied, fluttering to various nearby flowers and folding their wings respectfully. Reginald grunted his approval and settled down beside her. The Night Watch and the Mysterious Glow One moonlit evening, Reginald, The Guardian, and her butterfly entourage noticed a mysterious glow rising from the far end of the meadow. βProbably just a firefly dance-off,β Reginald muttered dismissively. But The Guardianβs curiosity got the better of her, and she tiptoed closer, her wings and ears trembling with anticipation. As she approached, she discovered an enormous gathering of fireflies spelling out messages in their glow. Messages like βBe Kindβ and βEat More Wild Berriesβ floated above the flowers, pulsing gently in the night air. βItβs a wisdom ritual,β whispered Myrtle, who had followed close behind. βOnce a year, the fireflies share their secrets with us.β The Guardian watched in awe, feeling a sense of peace wash over her. Her meadow wasnβt just a patch of grass with wildflowers and rambunctious rabbitsβit was a place of magic, community, and even wisdom. Ending with a Laugh The next morning, The Guardian sat beside Reginald, recounting the firefliesβ messages. Reginald rolled his eyes but listened politely. βEat more wild berries? What are we, herbivores?β he grumbled, giving her a sidelong glance. βI swear, Guardian, this meadow is getting weirder every year.β But The Guardian just smiled, watching a butterfly land on Reginaldβs head as he sighed in resignation. As the sun rose over the meadow, The Guardian felt grateful for her odd life, her quirky friends, and her very strange but beloved job. She was, after all, the one and only Guardian of Blossoms and Butterfliesβand she was exactly where she belonged. Β Β Bring the Guardian's Magic Home If you fell in love with the whimsical world of "The Guardian of Blossoms and Butterflies," why not bring a piece of it into your own space? Explore our exclusive collection inspired by this magical character and the meadow she calls home. Each item captures the charm and enchantment of the Guardian and makes a perfect gift for fans of fantasy, art, and nature. Tapestry: Transform any wall into a mystical landscape with this vibrant tapestry featuring the Guardian in all her butterfly-eared glory. Throw Pillow: Add a touch of whimsy to your living space with this plush throw pillow, a delightful accent for any couch or bed. Puzzle: Immerse yourself in the Guardian's world piece by piece with a beautiful puzzle that reveals her story as you go. Tote Bag: Carry the magic of the meadow with you on all your adventures with this charming tote bag, perfect for art lovers on the go. Let these enchanting items remind you of the Guardianβs world and her quirky friends, and bring a dash of magic into your everyday life. Shop the full collection here.
by Bill Tiepelman
The Kaleidoscope Elephant
In a hidden corner of the jungle, far beyond the reach of any safari map, lived Ellieβthe most extraordinary elephant in the world. She wasnβt your ordinary, gray-skinned, mud-loving pachyderm. Oh no. Ellie was a walking, trumpeting explosion of color. Her skin was a dazzling canvas covered in intricate swirls and patterns, and her ears looked like butterfly wings that had wandered off a mural from a dreamy, bohemian cafΓ©. She was, quite literally, the elephant in the room nobody could ignore. Ellieβs transformation began one humid afternoon when she stumbled upon a flower patch unlike anything sheβd ever seen. These flowers werenβt ordinary, mind you. They shimmered, shifted colors in the sunlight, and if you sneezed on them, theyβd release clouds of sparkling, rainbow-colored dust. Naturally, as a perpetually curious (and somewhat clumsy) elephant, Ellie couldnβt help but investigate. She gave one flower a good sniff, andβACHOO!βout came a colorful puff of magic that coated her from trunk to tail. When the dust settled, Ellie was no longer the plain, gray elephant sheβd been just moments before. She was a vibrant masterpiece of psychedelic colors and swirling patterns, with butterfly-winged ears and mandala-like designs that spiraled across her trunk and belly. She blinked in surprise, glancing down at her new, impossibly colorful reflection in a nearby puddle. βWell,β she chuckled to herself, βat least Iβll never get lost!β The news of Ellieβs new look spread through the jungle faster than a monkey with a megaphone. Soon, a line of animals formed just to get a look at her. Gerald the giraffe craned his long neck down to stare, his jaw practically grazing the ground. βYou lookβ¦ uh, colorful,β he said, trying to sound supportive despite his obvious envy. Ellie just batted her dazzling butterfly-like ears and replied with a grin, βDarling, I know.β Of course, life as the jungleβs only kaleidoscope elephant wasnβt without its complications. Butterflies were constantly mistaking her ears for flowers, landing there to rest or flutter around, creating a chaotic swarm that she had to politely shoo away. βNo, Iβm not a flower shop!β sheβd explain for the hundredth time, gently waving her trunk to send them off. And whenever she tried to nap in her favorite shady spot, sheβd open one eye to find a crowd of animals gawking at her from behind trees, unable to resist the spectacle. As days passed, Ellie began to realize that maybe she could put her new look to some use. Sheβd become so famous in the jungle that animals came from miles around just to catch a glimpse of her. So, with a mischievous glint in her eye, she came up with a plan: the jungleβs first-ever Kaleidoscope Elephant Dance Show. On the night of her grand debut, animals of all shapes and sizes gathered in a clearing. Monkeys swung in with their banana snacks, parrots perched on the branches above, and even the usually grumpy crocodiles lounged nearby, waiting for the show. Ellie took center stage, lifting her trunk high and flapping her ears to the rhythm of the jungle night. Her vibrant ears sent ripples of color through the air, her swirls and patterns creating hypnotic shapes in the moonlight. The butterflies, unable to resist, joined her performance as backup dancers, swirling around her in a cloud of color. The flowers in the nearby bushes cheered in their gentle, rustling way, and a few fireflies floated in, providing some added twinkle to the scene. Ellie twirled, she swayed, she even threw in a clumsy little pirouette (a difficult feat for an elephant), and the crowd roared with laughter and applause. After that night, Ellie became the jungleβs most beloved entertainer. She held weekly shows, turning her vivid appearance into an art form that brought joy and laughter to everyone who saw her. Animals would travel from all corners of the jungle to see the legendary Kaleidoscope Elephant perform, and Ellie never disappointed. With each show, she tried something newβmaybe a bit of trunk juggling, or a dramatic leap through a waterfall (followed by a hilarious splash that soaked her front-row fans). And if you ever wander far enough into the jungle, just beyond the last tourist trail, you might just be lucky enough to catch a glimpse of Ellie, the Kaleidoscope Elephant. Under the soft glow of the setting sun, sheβll wink and twirl, performing her goofy, glorious dance, bringing color, laughter, and a bit of magic to her little corner of the world, one flap at a time. After all, why be ordinary when you can be a kaleidoscope? Β Β Bring The Kaleidoscope Elephant Home! Love Ellie, the colorful jungle star? Now you can bring a piece of her magical charm into your own home with these unique products: The Kaleidoscope Elephant Tapestry β Perfect for adding a splash of whimsical color to any wall. Let Ellieβs playful spirit light up your space. The Kaleidoscope Elephant Throw Pillow β Cozy up with a burst of jungle magic! This pillow adds both comfort and vibrant personality to your home decor. The Kaleidoscope Elephant Puzzle β Enjoy putting together Ellieβs enchanting colors piece by piece. A perfect activity for those who appreciate a bit of playful challenge. The Kaleidoscope Elephant Framed Print β Display Ellieβs whimsical beauty as a piece of art on your wall. Ideal for anyone who wants to add a touch of fantasy to their decor. Embrace Ellieβs spirit and let her story brighten your world, one delightful product at a time!
by Bill Tiepelman
Lavender Fields Forever
At the far edge of the valley, where the road gave up pretending it had a destination and simply dissolved into petals, there lay a field of lavender so vast that even the horizon seemed mildly overwhelmed by it. Every evening, when the sun lowered itself into a molten smear of gold and peach, the field became something more than flowers. It became a memory with roots. A hush with color. A place where the wind did not merely pass through the blossoms, but whispered old names, old vows, and occasionally old gossip, because the dead may become poetic, but they do not necessarily become discreet. The villagers called it Lavenderβs Reach, though no one agreed on why. Some said the flowers stretched so far that they touched the foot of the mountains. Others claimed the scent reached into dreams and dragged out whatever a person most wished to forget. Children dared one another to run into the field at sunset and shout a secret. Lovers came to make promises they absolutely should have read twice before signing with their whole hearts. Widows came with folded letters. Old men came and pretended they were only admiring the flowers, which was a lie so thin even the bees rolled their tiny judgmental eyes. But there was one figure the field belonged to more than any of them. She stood among the lavender at sundown, crowned in roses the color of bruised pink velvet, draped in lace and beadwork that shimmered like the last blush of daylight. Her hair streamed pale and golden down her shoulders, catching the fire of the sinking sun. Her gown was lavender, lilac, and rose, woven with curling embroidery, glassy threads, and the kind of dramatic detailing that suggested she had either been a bride, a queen, or a woman who had once entered a room and made everyone else feel underdressed and spiritually inadequate. She was beautiful. She was radiant. She was also, quite unmistakably, a skeleton. This last detail bothered visitors more than it bothered her. Her name had been Evelina Vey, and in life she had been known for three things: laughing too loudly in places where people were trying to be respectable, wearing flowers even when flowers were not invited, and loving one man with such spectacular devotion that the village had never recovered from how inconveniently sincere it was. That man was Marlowe Finch. And every year, on the evening when the lavender first caught fire beneath the summer sunset, Marlowe came back to the field. Where the Flowers Learned Her Name Before she became the haunting of Lavenderβs Reach, before children dared one another to count her ribs from behind the stone wall, before the field learned to murmur her name in the wind, Evelina had been alive in the loudest, warmest, most unapologetic sense of the word. She did not enter the world quietly, according to anyone who had been unfortunate enough to attend her birth. Her first cry had cracked a teacup, frightened a priest, and caused her grandmother to declare, with profound weariness, βWell, that oneβs going to be expensive.β She grew into exactly that sort of woman. Not expensive in coins, necessarily, though she did have a dangerous weakness for embroidered sleeves, jeweled pins, and shoes that were entirely unsuited for mud but perfect for making entrances. She was expensive in feeling. Evelina cost people their cynicism. She was forever making the bitter laugh, the timid dance, and the pompous look briefly human. She had the rare and annoying gift of making life seem possible even when life itself was behaving like a damp loaf. The lavender fields were her favorite place because, as she once told Marlowe, βThey smell like peace, purple, and slightly dangerous decisions.β Marlowe had been a carpenterβs son with careful hands and a face that always looked as though he had just heard music from the next room. He was quieter than Evelina, which was useful, because someone had to make sure their love did not knock over furniture. He built gates, cupboards, window frames, cradles, coffins, and occasionally excuses for why Evelina had climbed onto a roof at midnight with a basket of lanterns. βShe said the moon looked lonely,β Marlowe explained once, to the town constable. The constable, who had been married for thirty-four years, nodded grimly. βThat does sound like a wife.β They were not rich. They were not grand. They were not the sort of couple poets usually bothered with until after tragedy came along and made everyone suddenly interested. But they had something rarer than grandness. They had ease. They had laughter that did not need an audience. They had hands that found each other automatically in crowds. They had arguments about bread, weather, and whether a goat named Madam Butterbean deserved to be invited indoors during storms. Evelina believed Madam Butterbean did. Marlowe believed goats should not have opinions about curtains. Madam Butterbean, being a goat, had opinions about everything and was willing to eat evidence. The lavender field was where Evelina and Marlowe met when the dayβs work was done. He would arrive with wood shavings still clinging to his sleeves. She would arrive with flowers in her hair, soil on her hem, and some half-baked plan involving moonlight, music, or petty revenge against a woman named Mrs. Brindle who had once called her βtoo colorful for a funeral.β Evelina had taken this not as criticism but as prophecy. They danced there before they were married. They danced there after. They danced there when crops failed, when storms tore tiles from roofs, when money thinned, when friends moved away, and when the world did what the world always does: behaved like a rude beast in need of manners. βPromise me,β Evelina said one evening, her head resting against Marloweβs chest as the sunset burned low, βthat if I go first, youβll still come here.β Marlowe had tightened his arms around her. βDonβt talk like that.β βIβll talk however I like. Iβm wearing flowers and therefore legally ungovernable.β βEvelina.β βPromise me.β He looked over the lavender, over the soft tossing purple that seemed endless in the dying light. βI promise.β She lifted her face and smiled. βGood. Because I have no intention of being forgotten politely.β That was the trouble with promises made in magical fields at sunset. They had roots. They listened. They took notes. The fever came in the following autumn. It moved through the village quietly at first, then hungrily. Doors closed. Bells tolled. Windows glowed late into the night. Marlowe built more coffins than cupboards, and each one stole something from his face. Evelina tried to help, because of course she did. She carried broth. She changed linens. She held hands. She laughed softly with the frightened, told filthy jokes to the dying if they asked for them, and scolded death itself like a misbehaving dog. Death, rude bastard that it was, did not take correction well. When Evelina fell ill, the lavender fields had already gone silver with frost. Marlowe sat beside her bed and held her hand through days that blurred into candles and whispered prayers. She was smaller then, her voice worn thin, her color fading from her cheeks as though the world had begun erasing her in careful strokes. On her last evening, she asked him to open the window. βItβs cold,β he said. βThen be useful and hold me warmer.β He did. The wind came in carrying the faintest trace of lavender, impossible for the season, impossible for the hour, impossible by every sensible measure. Evelina smiled as if she recognized it. βYouβll come?β she asked. Marlowe could not speak at first. His grief had filled his throat with stones. She squeezed his hand. βDonβt make me haunt you just to get an answer. I will, but Iβd rather not start our eternity with nagging.β He pressed his forehead to hers. βIβll come.β βEvery year?β βEvery year.β βAt sunset?β βAt sunset.β Her smile softened. βGood. Iβll wear something dramatic.β And then she was gone. They buried her at the edge of Lavenderβs Reach in a gown the color of twilight. Marlowe placed roses in her hair with hands that trembled so badly the petals shook. He did not weep in front of the village. He had already spent every tear he owned in the privacy of the room where she had left him. That summer, when the lavender bloomed again, Marlowe returned to the field at sunset. He sat in the place where they used to dance. The wind stirred. The flowers bent. And Evelina came walking out of the purple. Not as flesh. Not as breath. Not as anything the living could properly explain without upsetting a priest. She came as bone and beauty, as memory and moonlight, as a skeleton wrapped in lace and flowers, her empty eyes dark with impossible tenderness. Marlowe looked up. And saw his wife. Whole. Laughing. Golden in the sunset. βYou came,β she said. βI promised,β he answered. The lavender field shivered around them, smug as hell. The Annual Appointment with the Dead Woman in Excellent Lace Years passed, because years are show-offs that way. The village changed. Roofs were mended. Babies were born and grew into adults who had babies of their own. Madam Butterbean became a legend, then a cautionary tale, then the name of a tavern cocktail no one ordered twice. Mrs. Brindle died at ninety-two and was buried in a gown so aggressively beige that Evelinaβs ghost took it as a personal attack. But Marlowe kept his promise. Every year, on the evening the lavender first reached its full bloom, he walked to the field. At first, he came with firm steps and dark hair, his shoulders still strong from work. Later he came slower. His hair silvered. His hands bent at the knuckles. His back curved beneath the invisible weight of all the days he had survived without her. He brought something each time. One year, a ribbon from her sewing basket. Another, a slice of honey cake wrapped in linen, because she had loved honey cake with a devotion bordering on scandalous. Once, he brought a sprig of rosemary and apologized for the year he had forgotten their anniversary until lunchtime. βI forgave you before supper,β Evelina said, seated beside him in the lavender, unseen by everyone but him. βThough I did briefly consider replacing you with a man who owned a calendar.β Marlowe laughed, and the sound cracked open the field like sunlight through glass. To others, he appeared to be an old widower sitting alone among flowers, speaking softly to the air. Some pitied him. Some found it romantic. Some thought he had finally gone odd in the head, though most of those people had been odd in the head for years and were in no position to be throwing stones from their own cracked little cottages. But Marlowe was not alone. Evelina came every time. To him, she looked as she had in life: cheeks flushed, eyes bright, hair tangled with roses, mouth always on the edge of mischief. To the field mice, who had no sentimental filter and frankly could have used one, she was a skeleton in a gown. To the crows, she was βthe fancy dead one.β To the lavender, she was their lady. To herself, she was a woman caught between two versions of being loved. She could not leave the field. At first, she tried. The first year, after Marlowe walked home beneath the stars, Evelina followed him to the stone wall. Her bones glowed faintly in the dusk. The lace of her gown dragged through the flowers without bending a stem. She reached the edge of Lavenderβs Reach and stopped so abruptly that her skull nearly continued without the rest of her. βOh, that is undignified,β she muttered, catching herself. An invisible thread held her there. Not a chain. Not a curse in the old thunder-and-blood sense. Something softer. Crueler, perhaps, because softness can be its own kind of trap. She was bound by the promise. His promise to return. Her promise to wait. The field had accepted both. So Evelina learned the boundaries of her afterlife. She learned where the lavender grew tallest, where the rabbits hid, where the sunset struck the old stone wall and made it shine. She learned which flowers opened earliest and which bees were rude. She learned that death, despite its dramatic reputation, involved a shocking amount of standing around. She also learned that memory could be warm. Whenever Marlowe came, the field changed. The air grew thick with music no living musician played. The lavender brightened until each bloom seemed lit from within. The sun lingered longer, nosy and sentimental, pretending it had not slowed down just to watch. They could not touch for many years. That was the first rule. Not a written rule, of course. The dead rarely receive helpful pamphlets. There was no folded sheet saying, βWelcome to Your Haunting: Boundaries, Regrets, and How Not to Alarm Livestock.β Evelina simply discovered it the painful way. The first time she reached for Marloweβs hand, her fingers passed through his like moonlight through water. He shivered. She withdrew. βSorry,β she whispered. βDonβt be.β He looked at the place where her hand had been. βIt felt like you.β That nearly ruined her. If skeletons could sob, she would have rattled herself into a pile right there among the blossoms. Instead, she sat beside him each year with her hand close to his, near enough that the space between them seemed to ache. She told him things. She described how the rabbits had formed what appeared to be a small criminal organization beneath the eastern hedgerow. She complained about the crows. She informed him that Mrs. Brindleβs ghost had not appeared, which was merciful, because even death deserved boundaries. Marlowe told her about the village. He told her who had married badly and who had married worse. He told her when the old mill burned, when the schoolhouse opened, when the bakerβs son ran away with a traveling puppeteer and returned three months later with a mustache, a limp, and no explanation that satisfied anyone. He told her about the cupboards he built, the roofs he repaired, the chairs he carved because his hands needed work even when his heart did not. He never remarried. Evelina scolded him for that once. βYou could have found someone kind,β she said. He looked at her across the lavender, his face lined by years and sunset. βI did.β βYou know what I mean.β βI do.β βMarlowe.β βEvelina.β She huffed, which was impressive for someone with no lungs. βYou stubborn man.β βYou married me.β βYes, and apparently death has not improved my judgment.β He smiled, and it was the same smile she had loved when they were young: quiet, crooked, unbearably kind. βI had a full life,β he said. βNot an empty one. You were in it. You are in it.β The field went still then. Even the bees, who had been conducting some sort of pollen-related argument nearby, paused as if embarrassed by the intimacy of the moment. βI wanted more for you,β Evelina said. βSo did I.β There it was. The truth, simple and sharp as a thorn. They had wanted more. More mornings. More winters. More burnt suppers and ridiculous arguments. More ordinary days, because ordinary days are the treasure no one recognizes until the chest is empty. More time to become boring together. More chances to sit in chairs and complain about the weather as if weather had personally wronged them. But life had given them what it gave them. And love, being both miracle and menace, had made that briefness eternal. As Marlowe aged, the veil between them thinned. The first sign was sound. In the early years, he heard her voice only as wind through lavender. Later, he heard it clearly, especially when she was annoyed. Love may transcend death, but irritation is apparently even more powerful. The second sign was scent. Whenever she came near, he smelled roses and lavender, with a faint trace of the vanilla soap she had once made in a batch so disastrous it foamed under the pantry door and frightened a visiting aunt into confession. The third sign was warmth. One year, when Marlowe was nearly seventy, Evelina sat beside him as always, her hand resting near his. The sunset lowered. The field glowed. A breeze passed over them. And he felt her fingertips brush his. Only for a breath. Only barely. But real. Marlowe froze. Evelina stared at their hands. βDid you feel that?β she asked. He nodded, unable to speak. She looked up at the sky. βWell. About damn time.β The sun dipped behind a cloud as if trying not to laugh. After that, the touch returned in small mercies. A brush of fingers. A hand felt faintly against his shoulder. Once, when he stumbled in the field, she caught him by instinct, and for one impossible second he leaned against her as though she were flesh again. He wept then. So did she, though her tears became dew on the lavender. By the time Marlowe was an old man, the village had stopped pitying him. His yearly walk to Lavenderβs Reach had become part of local tradition. People left him alone. They pretended not to notice when the flowers bent toward him, when the sunset burned brighter above his head, when laughter sometimes rang from the field though no one stood beside him. Children still dared one another to sneak close enough to see the lady in lace. Most ran away screaming. One little girl, bolder than the rest, once peered through the lavender and saw Evelina as she truly was: bones, flowers, empty eyes, jeweled gown, sunset glowing through the cage of her ribs. Evelina turned her skull slowly. The child gasped. Then Evelina lifted one skeletal finger to her teeth. βBoo,β she whispered. The girl sprinted home so fast she lost both shoes and a moral certainty. Evelina laughed for twenty minutes. βThat was cruel,β Marlowe said, though he was laughing too. βIt was educational.β βShe may never enter a flower field again.β βThen she has learned respect for boundaries.β βYou are terrible.β βAnd yet here you are.β He looked at her, the lavender between them shining like purple fire. βHere I am.β The Last Sunset in Lavenderβs Reach The final year came softly. That was the worst of it. No thunder split the sky. No omen carved itself across the moon. No black horse appeared at Marloweβs door with glowing eyes and an attitude problem. Morning simply arrived, pale and ordinary, and Marlowe woke knowing his body had become a room he was preparing to leave. He was eighty-seven. His hands were twisted with age. His breath came shallow. His knees had opinions so loud they deserved their own parish meeting. He had outlived friends, enemies, creditors, two doctors, three mayors, and a rooster that everyone agreed had been possessed by something foul and administrative. But he had not outlived his promise. All day, the village watched his cottage. They knew the date. Everyone knew the date. Lavenderβs Reach had bloomed overnight, impossibly bright, the flowers opening in waves of purple and rose though the season had been cool. By noon, the scent rolled through the streets thick as incense. Even people who did not believe in ghosts found themselves speaking gently, as though the air had become a chapel. Marlowe dressed slowly. He put on his clean shirt. His dark waistcoat. The boots he had polished the night before, though no one but Evelina would notice, and Evelina had once noticed a missing button from across a crowded room while arguing with a magistrate. On the table lay a small bundle wrapped in linen. Inside was a pressed lavender bloom from the first year he had returned to the field after her death. He had kept it all this time, tucked inside the wooden box where he stored letters, ribbons, and other things too heavy to throw away. He placed it in his pocket. Then he took up his walking stick and opened the door. No one stopped him. Mrs. Vale from the neighboring cottage began to cry into her apron. Her son offered to walk with him, but Marlowe shook his head. βNot this time,β he said. The road to Lavenderβs Reach seemed longer than it had ever been. Perhaps it was. Roads are sentimental creatures when they know they are being walked for the last time. Each stone, each rut, each bend seemed determined to remind him of some moment he had carried across the years. Here was where Evelina had once removed her shoes and declared that respectable footwear was a conspiracy. There was where she had kissed him in a rainstorm and then blamed him for the mud. Near the old wall was where she had stolen his hat, placed it on a scarecrow, and announced that the scarecrow wore it with more emotional availability. By the time Marlowe reached the field, the sun had begun its descent. The sky was enormous with color. Gold near the horizon, then orange, rose, and violet rising into the first breath of evening. The lavender moved in long waves, and every blossom seemed turned toward him. He stepped into the field. Evelina was already there. She stood where she had stood for decades, crowned in roses, gown glittering with lavender light, hair streaming like pale fire. To the world, she was bone and lace, a beautiful ruin, a bride made of memory. To Marlowe, she appeared first as the young woman he had loved, the woman with laughter in her eyes and petals in her hair. Then, for the first time, he saw both. The living Evelina and the dead one. The warm face and the hollow skull. The bright eyes and the dark sockets. The bride he had buried and the ghost who had waited. He did not flinch. Evelina saw the moment happen. She felt it like a door opening. βAh,β she said softly. βThere I am.β Marlowe leaned on his stick, breathing hard, his old eyes full of tears and wonder. βThere you are.β She looked down at herself, at the bones beneath the lace, at the ribs that no longer held a heart and somehow ached anyway. βI was afraid this would frighten you.β He smiled. βMy love, I have seen myself in a washbasin every morning for the last twenty years. You are doing fine.β A laugh burst out of her, bright and startled. The lavender trembled. βStill charming,β she said. βStill dramatic.β βI am literally dead in a flower crown, Marlowe. Drama is the bare minimum.β He took one slow step toward her, then another. She moved to meet him, though she could feel the field holding its breath around them. The old promise tugged at her bones. The sunset burned lower. Somewhere beyond the wall, a village bell rang the hour. Marlowe reached into his pocket and withdrew the pressed lavender bloom. It was fragile now, faded almost gray, but still intact. βI kept this,β he said. Evelina stared at it. βFrom the first year.β He nodded. βSentimental fool.β βYes.β βMy favorite kind.β He held it out to her. For a moment, neither of them moved. They had spent so many years nearly touching that the idea of anything more seemed dangerous, like stepping onto ice that might remember it was water. Then Evelina lifted her skeletal hand. Her fingers closed around the lavender. She felt it. Not as a whisper. Not as wind. Not as memory. She felt the dry stem against her bones. She gasped. Marloweβs face broke open with tenderness. βEvelina,β he whispered. She looked at him. βIβm here.β βI know.β βIβve always been here.β βI know that too.β The sun touched the horizon. Everything in the field turned gold. Marlowe swayed, and Evelina caught him. This time, fully. Her arms went around him, bone and lace and light, and he leaned into her as though coming home after a journey far too long for one soul to walk alone. He was not young again. Not yet. He was old, tired, aching, and beloved. She held him exactly as he was, because love that only adores the polished version is not love but vanity wearing perfume. βYou came,β she said. βEvery year.β βStubborn man.β βYou waited.β βStubborn woman.β He laughed weakly against her shoulder. βWe were a menace.β βWe were magnificent.β βThat too.β The light deepened. The field began to glow from beneath, as though the roots had caught the sunset and were passing it flower to flower. The air filled with music, faint at first, then swelling into a tune Marlowe knew in his bones. Their song. The one they had danced to when they were young and foolish and certain that love could bully time into surrender. Perhaps they had been right. Evelina drew back and offered him her hand. βCan you dance?β she asked. Marlowe looked down at his knees, which had betrayed him in every weather for years. βPoorly.β βExcellent. I have always enjoyed a challenge.β He took her hand. And they danced. Not beautifully at first. Not gracefully. He stumbled. She steadied him. He complained once about his hip. She told him death would sort that out shortly, which he called inappropriate, and she called practical. They moved slowly through the lavender while the sun sank lower, two figures turning in a field that had held their sorrow for so long it had learned the shape of their joy. With each step, Marlowe grew lighter. The years loosened from him one by one. Pain fell away. The stoop left his shoulders. His hands straightened. His breath deepened. His silver hair darkened beneath the sunset, and his face became the face Evelina had kissed in rainstorms and scolded over forgotten bread. But he was not becoming young by erasing the old. He was becoming whole. Every age he had been remained inside him. The boy. The husband. The widower. The old man who kept a promise across decades. The soul who had loved once and never stopped. Evelina changed too. Flesh did not simply return to her bones like a curtain being drawn. It bloomed. Light gathered inside her ribs. Lavender petals rose around her. The roses in her crown opened fresh and wild. Her skull became a face, then shimmered back to bone, then face again, both truths held together without shame. Marlowe touched her cheek. This time, his hand did not pass through. βThere you are,β he said again. She covered his hand with hers. βTook you long enough.β βI was eighty-seven.β βI said what I said.β They laughed, and the sound rolled across Lavenderβs Reach like bells. At the final edge of sunset, Marloweβs body sat down gently among the flowers. Those watching from the distant road saw only an old man lowering himself into the lavender as the sun vanished. They saw the field flare gold. They saw the blossoms bend inward as though bowing. They did not see Evelina kneel beside him, did not see him rise from himself young and luminous, did not see him look back once at the long road of his life with gratitude and grief braided together. They did not see her take his hand. They did not see the two of them step beyond the place where the field ended and the stars began. But they heard the music. Everyone heard the music. For one full minute after sunset, Lavenderβs Reach sang. After that evening, Evelina no longer appeared alone in the field. Some say she left entirely, her promise fulfilled and her waiting done. Others say she remains, but only at the edge of sight, where the lavender grows thickest and the sky turns the color of old vows. The children still dare one another to approach at sunset, though now they claim there are two figures among the flowers: a woman in a lavender gown and a man who dances with her as if he has finally remembered all the steps. Visitors sometimes find pressed lavender blooms tucked into the stone wall, though no one admits to placing them there. Couples who argue too close to the field report hearing a womanβs voice say, βApologize properly or stop wasting everyoneβs evening.β Widowers say the air feels kinder there. Brides leave roses. Old men sit quietly and smile at nothing. And when the sunset pours gold over the endless purple, when the flowers sway though there is no wind, when laughter rises from the field with the scent of lavender and memory, the villagers lower their voices and let the dead have their dance. Because some love stories end. Some love stories haunt. And some, if planted deep enough in a field that knows how to keep secrets, bloom forever. Lavender fields forever, where love remembers its way home. Bring Lavender Fields Forever Into Your Space The artwork behind Lavender Fields Forever captures a hauntingly romantic vision of a flower-crowned skeletal beauty standing in a glowing lavender field at sunset, blending gothic elegance, soft floral fantasy, and bittersweet eternal-love energy. Bring that dramatic twilight magic into your own space with the Lavender Fields Forever Tapestry, the richly detailed Canvas Print, the cozy and decorative Throw Pillow, or the soft Fleece Blanket. Whether displayed as wall art, wrapped around a quiet reading corner, or added as a moody floral accent, this piece is perfect for anyone who likes their romance beautiful, slightly undead, and emotionally inconvenient in the best possible way.
by Bill Tiepelman
Beard, Boots, and Baby Dragon
Deep in the heart of the Widdershins Woods, where the moss grew thick enough to hide bad decisions and the mushrooms leaned in like gossiping aunties, lived a gnome named Grimble Stumbletoe. Grimble was small, round, boot-heavy, beard-heavy, and blessed with the sort of face that looked like it had argued with weather for sixty years and lost only twice. He wore a sagging brown hat embroidered with mysterious patterns, none of which meant anything noble, although Grimble once claimed they were βancient runes of protection.β In truth, they were stains, threadbare patches, and one burned spot shaped suspiciously like a duck. His beard tumbled down his chest in great silver waves, magnificent enough to earn admiration from respectable woodland folk and flammable enough to keep everyone concerned. His boots were another matter entirely. Large, brown, battered, and apparently built from the hide of some extinct beast with attitude problems, they announced his arrival before his mouth did. Which was impressive, because Grimbleβs mouth was famous for arriving early, staying late, and insulting the furniture. But for all his questionable hygiene, unreliable manners, and lifelong commitment to being a nuisance, Grimble was not alone. Curled against him, clinging to his arm, or occasionally trying to chew the buckles off his belt was Sizzle, a baby dragon no larger than a plump house cat but already convinced he was the blazing doom of kingdoms. Sizzle had slate-blue scales, a gold-plated belly, horns like little crooked candle flames, and wings so brilliantly orange they looked as if autumn itself had been slapped onto leather and told to behave. He also had a mouth full of tiny teeth, an enthusiasm for chaos, and the emotional restraint of a drunk pixie at a cake auction. Together, Grimble and Sizzle were the most troublesome pair in Widdershins Woods. Some called them heroes. Some called them menaces. Most called them from a safe distance. The Little Menace Beneath the Foxgloves Grimble found Sizzle on a morning that had already gone poorly. For starters, his left boot had filled with rainwater overnight, despite there being no rain. His kettle had been stolen by a raccoon with the dead-eyed confidence of a professional criminal. And old Miss Frumpel, the mushroom widow who lived beneath a red-capped toadstool, had posted yet another notice on the community stump reading: βResidents are kindly asked to refrain from shouting profanity at squirrels before breakfast.β Grimble had responded by shouting, βSquirrels can read now? Well, that explains the smug little bastards.β It was while searching for his kettle, his dignity, and possibly breakfast that he heard the rustling beneath the foxgloves. Now, sensible woodland folk do not investigate strange noises beneath foxgloves. Foxgloves are beautiful, yes, but they also tend to attract bees, witches, enchanted beetles, dramatic frogs, and once, briefly, a wandering accordion player who refused to leave until someone praised his βemotional range.β Grimble, however, had never been accused of being sensible by anyone sober. He shoved aside the pink bell-shaped flowers, squinted beneath a mushroom cap, and found a tiny dragon curled in the damp moss like a forgotten coal from a magical fireplace. The creature blinked one enormous eye at him, then the other. His wings were wrapped tight around his body, his tail tucked beneath his chin, and his expression suggested that the world had disappointed him already. βWell,β Grimble said, scratching his beard, βarenβt you an ugly little bugger?β The baby dragon sneezed. A puff of flame shot from his mouth and set Grimbleβs beard on fire. For three full seconds, the Widdershins Woods knew peace. Then Grimble shrieked, slapped his own chin, rolled through a patch of wet moss, kicked over a mushroom, insulted four generations of imaginary dragon ancestors, and finally sat up smoking from the mouth down. The baby dragon stared at him with bright, curious eyes. Grimble stared back. Then he laughed. Not politely. Not gently. Grimble laughed like a rusty hinge being tickled by a goblin. He laughed until the squirrels fled. He laughed until Miss Frumpel slammed her tiny round window shut. He laughed until the dragonβs ears perked up and his little spiked head tilted sideways in what might have been confusion or judgment. βAh,β Grimble said, wiping soot from his mustache, βyouβve got spirit. Terrible aim, but spirit.β The dragon opened his mouth again. βNope.β Grimble held up a finger. βYou scorch the beard twice before noon, and weβre no longer friends. Thatβs a boundary, that is.β The dragon sneezed again, this time sending only a tiny curl of smoke into the air. βThere we are.β Grimble nodded. βProgress. Low standards, but progress.β He named him Sizzle by lunchtime, after the little dragon bit into Grimbleβs stolen kettle, sneezed inside it, and cooked the rainwater into steam. Grimble took this as a sign of usefulness. Sizzle took it as a sign that metal was delicious. Neither of them was completely right, but that rarely stopped them. From that day forward, Sizzle followed Grimble everywhere. Through fern thickets. Across mossy stones. Into abandoned badger tunnels. Behind taverns. Under bridges. Occasionally into situations that had no business involving either of them, especially after dark. Grimble raised the baby dragon as best he could, which is to say poorly but with conviction. He taught Sizzle how to sit, although Sizzle preferred perching on his shoulder and digging tiny claws into his vest. He taught him how to hunt beetles, though Sizzle preferred roasting them first and making the entire clearing smell like burnt nutshells. He taught him how to glare at strangers, steal sausage ends from unattended plates, and avoid eating mushrooms with spots shaped like screaming faces. βThose ones make you see tomorrow,β Grimble warned him once. βAnd tomorrow is usually unpaid bills and back pain, so donβt bother.β Sizzle listened. Mostly. Every morning, Grimble would stomp out of his hollowed-out tree, stretch until his joints sounded like a bag of dropped spoons, and inhale deeply. βAh, smell that, Sizzle,β heβd say. βFresh moss, damp stone, wildflowers, and something dead behind the brambles. Natureβs perfume.β Sizzle would sniff, blink solemnly, and give a small approving chirp. Breakfast was whatever could be found, stolen, bartered, trapped, traded, or bullied away from something smaller than Grimble. Mushrooms were common. Stale bread was a luxury. Acorns were only eaten under extreme circumstances or after losing a bet. On rare fine days, Grimble would cook root cakes over a small fire while Sizzle hovered nearby, trying to help by breathing flames at everything except the cooking pot. βNot the hat,β Grimble snapped one morning as Sizzleβs nostrils glowed. βAnything but the hat. This hat has seen things. Mostly because I was wearing it when I saw them, but still.β Sizzle chirped and flapped his wings. βDonβt give me that innocent face. You have the innocent face of a weasel in a pie shop.β By midday, they usually wandered. Grimble claimed he was patrolling the woods. Miss Frumpel claimed he was avoiding chores. The owls claimed nothing at all, but only because Grimble had once threatened to charge them rent for staring at him. There were paths in Widdershins Woods, though none could be trusted. Some moved when you werenβt looking. Some led in circles out of spite. One path near the western creek led only to an apologetic shrubbery and a pair of shoes nobody admitted owning. Grimble knew them all, not because he was wise, but because he had gotten lost on each of them often enough to form opinions. βA map is a cowardβs blanket,β he liked to say. βThatβs because you canβt read one,β Miss Frumpel replied once. βI can read plenty.β βYou held it upside down and used it as a napkin.β βMultifunctional literacy,β Grimble said, and Sizzle sneezed smoke like he agreed. For all his bluster, Grimble loved the woods. He loved the dripping stone walls half-swallowed by ivy, the mushrooms glowing faintly under moonlight, the purple foxgloves nodding along the trails, the secret hollows beneath tree roots, and the endless damp green smell of things growing where they absolutely pleased. And, though he would deny it loudly and perhaps throw a pinecone at anyone who suggested it, he loved Sizzle most of all. He loved the way the baby dragon tucked his head under Grimbleβs beard during thunderstorms. He loved the way Sizzle growled at shadows twice his size and then hid behind a boot when the shadow moved. He loved the way Sizzle tried to roar every evening at sunset, producing a noise somewhere between a kettle whistle and an insulted chicken. βTerrifying,β Grimble would say gravely. βAbsolutely bone-chilling. Somewhere, a turnip has fainted.β Sizzle would puff himself up, delighted. That was their life: moss, mushrooms, insults, smoke, and occasional petty theft. Until the morning Grimbleβs left boot disappeared. A Shiny Young Fool and a Path That Lied for a Living Grimble discovered the theft with a scream that startled birds from three trees, woke a sleeping badger, and caused Miss Frumpel to spill tea down her front. βMy boot!β he bellowed. βMy left boot! Agnes is gone!β Yes, Grimble had named his boots. The left one was Agnes. The right one was Mildred. He claimed they had personalities. Agnes was loyal, dependable, and smelled faintly of onion. Mildred was suspicious, judgmental, and had once been used to stun a troll. Whether this counted as personality or merely fungal damage was a matter of debate. Sizzle waddled in a circle, sniffing the moss near Grimbleβs sleeping stump. He lowered his scaled snout to the ground, inhaled dramatically, and sneezed hard enough to singe a beetle. βWell?β Grimble asked. Sizzle pointed one claw toward the northern brambles. Grimble narrowed his eyes. βGoblin stink.β Sizzle nodded. βAnd onion.β Sizzle nodded again. Grimble clutched his remaining boot to his chest. βTheyβve taken Agnes.β From her toadstool porch, Miss Frumpel sighed. βPerhaps they mistook it for a dwelling.β βCareful, Frumpel,β Grimble snapped. βYouβre one lace away from a strongly worded gesture.β βYou havenβt strongly worded anything in your life. You just swear until birds leave.β βEffective communication comes in many forms.β Sizzle hissed at the brambles. Grimble jammed Mildred onto his right foot, wrapped his bare left foot in a rag, grabbed his rusted dagger, and stomp-limped toward the trail. βCome on, Sizzle,β he said. βNobody steals a gnomeβs boot and lives peacefully with both nostrils.β They had gone less than half a mile before they found the young man. He stood in the middle of the path wearing shining armor, a polished breastplate, silver-trimmed gloves, and a helmet so clean it looked like it had never been introduced to weather. He held a map upside down, which immediately made Grimble dislike him less than he expected. βExcuse me!β the young man called. βGood sir! Might you know the way to the Great Elven Temple?β Grimble stopped. Sizzle stopped. A squirrel stopped, sensing entertainment. βGood sir?β Grimble repeated. βYes.β βYou talking to me?β βI believe so.β Grimble looked down at his bare rag-wrapped foot, then at his soot-streaked beard, then at the dragon perched beside him, chewing thoughtfully on a twig that had done nothing wrong. βBoy,β Grimble said, βyour judgment is already in the ditch.β The young man swallowed. βMy name is Cedric Larkspur, apprentice of the Order of the Gilded Fern. I seek the Temple of Lethandriel, where the Silver Lantern of Kindly Directions has been stolen by goblins.β Grimble blinked. βThe what of what now?β βThe Silver Lantern of Kindly Directions,β Cedric repeated. βIt is an ancient elven relic that guides lost travelers home.β Grimble barked a laugh. βWell, that explains why the path behind the creek led me to my own backside yesterday.β Cedric frowned. βI beg your pardon?β βKeep begging. Youβre dressed for it.β Sizzle gave a tiny chirp that sounded suspiciously like laughter. Cedric leaned sideways to look at him. βIs that a dragon?β Grimbleβs expression changed. It was subtle, but Sizzle noticed. Grimbleβs hand lowered to rest lightly on the baby dragonβs back. His eyes, usually bright with mischief, narrowed into something old and sharp. βNo,β Grimble said. βHeβs a cabbage with wings.β Cedric flushed. βI only meantβheβs magnificent.β Sizzle puffed up immediately. βDonβt encourage him,β Grimble said. βHe already thinks heβs the flaming doom of breakfast.β βThe goblins who stole the lantern,β Cedric continued carefully, βwere seen near Snarglecap Hill. There were rumors they had other stolen goods as well. Boots, bells, silverware, a priestβs wig, several enchanted spoons, andβ¦β βBoots?β Grimble said. βYes.β βWhat kind of boots?β βI didnβt ask.β βOf course you didnβt. Nobody ever thinks to ask the important questions.β Cedric lowered the map. βWill you help me?β βNo.β Sizzle stared at Grimble. βAbsolutely not.β Sizzle continued staring. βDonβt look at me like that.β Sizzle blinked slowly. βHeβs a shiny lad with a lantern problem. We are boot people.β Sizzle pointed one claw toward the north. βFine,β Grimble muttered. βBut only because Agnes may be involved. Not because I care about elves, lanterns, or this polished spoon of a man.β Cedric straightened. βYou have my gratitude.β βKeep it. Does it buy lunch?β βNo.β βThen itβs useless.β So the three of them set off: Cedric in his shining armor, Grimble in one boot and a rag, and Sizzle trotting between them with his wings half-spread, thrilled to be included in something that smelled like danger. The northern path was not friendly. It twisted through fern beds and thorn tunnels, over slick stones and beneath arching roots. The trees leaned close, murmuring in creaks and leaf-whispers. Somewhere overhead, owls watched with the solemn disapproval of unpaid judges. βDo the trees always sound like that?β Cedric asked. βOnly when theyβre bored,β Grimble replied. βAnd are they bored now?β βYouβre asking a gnome with one boot and a baby dragon. Take a guess.β They crossed a creek where the water ran backward every third minute. They passed a ring of mushrooms that bowed politely until Grimble warned Cedric not to bow back. βWhy not?β Cedric whispered. βBecause then they think youβve accepted office.β βOffice?β βMushroom politics. Nasty business. Too many committees. Too much damp.β Sizzle paused at the mushroom ring and sneezed sparks. The mushrooms recoiled. βThatβs my boy,β Grimble said proudly. βDiplomacy.β By afternoon they reached the old stone wall that marked the beginning of goblin territory. It ran crooked through the woods, half-collapsed and moss-eaten, with purple flowers growing between its cracks. Beyond it, the trees seemed shorter, meaner, and more interested in watching people trip. Cedric lifted his sword. Grimble lowered it with two fingers. βFirst rule of goblins,β he said. βDonβt point the expensive shiny thing unless youβre ready to lose it.β βWhat should I do?β βLook poor.β Cedric glanced down at his gleaming armor. βToo late,β Grimble said. Sizzle sniffed the ground again. Smoke curled from his nostrils. He let out a low growl, deeper than his usual squeaks, and Grimbleβs jokes faded for a moment. There, pressed into the mud beside the wall, was the print of a goblin foot. Beside it was the square, deep impression of a boot heel. Agnes. Grimble knelt slowly and touched the print. βThose green-nosed little pantry rats,β he whispered. Cedric looked uncomfortable. βIt is only a boot.β Grimble turned his head. Cedric took one step back. βOnly a boot?β Grimble said softly. βThat boot carried me out of a troll wedding, across the Mudfen Flats, through the cellar of the Crooked Goat Tavern during a cheese riot, and away from three tax collectors who were faster than they looked. Agnes has seen more life than your entire helmet.β Cedric nodded quickly. βA noble boot.β βDamn right.β Sizzle pressed his little snout against Grimbleβs shoulder. Grimble gave him a rough pat. βDonβt worry. Weβll get her back. And if theyβve scratched the buckle, Iβm doing something dramatic.β βWhat sort of dramatic?β Cedric asked. βI havenβt decided yet. But itβll involve yelling.β They followed the tracks until dusk draped itself over the woods. Ahead, through the tangled branches, they saw firelight flickering against stone. They smelled smoke, stew, wet leather, cheap ale, and goblin confidence. They heard singing. It was bad singing. Not ordinary bad, either. Goblin bad. The kind of bad that sounded like someone throwing a sack of spoons down a stairwell and insisting it had a chorus. Grimble parted the leaves and peered into the hollow below. There, beneath Snarglecap Hill, sprawled a goblin camp. Dozens of crooked tents leaned around a smoky fire. Loot lay piled everywhere: silver plates, jeweled combs, cracked mirrors, rusty helmets, temple bells, a priestβs wig hanging from a spear, and three crates labeled Definitely Not Stolen. At the center of it all, raised on a flat stone like a throne, sat a goblin chief with a nose like a rotten pear and a crown made of bent forks. And on his lap, filled with soup, was Grimbleβs left boot. Agnes. Grimble made a noise so quiet and furious that even the owls stopped judging. Sizzleβs spines rose along his back. Cedric whispered, βIs that your boot?β βThat,β Grimble said, βis a declaration of war.β The Goblin Hoard, the Stolen Boot, and the Roar That Finally Found Its Teeth The goblin chief lifted Agnes to his mouth and drank from her. Grimbleβs left eye twitched. βIβm going to peel him,β he said. βWe need a plan,β Cedric whispered. βThat was the plan.β βA better plan.β Grimble glared at the hollow. βFine. You walk in first, all shiny and noble. They get distracted by your expensive kneecaps. I sneak around the side, retrieve Agnes, steal the lantern, insult someoneβs mother, and then Sizzle sets fire to something emotionally important.β Sizzle chirped approvingly. Cedric looked horrified. βThat is not a plan. That is a crime with choreography.β βMost good plans are.β Before Cedric could object further, a new sound rose from the far edge of the camp: wheels creaking over roots, horses snorting, and a man complaining loudly about mud. A carriage rolled into the hollow, lacquered black and trimmed in brass. Two exhausted ponies dragged it through the muck. On the side, painted in gold letters, were the words: Lord Prundle Coppersnatchβs Traveling Collection of Rare, Dangerous, and Financially Promising Creatures Grimble went very still. Sizzle pressed closer to him. From the carriage stepped Lord Prundle Coppersnatch himself, a tall, narrow man wearing a velvet coat, white gloves, and the expression of someone who had never been punched by nature but richly deserved the introduction. He held a silver-tipped cane and walked as if the ground was lucky to be beneath him. The goblin chief hopped down from his stone, still holding Agnes. βYou bring gold?β the goblin demanded. Lord Prundle sniffed. βIf you have brought me what you promised.β The goblin grinned, revealing teeth like broken corn. βLittle dragon. Blue scales. Orange wings. Baby. Rare. Worth lots.β Sizzleβs pupils narrowed. Grimbleβs hand closed around his dagger. Cedric whispered, βThey mean him.β βAye,β Grimble said. There was no joke in his voice now. Lord Prundle removed a small golden cage from the carriage. The bars shimmered with spellwork. βA hatchling drake,β he said, almost purring. βExcellent. Properly trained, displayed, and branded, it will be the centerpiece of my autumn exhibition.β Sizzle made a tiny, terrified sound. Grimbleβs face hardened into something the woods had not seen in years. For all his foul jokes, petty theft, and general resistance to behaving like a civilized creature, Grimble Stumbletoe had rules. Not many. Not tidy ones. But rules all the same. You did not steal a gnomeβs boot. You did not serve soup in Agnes. And you absolutely, under no circumstances, put Grimbleβs dragon in a cage. βChange of plan,β Grimble said. Cedric swallowed. βTo what?β Grimble stood up. βTo dramatic.β He marched straight into the goblin camp. For a moment, nobody moved. Goblins paused mid-song. Lord Prundle froze with his cage in hand. The goblin chief looked down at the soot-bearded gnome stomping into camp wearing one boot and one filthy rag. Then Grimble pointed at him. βYou,β he said, βare drinking soup from my wife.β The hollow went silent. Cedric closed his eyes behind the bushes. The goblin chief blinked. βBoot wife?β βDonβt judge what you donβt understand.β Lord Prundle looked disgusted. βWhat is this creature?β βThis creature,β Grimble snapped, βis the last bad idea youβre going to have today.β Sizzle stepped out beside him, wings spread, orange membranes glowing in the firelight. He was still small. He was still young. His claws sank nervously into the dirt. But he lifted his head and bared every tiny tooth he had. The goblins stared. Lord Prundleβs eyes lit up. βThere it is.β Grimble moved between him and Sizzle. βThere he is,β Grimble said. βAnd there he stays.β The goblin chief cackled. βSmall dragon. Small gnome. Big soup boot.β He raised Agnes again. That was his mistake. Grimble flung his dagger. It did not hit the goblin. Grimble was not that accurate. It did, however, slice through the rope holding up a rack of stolen pans, which crashed down onto six goblins, a barrel of turnips, and one unfortunate fiddle. Chaos exploded. Sizzle launched himself into the air with a squeak of fury and spat flame at the nearest tent. The tent did not catch fire, because it was too damp and miserable, but it did begin smoking in a way that deeply offended everyone inside it. Cedric charged from the bushes, sword raised, shouting, βFor the Temple of Lethandriel!β Grimble shouted, βFor Agnes, you soup-sucking goblin twits!β The goblins shouted several things, most of them grammatically unstable. Lord Prundle shouted, βDo not damage the merchandise!β Sizzle heard that. His little head snapped toward the collector. Smoke curled from his nostrils. Grimble saw it too, and pride flashed across his soot-smudged face. βThatβs right, lad,β he said. βNobody merchandises you unless you get royalties.β A goblin lunged at Grimble with a club. Grimble ducked, grabbed a ladle from the soup pot, and smacked the goblin across the nose. βYou call that a swing?β Grimble barked. βMy gran hit harder with a knitting needle, and sheβd been dead three days at the time!β Another goblin leapt onto his back. Sizzle swooped low and bit the goblinβs ear. The goblin shrieked, released Grimble, and ran in a circle yelling, βTiny devil! Tiny devil!β βHe prefers dragon,β Grimble shouted after him, βbut your terror is appreciated!β Cedric, to his credit, fought better than Grimble expected. He swung his sword with practiced precision, knocked clubs from goblin hands, kicked over a crate of stolen candlesticks, and once accidentally reflected firelight off his polished breastplate so brightly that three goblins ran into each other. βUseful armor!β Grimble called. βAnnoying, but useful!β βThank you?β Cedric shouted back. βDonβt get sentimental. Iβm under stress.β Lord Prundle advanced toward Sizzle with the golden cage open. βEasy now,β he crooned. βEasy, precious little specimen.β Sizzle backed away. Grimble saw fear flicker through the baby dragonβs eyes, and something in him cracked open like old bark. He remembered finding Sizzle beneath the foxgloves. Remembered the first beard fire. Remembered the little dragon sleeping in Agnes during a cold rainstorm, curled in the boot like a scaly coal. Remembered the first time Sizzle had followed him into the dark, trusting him without question, as if Grimble Stumbletoe of all people was a safe place in the world. Grimble had been called many things: nuisance, thief, drunkard, mushroom menace, public language hazard. But safe? That one was new. And he would be damned before he let some velvet-coated collector take that away. Grimble grabbed Agnes from the goblin chiefβs hands, dumped the soup over the chiefβs head, and shoved his bare foot into the boot with a wet, awful squelch. βOh, that is vile,β he said. βThat is emotionally vile.β The goblin chief wiped broth from his eyes. βMy soup!β βMy boot!β βMy dragon!β Lord Prundle snapped. The camp went quiet again. Even the fire seemed to lean back. Grimble turned slowly. βSay that,β he said, βone more time.β Lord Prundle lifted his chin. βThat dragon is an unregistered magical creature. By royal collectorβs privilege, I have the right to claimββ Sizzle roared. It was not the squeaky kettle-whistle roar from sunset practice. It was not the tiny chirp that made frogs look concerned. This roar rolled out of him with heat, smoke, and the sudden ancient weight of mountains remembering they used to be volcanoes. For one shining second, Sizzle was not a cat-sized baby dragon clinging to a gnomeβs sleeve. He was fire with wings. The flames that burst from his mouth did not strike Lord Prundle. They hit the golden cage. The spellwork shattered. The bars melted. The collector screamed and dropped it, stumbling backward into a crate marked Rare Snails: Do Not Agitate. The crate broke. The snails emerged. They were indeed rare. They were also deeply agitated. Goblins scattered. Cedric seized the Silver Lantern of Kindly Directions from a pile of loot, only to have it shout, βLEFT, YOU FOOL!β in an elegant elven voice. βIt talks?β Cedric cried. βEverything talks in these woods if you annoy it enough!β Grimble shouted. Sizzle landed on Grimbleβs shoulder, trembling with excitement and fear and the aftershock of his own roar. Grimble reached up and held him steady. βGood lad,β he whispered. βGood bloody lad.β The goblin chief, still dripping soup, tried to rally his troops. βGet them! Get boot gnome! Get dragon!β Grimble looked around quickly. He saw the smoky tent, the overturned turnips, the melted cage, the panicked ponies, the scattered lantern light, and the rare agitated snails advancing with slow, terrible purpose. Then he saw a sack of powdered puffball mushrooms. Grimble grinned. βSizzle,β he said, βremember diplomacy?β Sizzleβs eyes brightened. Grimble kicked the sack into the fire. A cloud of glittering mushroom powder erupted through the hollow. Goblins coughed. Lord Prundle wheezed. Cedric sneezed into his helmet so loudly that the Silver Lantern shouted, βBLESS YOU, BUT WITH RESERVATIONS!β Sizzle flapped his wings, pushing the sparkling cloud across the camp. And then the puffball powder did what puffball powder from Widdershins Woods always does when heated, disturbed, and exposed to goblin panic. It made everyone brutally honest. βI never liked this crown!β one goblin sobbed, throwing down a fork. βI canβt read!β shouted another, holding up a stolen recipe book. βI only joined this gang for dental coverage!β cried a third. The goblin chief clutched his soup-stained tunic. βI am lonely and my leadership style is mostly yelling!β Lord Prundle staggered backward, covered in glittering spores. βI have no friends because I collect living things instead of forming meaningful relationships!β Grimble pointed at him. βThere it is.β Cedric, also dusted in powder, turned to Grimble. βI was terrified the whole time and I polished my armor because I thought confidence could be buffed onto metal!β βThat one we knew,β Grimble said. Sizzle sneezed once and released a puff of smoke shaped vaguely like a rude gesture. βAnd you,β Grimble told him, βare perfect.β Sizzle froze. Grimble froze too, realizing what heβd said. βPerfectly annoying,β he added quickly. βPerfectly bitey. Perfectly likely to burn down something I just paid for.β Sizzle nuzzled into his beard anyway. The battle, if it could still be called that, collapsed into goblin confession, snail vengeance, and Lord Prundle trying to apologize to a pony. Grimble took advantage of the confusion with the efficiency of a man who had never respected property boundaries. He retrieved Agnes properly. He pocketed three coins, one silver spoon, a whistle shaped like a frog, and a bottle labeled Do Not Drink Unless You Mean It. He helped Cedric gather the Silver Lantern, several temple bells, and a scroll that kept sighing. Then he found, tucked behind the collectorβs carriage, a small bundle of shed dragon scales tied with red string. Sizzle sniffed them and whimpered. Grimbleβs jaw tightened. βWere these yours?β he asked softly. Sizzle touched one claw to the bundle. Lord Prundle, still covered in glittering spores, raised a weak hand. βI bought those from a reputable goblin.β βThat sentence had three crimes in it,β Grimble said. Cedric stepped forward. βBy authority of the Order of the Gilded Fern, I declare Lord Prundle Coppersnatch under arrest for trafficking magical creatures, conspiracy with goblins, and misuse of velvet in a woodland environment.β Grimble looked impressed. βThat last one official?β βIt should be.β βYouβre learning.β The Silver Lantern glowed brightly and shouted, βSOUTHWEST FOR JUSTICE! ALSO, SOMEONE PICK ME UP PROPERLY!β By midnight, the goblins had fled, Lord Prundle was tied to his own carriage with curtain cords, the rare snails had claimed the chiefβs throne, and Cedric stood in the hollow looking far less polished than before. There was mud on his armor, soot on his cheek, and a dent in his helmet shaped like a goblin pan. βYou did well,β Grimble said. Cedric smiled. βTruly?β βDonβt make it weird.β βRight.β Sizzle climbed onto the stolen loot pile, spread his orange wings, and attempted another mighty roar. This one came out half-roar, half-hiccup, and ended with a spark that lit the priestβs wig on fire. Grimble watched the burning wig sail into the night on a sudden gust of wind. βMajestic,β he said. The next morning, they returned the Silver Lantern of Kindly Directions to the Temple of Lethandriel, though not without incident. The lantern criticized Grimbleβs route the entire way, calling him βgeographically feralβ and once suggesting that even moss had better instincts. The elves, who were tall, serene, and nearly unbearable about both qualities, thanked Cedric with a formal bow and thanked Grimble with visible hesitation. βYour assistance,β said the High Keeper of the Temple, βhas restored balance to the northern paths.β βGood,β Grimble said. βBecause yesterday one of them tried to lead me into a pond.β βThe lantern will prevent such confusion.β βWill it prevent goblins from making soup in my footwear?β The High Keeper paused. βNot specifically.β βThen your magic has gaps.β Cedric coughed into his hand. As a reward, the elves offered Grimble a silver medal, a blessing of safe passage, and a small purse of coins. Grimble took the coins. βNo medal?β Cedric asked as they left. βMedals are just shiny responsibility.β βAnd the blessing?β βIβve survived this long without being blessed. No sense confusing the universe now.β They parted at the old stone wall. Cedric bowed to Grimble, then to Sizzle. βI owe you both my life.β βProbably,β Grimble said. βIf ever you need aid from the Order of the Gilded Fernββ βDo they cook?β βNot well.β βThen weβll manage.β Cedric smiled, less shiny now and better for it. βFarewell, Grimble Stumbletoe. Farewell, Sizzle.β Sizzle chirped. Grimble waved one hand. βTry not to get lost on the way out.β The Silver Lantern, now hanging from Cedricβs belt, shouted, βHE ABSOLUTELY WILL!β Grimble laughed all the way back through the woods. When they reached their clearing, Miss Frumpel was waiting with folded arms, a stern expression, and a fresh notice already nailed to the community stump. βResidents are kindly asked not to return from adventures covered in goblin soup, mushroom glitter, and legal complications.β Grimble read it twice. βThat feels targeted.β βIt is,β said Miss Frumpel. Sizzle waddled up to her porch and dropped a silver spoon at her feet. Miss Frumpel blinked. βFor me?β Sizzle nodded. Her stern face softened, just a little. βWell. Thank you, dear.β Grimble gasped. βHe steals one spoon and gets praised. I borrow three pies and Iβm a menace.β βYou borrowed them from a windowsill.β βThatβs where pies go when they wish to travel.β Miss Frumpel shook her head, but she was smiling when she shut her door. That evening, Grimble and Sizzle sat together beneath the foxgloves where they had first met. The old stone wall glowed softly in the sunset. Mushrooms dotted the moss like tiny umbrellas. Somewhere in the distance, goblins were probably reconsidering their lives, Lord Prundle was definitely composing an apology he didnβt mean, and Cedric Larkspur was learning that heroism involved far more mud than expected. Grimble cleaned Agnes as best he could, muttering apologies to the boot for the soup incident. Sizzle curled against his side, wings folded, eyes heavy. βYou were brave today,β Grimble said. Sizzle looked up. βDonβt get smug. Brave and smug are cousins, and one of them gets punched at weddings.β Sizzle blinked. Grimble sighed and leaned back against a mossy stone. βBut aye. You were brave.β The baby dragon rested his head on Grimbleβs belly. For a while, they listened to the woods breathe. Then Sizzle opened one eye and gave a tiny puff of flame that warmed Grimbleβs beard without burning it. Grimble smiled. βThere you go,β he murmured. βGetting the hang of it.β Above them, the first stars pricked holes in the deepening blue sky. The flowers nodded. The mushrooms glowed. The forest settled around them, wild and green and full of problems waiting patiently for morning. Grimble knew there would be more trouble. There always was. Some lost fool would wander in with a quest. Some goblin would steal something sentimental. Some elf would make a ceremony too long. Some squirrel would look at him wrong. And Sizzle would be there for all of it, tiny teeth flashing, orange wings blazing, eyes bright with the terrible joy of being loved by someone just irresponsible enough to make life interesting. βTomorrow,β Grimble said, βwe practice roaring without setting wigs on fire.β Sizzle made a doubtful chirp. βFine. Without setting important wigs on fire.β Sizzle seemed satisfied. Grimble pulled his hat low, tucked one arm around the baby dragon, and closed his eyes. So the tales continued through Widdershins Woods: of Grimble Stumbletoe, the gnome with the glorious beard, the questionable boots, and the mouth that could curdle cream at twenty paces; and of Sizzle, the baby dragon who was small enough to sleep in a boot but fierce enough to melt a cage, humble a collector, scatter a goblin camp, and warm one cranky old heart that had pretended for years it didnβt need warming. They were not proper heroes. They were too rude for that. But they were loyal. They were ridiculous. They were dangerous in ways no respectable villain could plan for. And in Widdershins Woods, that was usually better. Β Β Bring Grimble and Sizzle Home The artwork behind Beard, Boots, and Baby Dragon captures Grimble Stumbletoe and Sizzle in all their wild woodland glory: the tangled silver beard, the battered leather boots, the mossy mushrooms, and one gloriously loud little dragon with wings like firelit autumn leaves. Bring their mischief home piece by piece with the jigsaw puzzle, turn a wall into Widdershins Woods with the tapestry, or add a bold fantasy focal point with the canvas print. For a softer dose of dragon-powered nonsense, the throw pillow delivers cozy charm with just enough goblin-level attitude. Whether you love gnomes, dragons, woodland fantasy, or art with a mischievous grin, Grimble and Sizzle are ready to stomp, snort, and mildly threaten the mood of any room.
by Bill Tiepelman
Little Keeper of Autumn Magic
In a quiet corner of the enchanted forest, under the dappled, golden light of autumn, sat the "Little Keeper of Autumn Magic," a pint-sized elf with a big attitude. She may look sweet, with her wide eyes and innocent expression, but don't let the adorable hat fool youβshe's got a bit of a bite. This autumn, her job was to watch over the pumpkin patch and make sure none of the forest creatures got too enthusiastic about their seasonal snacking. Every year, the deer, squirrels, and the occasional overzealous hedgehog would tear through her precious pumpkins like kids at a candy shop. The Patch Patrol So there she sat, on her little tree stump throne, swinging her boots in the crisp autumn air. Her hat was as big as her attitude, brim overflowing with autumn leaves, berries, and what she would tell you were "the very essence of fall." (She had a flair for drama.) She even fashioned herself a little stick she called the "Rod of Righteous Reprimands," which she waved at every passing critter with suspicious eyes. βOi! You there! Yes, you, fat-bottomed squirrelβstep AWAY from the squash!β she shouted one afternoon, brandishing her stick. The squirrel paused, mid-pounce, looking from her to the pumpkin with a mix of guilt and confusion. βDonβt give me that look,β she said, arms crossed. βJust because youβre fluffy doesnβt mean youβre sly. Iβve got my eye on you.β She pointed to a small pile of acorns sheβd left out as a peace offering. βNow, you can have those, but touch my pumpkins, and youβll answer to me. And trust me, thatβs not a walk in the woods you want to take.β A Visitor in the Night One chilly evening, just as the sun was setting, a particularly large raccoon came sniffing around the patch. He was the size of a small bear, his eyes glinting with the unmistakable gluttony of someone who thought heβd stumbled upon an all-you-can-eat buffet. βOy!β she yelled, hopping off her stump and stomping over, stick in hand. βWhere do you think youβre going, pal?β The raccoon froze, his tiny paws clutching a miniature pumpkin. They locked eyes for a moment, and the raccoon did what any guilty forest creature would doβhe doubled down. With a haughty chitter, he crammed the pumpkin into his mouth and stared her down, unblinking. The elf narrowed her eyes, one hand on her hip. βAlright, big guy, you wanna dance?β She pointed her stick at him dramatically. βBecause I am in no mood to lose another pumpkin to a creature with hygiene standards so low it thinks a garbage can is a five-star dining experience.β The raccoon, however, was undeterred. He gave her a slow blink, finished chewing his ill-gotten pumpkin prize, and sauntered off, tail flicking behind him in defiance. βUnbelievable,β she muttered. βThe nerve of these woodland hooligans.β She stomped back to her stump, muttering about the βdownfall of forest societyβ and the βmoral corruption of raccoons.β A Fateful Encounter The next day, a handsome young fox sauntered into the clearing, sniffing the air. Now, the Little Keeper of Autumn Magic would tell you she was far too busy to be interested in romance, but she couldnβt help noticing his elegant tail and the debonair way he looked over the pumpkins. βGood evening, miss,β the fox said smoothly, with a little bow. βMight I sample one of your gourds?β She blushed, adjusting her hat. βWellβ¦ um, as long as itβs just one. Andβ¦ you know, youβre respectful about it.β The fox winked. βRespect is my middle name.β He picked out a particularly plump pumpkin, and she watched him nibble it with uncharacteristic bashfulness. Then, out of the corner of her eye, she noticed a sneaky squirrel making off with a gourd while she was distracted. βOi! Get back here!β she shrieked, abandoning her conversation with the fox to chase down the wayward thief. The fox just chuckled, finishing his pumpkin in peace. βQuite the little keeper of autumn magic, indeed,β he murmured, watching her dart after the squirrel with her stick held high. And the Magic of Fall Rolls On As the leaves continued to turn, the elf maintained her vigilant post, armed with her oversized hat, her fierce spirit, and her trusty "Rod of Righteous Reprimands." While the forest creatures occasionally got the better of her, she always managed to restore order to her pumpkin patchβmore or less. It was her own chaotic little kingdom, and she wouldnβt have it any other way. After all, thereβs magic in the mayhem, and if autumn wasnβt a little wild, it just wouldnβt be autumn at all. And somewhere in the background, a certain fox watched her antics with an amused twinkle in his eye, patiently waiting for his next chance to charm the Little Keeper of Autumn Magic. Β Β Bring the Little Keeper of Autumn Magic Into Your Home If the charm of our βLittle Keeper of Autumn Magicβ has enchanted you, bring a touch of her cozy woodland world into your own space! Whether you're looking to decorate for fall or simply love whimsical art, these beautiful items make it easy to keep the spirit of autumn close year-round. Wood Print: Add rustic charm to any wall with this artwork printed on durable wood, perfect for giving your space that cozy, magical vibe. Tapestry: Make a statement with this enchanting tapestry, ideal for transforming any room into a woodland wonderland. Tote Bag: Take a little autumn magic with you wherever you go. This tote bag is both practical and charming, a perfect blend of art and functionality. Throw Pillow: Cozy up with the Little Keeper herself. This throw pillow is a delightful way to add a touch of whimsy to your couch or favorite chair. Whether you're decorating for the season or looking for the perfect gift for a friend who loves a bit of fantasy, these pieces capture the essence of autumn magic. Embrace the cozy vibes and invite a little bit of woodland wonder into your life!
by Bill Tiepelman
Cradle of the Universe
In the beginningβthough βbeginningβ might be an oversimplificationβthere was only stardust, cosmic dust swirling in some unknowable void. From this, the universe emerged, a chaotic, infinite playground of light and gravity, expansion and implosion. There was no rhyme or reason, just the endlessly swirling potential of everything that would come to be. And somewhere along the way, perhaps because the universe got bored or because itβs terribly fond of experiments, there were hands. Now, these werenβt your ordinary hands. They didnβt have fingerprints, nerves, or bones, nor were they attached to any particular body. They simplyβ¦ were. Floating, glowing, cosmic in nature, made of stardust and galaxies, somehow warm despite their otherworldly texture. If you were to look closer, you might swear you could see nebulae swirling under the skin, like oil on water, shimmering with an impossible spectrum of colors. But as far as anyone could tell, they didnβt belong to anyone or anything. They were hands without a master, or perhaps they were the master, and the universe itself was just an idea held gently in their palms. For eons, they simply floated, marveling at their own existence in a way only hands can. If they could laugh, they would have, and if they could think, they wouldβve pondered deeply on their purpose. But they were, after all, just hands. Purpose was irrelevant; they simply existed, cradling bits of stars and flickers of light, feeling the warmth of all creation flowing through them. And that was enough. Or it was, until the day they felt something new. It was a faint stirring, an almost imperceptible thrum from deep withinβa signal, maybe, or a call. Something in the universe hadβ¦ shifted. As the hands instinctively cupped together, they noticed the faint outline of a small, luminous bloom taking shape between their palms, an ethereal, delicate flower glowing with the light of stars. Its petals shimmered in shades of rose and violet, its center a gentle sunburst of gold. The hands sensed something, if hands could be said to sense things. The sensation wasnβt a thought, not exactlyβit was more like an impulse, a tugging urge. They had been cradling the whole of the universe for as long as theyβd been aware, but this feltβ¦ different. Personal. The flower unfolded, layer by intricate layer, each petal a burst of color and light, as if the flower held all the stories of all the stars in its tiny form. And for the first time, the hands felt an ache, an urge to protect something so fragile yet so boundless in its beauty. And so they held it closer, cupping it more carefully, feeling a quiet warmth radiate through their intangible palms. In a universe defined by chaos and uncertainty, here was something that felt precious, something that required care. As they marveled, the flower began to whisper. Not wordsβflowers donβt have mouthsβbut a deep, resonant knowing that somehow poured directly into the stardust of those celestial hands. The whisper was both infinitely old and startlingly new. It spoke of life and death, of birth and decay, of laughter and heartbreak. It spoke of momentsβthe way light feels when it first touches the skin after winter, or the peculiar joy of sharing a joke that doesnβt need to be funny as long as youβre laughing together. It whispered of paradoxes, too, the absurdity and magnificence of human lives, the moments when people laugh through their tears or fall in love against all reason. The hands couldnβt laugh, but if they could, they mightβve chuckled at the absurdity of it all. A flower that contained every secret of the universe, whispering about awkward first dates and the feeling of sand between toes, as if these tiny human moments somehow weighed equally with the birth of stars and the collapse of empires. But as the hands listened, they realized something even stranger: the flower didnβt care about being eternal. Its wisdom lay in understanding that everythingβevery laugh, every tear, every star, every silenceβwould one day fade. And it was okay with that. In fact, it celebrated it. The flower embraced the temporary, the bittersweet, the brief flashes of beauty that gave meaning to existence. In that instant, the hands understood, in their own silent, wordless way. The purpose of cradling the universe wasnβt to keep it safe from change, but to nurture its transformations, to let things bloom and wither, to witness both the joys and absurdities of existence. Maybe that was why they were hereβto hold the universe not as a possession, but as a friend, someone you understand is only visiting for a while. And so, for the first time in however many eons theyβd existed, the hands loosened their grip. They let the flower rest freely in their palms, content to watch it live and grow, and eventually, inevitably, fade. It was strange, comforting even, to know that in the end, everything that came to be would eventually return to the same cosmic dust from which it sprang. As the flowerβs petals began to drift away like tiny stars, the hands found themselves strangely at peace. They knew the universe would carry on its chaotic dance, birthing new wonders, creating and destroying in endless cycles. They would watch, bearing witness, their only purpose to cradle, to care, and, occasionally, to let go. And maybe, just maybe, if theyβd had the gift of laughter, theyβd chuckle at the irony of it all. After all, they were handsβthe simplest of formsβholding the most complex of things. But thatβs life, isnβt it? Simple, absurd, and infinitely beautiful. Β Β Bring "Cradle of the Universe" into Your Space If the story of "Cradle of the Universe" resonates with you, consider bringing this celestial beauty into your own life. From wall decor to cozy essentials, there are many ways to keep this image close, a reminder of the universeβs gentle mystery and our own fleeting moments of wonder. Explore these stunning product options to make it a part of your world: Tapestry: Transform any wall into a cosmic sanctuary with this captivating tapestry, perfect for meditation spaces or creative studios. Jigsaw Puzzle: Enjoy a mindful experience piecing together "Cradle of the Universe," a soothing and meditative activity. Framed Print: Elevate your home decor with a framed print of this timeless artwork, a daily reminder of beauty and perspective. Fleece Blanket: Wrap yourself in the warmth of the cosmos with a soft fleece blanket, perfect for stargazing nights or cozying up indoors. Each product allows you to carry a piece of the universe into your own life, a gentle reminder of its cosmic beauty and endless mysteries.
by Bill Tiepelman
The Girl, the Cat, and the Garden that Didnβt Exist Yesterday
Once upon a Thursday that was supposed to be like any other, Lydiaβa small, curious girl with an affinity for rose-patterned dresses and grand adventuresβwandered into her backyard to find something that had definitely not been there the day before: a sprawling, enchanted garden. There were plants she didnβt recognize, which was odd because Lydia considered herself something of a garden expert. Enormous blooms the size of dinner plates arched over winding wooden paths, their petals shimmering in impossible shades of indigo, coral, and bright peach. Vines coiled up ancient trees as if they were knitting a tapestry, and the air smelled like honey and cinnamon, though it was probably just the same backyard where the neighborsβ dog liked to dig up their lawn. Perched beside her was her fluffy, slightly sarcastic Maine Coon, Maximilian von Purrington. Max had been named by Lydiaβs grandmother, who claimed that cats with long names developed character, and Lydia figured it was true since Max had a personality that could fill the house. His ginger fur glowed almost theatrically in the soft light filtering down through the foliage, and he sat with his tail wrapped around his paws, regarding the garden with a mixture of surprise and mild disapproval. He preferred the indoorsβwhere snacks were abundant, and the risk of strange vegetation was minimal. βDid you do this?β Lydia whispered, already certain the garden was hiding secrets she had yet to uncover. Max glanced up at her, narrowing his green eyes with the world-weary expression of a cat whoβs used to humoring humans. βI think we both know Iβm not one for horticulture,β he replied, his voice dripping with the kind of dry British accent Lydia imagined for him. In truth, Max didnβt speak, but Lydiaβs imagination filled in the gaps. βAnd donβt even think about eating anything here. If the mushrooms have eyes, we turn around.β But Lydia was already dashing down the first winding path, lace skirt swirling around her legs, her hair bouncing as she leaped over roots that seemed to pulse with life. Max, torn between his loyalty and his reluctance to enter the garden, followed with a resigned sigh. The Gardenβs Secret The deeper they wandered, the more peculiar the garden became. There were flowers that seemed to rearrange themselves whenever Lydia wasnβt looking, and plants that shivered and withdrew as Max approached, as though intimidated by his casual haughtiness. Lydia laughed and twirled, delighting in every strange and marvelous sight, while Max muttered under his breath about βbotanical nonsenseβ and βhumans and their foolishness.β Then they reached a clearing where a massive, intricately carved wooden door stood alone, leading to nothing in particular. Painted on its surface in delicate script were the words: βFor Those Who Are Lost or Simply Bored.β βOh! We should go through it!β Lydia declared. βOr,β Max drawled, stretching his paws delicately, βwe could turn back. I hear the sofa is nice and warm this time of day.β But before he could protest further, Lydia had pushed open the door, and they stepped through. A Dance with the Toads On the other side of the door, they found themselves in an even stranger garden. The path beneath them was not dirt or wood but soft, thick clouds that cushioned each step, and the plants here were even more absurd than before. Bright purple mushrooms sprouted on floating rocks, and enormous, puffy plants with pastel fur swayed in time to music that seemed to drift out of nowhere. βAre we floating?β Max asked, somewhat distressed. βIβm a cat, Lydia. Iβm supposed to stay close to the ground. Gravity is part of my brand.β Lydia barely heard him. She was already darting toward a cluster of flowers with gleaming petals that looked like stained glass. Behind the flowers, a signpost read: βLEFT: A Friendly Ogre with Free Lemonade. RIGHT: Beware of Tap-Dancing Toads.β Lydia, being a logical child, decided that free lemonade was an opportunity not to be missed, so she veered left, with Max reluctantly padding along behind her. Sure enough, they soon encountered a friendly ogre sitting in a large, comfy armchair, looking surprisingly domestic. He wore glasses, had a nose ring, and held a jug of lemonade in one hand. As they approached, he grinned and offered them each a cup (Lydia gladly accepted, Max sniffed his cup suspiciously). βLovely day in the garden, isnβt it?β said the ogre, whose name turned out to be Gerald. βOh, I wouldnβt go past the river, thoughβwild blueberry bushes with quite an attitude over there.β βOh, thank you, Gerald!β Lydia said, delighted at having found a friend. βDo you live here?β βOh, I wouldnβt say I live here,β Gerald replied mysteriously, peering over his glasses. βItβs just where I go on Thursdays. Fridays Iβm more of a mountain troll, if you catch my drift.β He winked. After a few more sips of lemonade, Lydia and Max thanked Gerald and set off once more, waving goodbye as he returned to his magazine, which appeared to be titled βOgrely Affairs.β The Journey Home Hoursβor maybe only minutesβlater, Lydia and Max finally retraced their steps back to the lone door in the garden. They slipped through it and emerged once more into Lydiaβs perfectly normal backyard. The enchanted garden was gone, replaced by the usual bushes, a patchy lawn, and that neighborβs dog who was barking at a pigeon. As they stepped inside the house, Max immediately sprawled out on the nearest rug with a sigh, as if he had been on some terribly arduous journey. βWhat do you think it all meant?β Lydia asked, glancing back at the garden, as if hoping it might reappear. Max gave her an inscrutable look. βSome things, Lydia, are better left unexplained. Like that ogreβs lemonade recipe.β They never spoke of the garden again, but every Thursday, like clockwork, Lydia would check the backyard, just in case the door returned. And though heβd never admit it, Max always checked too. Β Β Bring the Magic Home If you loved Lydia and Max's enchanting adventure through the mystical garden, you can keep a piece of that magic in your own space. Explore our Mystical Gardens and Childhood Dreams collection, featuring whimsical designs by Bill and Linda Tiepelman that capture the storyβs dreamy spirit. From cozy throws to charming accessories, these items are perfect for adding a touch of wonder to your day-to-day life. Tapestry β Transform any room into a fairytale escape with this beautiful tapestry. Throw Pillow β Add a splash of magic to your sofa or reading nook with this cozy throw pillow. Tote Bag β Carry a piece of the enchanted garden with you wherever you go! Pouch β Keep your essentials close with this charming pouch, perfect for daily adventures. Each piece in this collection is designed to bring a smile and a touch of whimsy into your life. Take a bit of the gardenβs magic with you, and let your imagination roam!
by Bill Tiepelman
Nebula Eyes and the Enchanted Litter Box
Once upon a time, deep in a forest where magic mushrooms glowed and squirrels sipped on spiked acorn brew, there lived a mystical kitten named Nebula. Now, Nebula wasnβt your average kitten. Nopeβthis one had fur that swirled with cosmic patterns, eyes that looked like they could see through your soul, and the sass of a hundred alley cats combined. You might think that having galaxies in your fur would make you a wise, noble guardian of the forest. But Nebula? Nebula hadβ¦ other priorities. One night, Nebula strutted through the enchanted forest, her gaze shimmering with that usual βI know something you donβtβ energy. But tonight, she was on a mission. Somewhere, hidden under a mystical mushroom or beside a babbling brook, was the legendary Enchanted Litter Boxβrumored to be the most luxurious bathroom in the universe. According to forest legend, the Enchanted Litter Box would grant one wish to any creature who used it. But it wasnβt just any wish. It was the kind of wish that could make your wildest dreams come trueβ¦ as long as you flushed properly. βPerfect,β thought Nebula, whiskers twitching. βIβve got a few things Iβd like to change around here.β Nebulaβs journey wasnβt without its obstacles, though. She had to dodge a drunk raccoon named Ralph, who was babbling on about his broken marriage, and a band of chipmunks running a very illegal nut gambling ring. After a few detours (and a stolen mushroom or two), Nebula finally spotted it: the Enchanted Litter Box. It was as golden as a goose egg and smelled faintly of lavender andβ¦ was that... cinnamon? She sniffed the air. βThis better be worth it,β she muttered, stepping into the box. The enchanted box glowed as she did her business, little sparkles dancing in the air. She thought long and hard about her wish as she kicked some enchanted litter over her βcontribution.β Finally, with a haughty tail flick, she declared, βI wish for unlimited snacks and absolutely zero consequences for anything I do. Ever.β The Litter Box shimmered, glowed, and thenβPOOF! Out came a cloud of sparkles, swirling around her in a storm of magic. When the glitter settled, Nebula was sitting in a pile of treatsβenchanted catnip, smoked salmon bits, and even the fabled Forest Tuna Tartare (usually reserved only for the royal badger). She rolled around in her new stash, practically purring with triumph. Of course, word of the litter box wish quickly spread. Soon, every forest creature wanted in on the action. Ralph the raccoon attempted a wish for βeternal charisma,β only to end up with a permanent case of the hiccups. The chipmunks wished for endless acorns and got buried under an avalanche of the darn things. But Nebula? She was completely unfazed, watching from her pile of treats as chaos reigned around her. As she lounged in her enchanted treat stash, smirking at the pandemonium, Nebula realized one important truth: Sometimes, it pays to be a little selfish and a whole lot sassy. After all, if you can look like a star-dusted, galaxy-eyed diva and still come out smelling like lavender litter, then why the heck not? And so, Nebula lived out her days in smug luxury, rolling in enchanted treats, ignoring the antics of her enchanted forest neighbors, and, of course, refusing to let anyone touch her precious, glowing litter box. The End Β Β Bring Nebula Home! If you enjoyed the story of Nebula, why not bring a little of that enchanted, cosmic charm into your own space? Explore our exclusive collection featuring Nebula Eyes and Moonlit Fur on a variety of unique products: Throw Pillow β Add a touch of magical comfort to your living space. Tapestry β Transform any wall into a window to an enchanted forest. Tote Bag β Carry a bit of Nebulaβs magic wherever you go. Fleece Blanket β Snuggle up in cosmic style. Stitch the Magic of Nebula Eyes and Moonlit Fur Capture the whimsical charm and cosmic beauty of Nebulaβs story with this cross-stitch pattern. Perfect for both beginners and experienced stitchers, this pattern transforms the enchanting tale into a stunning work of art. Let your creativity bring Nebulaβs glowing eyes and moonlit fur to life, one stitch at a time. Whether youβre looking to add a whimsical touch to your home or a unique gift for someone special, these items bring Nebula's enchanted energy into the everyday.
by Bill Tiepelman
Cheeky Forest Dwellers
Interview with the Cheeky Forest Dwellers Welcome to a very special (and chaotic) interview with two of the forestβs most infamous troublemakers. We sat down with the delightful duo, Hank and Gertie, to hear about life, love, and why they refuse to act their age. Warning: this interview contains snark, sass, and mushroom-infused moonshine. Interview Highlights Interviewer: So, Hank and Gertie, thanks for sitting down with us today! You two are quite the pair. How long have you beenβ¦ uh, βtogetherβ? Hank: Together? Ha! Sheβs been stuck with me since the Summer of β834. Just sorta latched on like a barnacle on a troll's backside. Gertie: Oh, please. If Iβm a barnacle, then youβre the sea slug Iβm stuck on. He wooed me with a wilted dandelion bouquet and the promise of free mushroom stew. Real charmer, this one. --- Interviewer: Wow, quite the romantic beginning! So, whatβs kept you two together forβ¦ checks notesβ¦ over a thousand years? Gertie: Itβs simple. I keep him around βcause he knows how to build a good fire and heβs got a high tolerance for my cooking. And because heβs too slow to run away. Hank: And I stick with her βcause she laughs at all my jokes, even the bad ones. Plus, sheβs handy with a slingshot when the squirrels get cheeky. Gertie: True. Nothing says romance like warding off a squirrel invasion together. They donβt tell you that in fairy tales. --- Interviewer: Speaking of squirrelsβ¦ you two have a bit of a reputation in the forest. Care to comment on all the mischief? Hank: Mischief? Us? Look, if weβre not keeping things lively, the place would be dull as dirt. Someoneβs gotta keep these mushrooms on their toes. Gertie: Exactly. Lifeβs short, even for us gnomes. Might as well spend it playing tricks, throwing pine cones, and generally causing a ruckus. Keeps us young. Hank: Besides, weβre practically celebrities βround here. The pixies tell legends about us! "The Great Gnome Fart Fiasco of β976ββever heard of it? Gertie: *rolls eyes* Letβs not get into that one. We nearly got banished for a year after that stunt. --- Interviewer: I canβt believe Iβm asking this, but any relationship advice for the young gnomes out there? Gertie: Sure. Find someone who doesnβt mind that you snore like a bear or that your idea of a bath is wading through a mud puddle once a month. Hank: And someone who can handle yourβ¦ βunique talents.β Like her mushroom casserole. Tastes like dirt, but you wonβt hear me complaininββmostly because sheβd whack me with her ladle. Gertie: Thatβs the spirit. Just remember, kids, love is all about tolerance. And sometimes a good dose of blindfolds and nose plugs. --- Interviewer: One last questionβwhatβs the secret to staying soβ¦ lively? Hank: Easy! A nip of mossy moonshine every morning and a solid diet of insults. Keeps the blood pumpinβ and the heart rate high. Gertie: And donβt take life too seriously. If you canβt laugh at yourself, find someone else to laugh at. Like Hank here. Heβs got a face only a blind troll could love. Hank: And sheβs got a laugh that could wake the dead. But thatβs love, ainβt it? Gertie: *grins* I guess so. Now, if youβll excuse us, weβve got a mushroom hunt to get to. And a few squirrels who could use a good scare. With that, the Cheeky Forest Dwellers stomped off, arm in arm, leaving behind only the faint scent of mushroom stew and an echo of mischievous laughter. --- The Secret to Cheeky Love For all their crassness, Hank and Gertieβs long-lived love reminds us that a little snark, a lot of laughs, and a mutual appreciation for mischief may just be the recipe for happily-ever-afterβ¦ in gnome years, anyway. The (Unlikely) Tale of How Hank and Gertie Met Long before they were the most infamous pranksters of the forest, Hank and Gertie were just two solitary gnomes with reputations for causing trouble in their own unique ways. Hereβs the (mostly true) tale of how these two stubborn souls first crossed pathsβ¦ The Festival of the Fungi It was during the annual Festival of the Fungiβa legendary event held in the deepest part of the enchanted forest. Gnomes, pixies, and critters from all over gathered to celebrate the wonders of wild mushrooms. There was food, music, mushroom-flavored moonshine, and, of course, plenty of mischief. Hank, already a well-known menace, was in his element. Heβd spent the whole evening challenging other gnomes to drinking contests and trying to steal hats off the heads of every passing pixie. With his long beard and his wild laugh echoing through the forest, he was hard to miss. Gertie, meanwhile, had come for the mushrooms. She wasnβt interested in festivities or flirtationsβshe was there on a mission. She had a particular fondness for the rare Glowcap Shroom, which only appeared once a century. Unfortunately for her, the Glowcap patch was surrounded by rowdy gnomes, with none other than Hank smack in the middle, drunkenly challenging anyone who crossed his path. The (Not So) Meet-Cute Gertie rolled her eyes and waded through the chaos, determined to reach her prized mushrooms. Just as she stretched her hand toward a perfect Glowcap, Hank lurched forward and stepped on it, squashing the shroom under his big muddy boot. Gertie: Hey! You big oaf! That was the rarest shroom in the forest! Hank: *looks down, grinning* Whoops. Didnβt see it there. Maybe if you got a pair oβ spectacles, youβd find a shroom without trippinβ over your own feet. Gertie: Tripping over my own feet? Iβve half a mind to wallop you with my basket! Hank: Go ahead, sweetheart. Bet you couldnβt knock over a feather if you tried. And that was all it took. In an instant, Gertie had grabbed her basket, wound up, and whacked Hank squarely across the beard. The slap echoed through the forest, stopping the music and drawing the attention of every gnome, pixie, and squirrel nearby. Hank: *laughing* Feisty one, arenβt ya? I think I like you! Gertie: *glaring* Well, I donβt like you! And Iβd like you even less if you keep squashing mushrooms under your clumsy feet. A Prank War Begins Hank, being the foolhardy gnome he was, saw this as a challenge. For the rest of the festival, he followed Gertie around, pulling every prank he could think of. Heβd hide her basket, replace her mushroom samples with rocks, and even sprinkle itching powder on her hat. Gertie, far from backing down, retaliated in kind. She βaccidentallyβ spilled mushroom stew on his boots, planted stinkweed in his path, and once even put a toad in his bedroll. By the end of the festival, both of them were exhausted, filthy, and still arguing. But there was something neither of them could ignoreβbeneath all the insults and pranks, theyβd started to enjoy each otherβs company. Somewhere between the mushroom stew mishap and the toad incident, a strange, grudging respect had blossomed. A Strange Proposal As the Festival of the Fungi wound down, Hank turned to Gertie, grinning his signature, lopsided grin. Hank: Tell ya what, Gertie. How βbout we keep this going? I could use a lady with a mean swing and a taste for mischief. Gertie: *scoffs* Only if you promise not to squash any more Glowcaps under those big, clumsy feet of yours. Hank: Deal. Long as you promise not to hit me with that basket again. Hard enough being a gnome without a concussion. And just like that, they struck a dealβa partnership in chaos, a truce between pranksters, and, perhaps, the beginning of something resembling love. Theyβd argue, prank, and torment each other for centuries to come, bound together by a shared love of mischief and a mutual refusal to act their age. And thatβs how Hank and Gertie, the Cheeky Forest Dwellers, metβover a squashed Glowcap and a mutual willingness to annoy each other for the rest of their very long lives. Bring the Cheeky Forest Dwellers Home! If youβve fallen for the mischievous charm of Hank and Gertie, why not invite a little of their cheeky spirit into your own space? Our Cheeky Forest Dwellers Collection captures all the humor, sass, and rustic whimsy of this unforgettable duo. Perfect for anyone who loves a good laugh and a touch of woodland magic! Tapestry β Add a bold touch of gnome mischief to any wall with our vibrant tapestry, perfect for bringing a slice of enchanted forest into your home. Framed Print β Capture Hank and Gertieβs timeless snark in a beautifully framed print, ideal for those who appreciate a bit of character in their decor Jigsaw Puzzle β Piece together the charm of this dynamic duo with a puzzle thatβs as fun and quirky as they are. A perfect gift for gnome lovers and puzzle enthusiasts alike! Tote Bag β Carry a bit of cheeky charm wherever you go with this sturdy tote, featuring Hank and Gertieβs unforgettable expressions. Embrace the magic, humor, and pure cheekiness of the forestβs most famous gnome couple! Check out the full collection here.
by Bill Tiepelman
The Harvest Watcher
The Harvest Watcherβs Halloween Havoc It was Halloween night, the one night when The Harvest Watcher, a tiny elf with a sass level rivaled only by her height (about three inches, but donβt tell her that), had to keep a sharp eye on her pumpkin patch. She loved her job, really. Guarding pumpkins was her calling. But tonight, the forest felt different. The wind howled louder, the trees seemed darker, and somewhere in the distance, an owl hooted in a way that sounded suspiciously like laughter. This wasnβt just any Halloweenβit was the full-moon kind, and every nutty ghoul and clueless mortal was about to waltz right into her patch. βNot on my watch,β she muttered, cracking her knuckles and adjusting her hat, which was festooned with berries, leaves, and enough autumn flair to put a Pinterest board to shame. She had barely settled onto her favorite stump when she heard a rustling in the bushes. Her heart sank. "Who goes there?β she called, her tiny voice echoing with a surprising authority. Out of the shadows slunk a group of costumed kids, about ten of them, carrying flashlights and candy bags already half-full. βLook, there she is! The forest elf!β one of them squealed, pointing right at her. Oh, for pumpkinβs sake. The Harvest Watcher sighed. She was hoping for at least another hour before the Halloween thrill-seekers showed up. But there was no stopping them once the stories got out. She glared at them, hands on her tiny hips. βWhat do you think youβre doing here? Donβt you have houses to egg or candy to steal?β she demanded, her voice dripping with annoyance. βWeβre looking for the legendary forest treasures,β one particularly bold kid declared, flashing an annoyingly toothy grin. βWe heard the elf would grant us a wish if we found her!β The Harvest Watcher snorted. βA wish? The only thing Iβm going to grant you is a swift kick in the keister if you touch a single pumpkin.β But the kids only giggled, clearly unbothered by her threats. βAlright, last warning, kiddos,β she hissed, grabbing her trusty staffβa tiny twig but enchanted to pack a punch. They werenβt scared, so she figured it was time to give them a taste of her power. With a flourish, she waved her twig-staff, and the pumpkins began to glow with an eerie orange light. Their carved faces twisted and grinned, and the forest seemed to whisper, "Turn backβ¦." Most of the kids screamed and took off, but one stubborn kidβthe one who probably still believed in Santa at age fifteenβstood his ground, staring her down. βIβm not scared of you, tiny elf!β he taunted. βIβll just take this pumpkin here andβ¦β Before he could finish, the Harvest Watcher flicked her fingers, and the pumpkin he was reaching for came to life, sprouting vine-arms that wrapped around his legs. βHELP!β he yelped as he struggled to break free. The vines held firm, dragging him backwards as his friends yelled, βLeave it, Todd! Sheβs real! Run!β With a smirk, The Harvest Watcher released him, and he bolted after his friends, his dignity left somewhere between the forest entrance and the nearest pumpkin. Good riddance. She dusted off her hands. But the night wasnβt over yet. Far from it. Just as she was about to settle back down, she heard another rustling soundβthis time from behind. βPlease, let this be another raccoon in a witch hat,β she muttered, turning around. But what she saw made her jaw drop. Out of the trees sauntered three full-grown adults dressed as vampires. And not the classy, βI-hung-out-with-Draculaβ type vampires. No, these were the bargain-bin, black-lipstick, ripped-fishnet-wearing kind. And judging by the bottles in their hands, theyβd been celebrating since sundown. βLook, itβs the elf,β one of them slurred, leaning on his friend. βThe one from the legends, right? If we catch her, we get aβ¦ aβ¦ prize or something?β The friend shrugged, mumbling something about how they βdidnβt come all this way to get spooked by a forest pixie.β The Harvest Watcher groaned. βAlright, boys, turn around and head back to your party. Iβm not here to entertain drunken vampires.β But they kept advancing, circling her pumpkin patch like wolves around a chicken coop. βFine,β she said, cracking her knuckles again. βYou want a Halloween scare? Youβve got it.β She chanted a few words in an ancient elfin tongue, and suddenly the pumpkins erupted into a roaring blaze of orange and green fire, illuminating the forest in an otherworldly light. The three men froze, their faces pale under the flickering glow. But that wasnβt enough for The Harvest Watcher. She flicked her wrist, and one of the pumpkins sprouted legs, hopping over to the lead vampire and letting out a tiny but menacing roar. βAHHH!β he shrieked, dropping his bottle and scrambling backwards. βAnd donβt come back!β she yelled after them as they stumbled and tripped their way out of the forest, half of them babbling apologies and the other half screaming about βdemon pumpkins.β By now, the forest was quiet, and she was almost ready to call it a night. But Halloween had one last surprise for her. From the shadows, a cloaked figure emerged, small but dignified, with a pumpkin head carved with an elaborate, toothy grin. βWatcher,β he said in a low, gravelly voice. The Harvest Watcher narrowed her eyes. βJack. Youβre late.β Jack-oβ-Lantern, the spirit of Halloween himself, shrugged. βBusy night, you know how it is. I just wanted to stop by and thank you for keeping things in order here.β βAll in a nightβs work, Jack. But you owe me. These mortals are getting more obnoxious every year.β Jack chuckled. βFine. Next year, Iβll send you some reinforcements. Maybe a few werewolves to liven things up.β He gave her a wink, his carved face casting eerie shadows in the moonlight. And with that, he vanished into the mist, leaving The Harvest Watcher alone with her pumpkins and the lingering smell of cider and firelight. She gave one last look around her patch, satisfied that sheβd held her ground. βHappy Halloween,β she whispered to her pumpkins. βNow rest upβ¦thereβs always next year.β Β Β As the night grew quiet, The Harvest Watcher finally leaned back, content that her pumpkins were safe for another Halloween. But for those who wished to bring a piece of her pumpkin-protecting magic home, sheβd left behind a few enchanted treasures of her own. Celebrate the spirit of Halloween year-round with The Harvest Watcher collection, available in charming forms: Throw Pillow β Bring cozy, whimsical charm to your space with this delightful pillow featuring The Harvest Watcher herself. Puzzle β Embrace a magical challenge and piece together this enchanting autumn scene, one pumpkin at a time. Tote Bag β Carry a bit of Halloween magic wherever you go with this sturdy, stylish tote bag. Tapestry β Transform any room into an autumn forest with a tapestry that captures all the whimsy and wonder of The Harvest Watcherβs realm. Whether you're a lover of Halloween, a fan of fantasy, or simply want to enjoy a touch of fall magic, The Harvest Watcher collection is here to bring a little enchantment to your everyday life. Happy Halloweenβ¦and remember, keep an eye on your pumpkins!
by Bill Tiepelman
Splashing in Magic Waters
Deep in the heart of the enchanted autumn woods, where the leaves were ablaze in shades of red and gold, there lived a gnome named Gribble. Now, Gribble wasnβt your average, everyday garden-variety gnome. No, no. He was as mischievous as they came, with a snicker that could make the trees blush and a wit sharper than the blade he never actually used. Letβs be honest, Gribble was more about fun than work. And then there was Sprout. Ah, Sproutβhis pint-sized dragon companion. Sprout was... well, "adorably chaotic" is a good way to put it. With wings too big for his body and a tendency to hiccup smoke rings, he was like a flying toddler with an attitude. Together, they were a walking (or flying) disaster, but in the most entertaining way possible. One crisp autumn afternoon, Gribble and Sprout were on a stroll through the forest, not looking for trouble (which meant trouble was definitely going to find them). They came upon a stream, the water clear and cold, reflecting the fiery canopy of leaves above. Gribble, always up for a bit of nonsense, decided this was the perfect time for a break from βimportant gnome business.β And by that, he meant absolutely nothing productive. The Plan (or Lack Thereof) "Alright, Sprout," Gribble said, rubbing his hands together, eyes gleaming with glee. "Time for a bath!" Now, dragons donβt traditionally love water, but Sprout, with his unpredictable baby brain, decided today was the day heβd be an exception. With a high-pitched squeal that sounded like a kettle about to blow, he launched himself into the stream, flapping his tiny wings and spraying water everywhere. And by everywhere, I mean all over Gribbleβs face. "Ah! You soggy little lizard!" Gribble sputtered, wiping his beard, which now looked more like a soaked mop than the dignified tangle it usually was. "I said you take a bath, not me!" Sprout, of course, was far too busy splashing and blowing little fire-bubbles to listen. Every few seconds, the dragon would hiccup, sending out a spark of flame that turned into harmless bubbles in the cool air. A bubble popped on Gribbleβs nose, and he couldnβt help but snort in amusement. The little pest was too cute to stay mad at for long. The Splash War Begins "Alright, Sprout," Gribble said with a wicked grin, rolling up his sleeves. "If itβs a splash war you want, itβs a splash war youβll get!" He leapt into the stream with all the grace of a rock tied to an anvil. Water exploded in all directions as the gnome belly-flopped into the shallow creek, sending waves cascading over the unsuspecting Sprout, who immediately retaliated with a gust of wing-flapping and shrill giggles. Gnomes werenβt exactly known for their swimming abilities, but Gribble didnβt care. He was having the time of his life. And so it went, back and forth, with Gribble laughing like a madman and Sprout trying his best to drown him in two inches of water. To any casual observer, it looked like a full-blown riot had broken out between a miniature dragon and an overgrown garden ornament. And to be fair, thatβs not too far off the mark. "You call that a splash?" Gribble bellowed, swiping a wave toward Sprout, who ducked and responded with an expertly timed tail-flick that sent water straight into Gribbleβs open mouth. "Gah! You slimy little..." Gribble sputtered again, but his laughter was louder than his complaints. He couldβve sworn Sprout was actually smirking at him. Cheeky lizard. Serenity, Interrupted As the sun dipped lower, casting a warm orange glow over the forest, Gribble and Sprout finally collapsed onto the shore, soaked and exhausted. The forest around them had returned to its usual serene self, the birds singing sweetly, the leaves rustling softly in the breeze. It was almost... peaceful. Until Sprout hiccupped again. This time, instead of bubbles, a tiny jet of flame shot out, catching Gribbleβs boot on fire. "Well, thatβs just perfect," Gribble groaned, staring at the tiny flame that had decided to settle on his foot. He lazily dipped it into the stream to put it out. "Thanks, Sprout. Really. Just what I needed." Sprout gave an apologetic chirp and then, with a mischievous twinkle in his eye, splashed Gribble one last time. The gnome sighed dramatically, raising his eyes to the sky. "I donβt know why I keep you around," Gribble muttered. "But then again, who else would set my foot on fire just to get a laugh?" With a huff of mock indignation, Gribble stood up, his clothes still dripping. He looked down at the soaking wet dragon, who was now curled up in the shallows, tail flicking contentedly in the water. Gribble couldn't help but grin. For all their chaos, he wouldnβt have it any other way. "Alright, come on then, you soggy salamander," Gribble said with a smirk, offering Sprout his hand. "Letβs go find something else to ruin." And off they went, leaving a trail of wet footprints and charred leaves behind them, two mischievous companions bound to wreak havoc on whatever unsuspecting corner of the forest they found next. Because in the life of a gnome and his dragon, there's no such thing as a dull moment. Β Β If youβve fallen in love with Gribble and Sproutβs chaotic adventures, you can bring a piece of their whimsical world into your own! Prints, products, downloads, and licensing options for this delightful image are availableΒ in theΒ My Gnomies Archive. Whether youβre looking for a splash of magic for your walls or unique gifts that capture the joy of these mischievous companions, explore the collection today!
by Bill Tiepelman
The Laughing Gnome and His Winged Friend
Deep in the heart of the Enchanted Forest, where the mushrooms grow larger than houses and the flowers sing you lullabies (usually to distract you before they spit pollen in your face), lived a gnome named Grubnuk. Grubnuk wasn't your average gnome. While most of his fellow gnomes were busy crafting tiny shoes for even tinier feet or meditating under dew-soaked leaves, Grubnuk preferred chaos. He was the kind of gnome that would superglue your shoes to the floor just for the laugh, then hand you a cup of tea afterward as if nothing had happened. The grin on his face told you everything you needed to knowβGrubnuk was trouble. On this particularly sunny day, Grubnuk had one hand held up in a peace sign, the other balancing his trusty sidekick, a miniature dragon named Snort. Why βSnortβ? Because this tiny creature had the irritating habit of sneezing fire every time it laughed, which happened to be often, thanks to Grubnukβs pranks. Together, they made the perfect pair of mischief-makersβone with an endless supply of obnoxious humor, the other a living flamethrower with a sense of timing that could put any comedian to shame. "Alright, Snort, whatβs the plan for today?" Grubnuk said, his legs dangling off a mushroom that was about as large as a coffee table, if said coffee table also happened to be made of fungus and poor life choices. Snort let out a squeaky roar, flapping his wings with all the grace of a wet towel being thrown at a wall. His tongue flopped out as he inhaled for another fire-laced sneeze, which, by the way, was precisely how the last gnome village ended up as nothing more than a pile of smoking rubble. Grubnuk, ever the enabler, laughed. He knew exactly what that meant. "Perfect. We'll start by messing with the elves. They're still mad about that whole βspiked hair-growth potionβ incident. Apparently, it wasn't as βtemporaryβ as I promised." The two set off through the forest, leaving behind their peaceful mushroom perch. They wove through a meadow of oversized daisies, which Grubnuk casually watered with a bottle of βmagically enhanced fertilizer.β The kind of enhancement that ensured the flowers would grow arms and start waving at confused passersby by noon. The Elf Ambush As they approached the elvesβ domainβwell-manicured treehouses and sparkling pathwaysβthe gnome-dragon duo began to plot their next move. Grubnukβs eyes gleamed with that special glint of a man... er, gnomeβ¦ about to ruin someone's day. "Alright, Snort. Phase one: find the leaderβs fancy cloak andβ¦ modify it." Snort puffed out his chest proudly, a bit of smoke escaping his nostrils as he fluttered off toward the elves' wardrobe line. A few moments later, he returned with a regal-looking cloak in his claws, as well as what looked suspiciously like the elf leaderβs underwear (but that was just a bonus). Grubnuk cracked his knuckles and began to sew in a few 'enhancements.' Oh, it still looked as elegant as ever, but now it came with a surprise featureβtiny enchanted spiders that would scurry out from the hem and climb up the wearerβs legs, perfectly invisible to anyone else but the unfortunate soul wearing the cloak. The best part? The wearer would think they were going mad, and that's where the real fun began. Chaos Unleashed As the elf leader strode proudly into view, resplendent in his royal cloak, the mischief began. One by one, invisible spiders crept up his legs, making him swat at the air and twitch uncontrollably. It started with a light scratch, then a frantic shake of his foot, and finally, the cloak was flung off as he yelped, "By the Great Oak, Iβm infested!" Elves scattered, some in sheer terror, others pointing and laughing. Grubnuk, sitting behind a bush with Snort, was in absolute stitches, practically falling over with laughter. "Priceless," he wheezed. "Oh, this is going in the prank hall of fame!" Snort, for his part, let out a satisfied snortβa mini fireball escaping his nose and singeing a nearby bush. The elves were too busy dealing with the cloak fiasco to notice. Lucky for them. Grubnuk, however, grinned even wider. βYou know what, Snort? We should probably leave before they find out it was us. Again." But the fun wasnβt over. As they snuck away, Grubnuk noticed the elvesβ prized ceremonial flowers, the kind that bloomed only once a decade. A wicked thought crossed his mind. "One more thing before we go," he whispered, pulling out a pouch of itching powder. With a devilish glint in his eye, he sprinkled the powder over the delicate petals. By the time the elves got back to their beloved flowers, they'd be scratching so hard they wouldnβt be able to sit still for a week. βAh, the sweet scent of chaos,β Grubnuk said as they escaped back into the forest, the echo of elf curses chasing them into the trees. The Aftermath Back at their mushroom perch, Grubnuk and Snort settled in for the evening. The sun was setting, casting a golden hue over the forest, while somewhere far off, the elves were still undoubtedly dealing with the aftermath of the dayβs pranks. βAnother successful day of mischief, my friend,β Grubnuk said, kicking off his boots and leaning back on the soft mushroom cap. Snort curled up beside him, puffing out little smoke rings as if in agreement. βWhat should we do tomorrow?β Grubnuk mused aloud, already scheming. Snort responded with a tiny sneeze, igniting the edge of Grubnukβs beard. Grubnuk slapped out the flames, laughing. βGood one, Snort. Always keeping me on my toes.β He patted the dragonβs head affectionately. βBut just wait till tomorrow. Weβre going after the dwarves next." And with that, the two fell asleep, their dreams filled with new pranks, singed beards, and just the right amount of chaos to keep things interesting in the Enchanted Forest. Β Β Bring the Mischief Home! Love the playful, chaotic energy of Grubnuk and Snort? Why not bring a little of that magic into your own space? Check out this vibrant tapestry featuring the laughing gnome and his winged companion. Or, if you're a fan of something more interactive, challenge yourself with this whimsical puzzle. Add a touch of magic to your walls with a beautiful framed print, or cozy up with a throw pillow thatβs perfect for your own whimsical naps. Donβt miss your chance to make a little mischief part of your home decor!
by Bill Tiepelman
Blooming with Love and Light
Once upon a time in the farthest, sunniest corner of the world, there lived a cheerful flower named Gloombloom. Now, Gloombloom was no ordinary flower. Oh no. Unlike her fellow flowers, who spent their days doing typical flower thingsβlike growing, waving in the wind, and pondering how photosynthesis workedβGloombloom had a curious quirk. She could smile. And not just any smile, but a big, goofy, rainbow smile that stretched from petal to petal, so wide you could practically hear it. Gloombloom had it all: colorful petals that shimmered like the finest paint set in the universe, a golden face that could rival the sun, and a happiness that seemed to radiate like a disco ball in a meadow. But hereβs the thingβGloombloom had a secret. As happy as she looked, she felt a little...off. Like a cupcake missing its sprinkles. Like a party without a piΓ±ata. She had plenty of light from the sun, sure, but something was missing. The Quest for Positivity One particularly breezy afternoon, while basking in the sunshine, Gloombloomβs best friend, Leafbert, rustled in the wind and whispered, βHey, Gloomy. You ever feel like youβve got all the sunshine in the world, but somethingβs still, I dunno, a bit meh?β Gloombloom sighedβwell, as much as a flower could sigh without lungs. βYou read my petals, Leafbert. I feel like a pet rock at a juggling contest. Iβve got all this sunlight, but I just donβt feel complete. Like, Iβm glowing but... whereβs the pizzazz? Whereβs the sparkly confetti for my soul?β Leafbert thought for a moment (which, for a leaf, is quite impressive). βMaybe you need a little love, Gloomy. Lightβs great and all, but loveβs the fertilizer of the soul. You know what they sayβphotosynthesis may feed the plant, but love feeds the heart. Or something like that. I dunno, Iβm a leaf, not a philosopher.β The Discovery of Love Gloombloom perked up at the idea. "Love, huh? Sounds legit. But where do I find that? Can I order it online? Is it organic?" βNot sure,β said Leafbert, flapping enthusiastically. βBut you could try the Love Garden. Rumor has it, that's where the most love-filled flowers bloom. They've got sunshine, but also a whole lotta heart.β So, with her petals shimmering in excitement, Gloombloom set off (which was quite a sight, since flowers donβt usually βset offβ anywhere). She bounced along the meadow, smiling her rainbow smile at every bumblebee, butterfly, and confused grasshopper she passed. Finally, after what seemed like an eternity (or about ten minutes), she found the Love Garden. And boy, was it spectacular. There were flowers of every color imaginableβpinks, purples, blues, and yellows so vibrant they looked like someone had spilled a box of crayons across the field. Hearts floated gently in the air, glittering with all the tenderness of a thousand βawws.β The place oozed positivity. Gloombloomβs smile grew even wider (if that was even possible). Gloombloom's Glow-up At the center of the Love Garden stood an old, wise sunflower named Solara. She was so tall and majestic that even the clouds gave her high-fives as they passed. Solara beamed down at Gloombloom. βWell, well, well, what brings you to our little corner of love, young one?β she asked, her voice warm like a summer day. Gloombloom wiggled her leaves. βIβve got all the sunshine I could ever want, but Iβm missing something. I heard thereβs love here, and well, I thought maybe...you know, I could borrow some? Like a cup of sugar, but, uh, for the heart?β Solara chuckled. βYou donβt borrow love, dear. You grow it. Itβs a bit like sunlightβit shines from within, and the more you share it, the more it grows. Sunshine helps you grow tall, but love helps you bloom wide and wild.β With that, Solara sprinkled Gloombloom with a little heart-shaped glitter (magical, obviously). Instantly, Gloombloom felt something change. Her petals stood a little taller, her colors a little brighter, and her smileβa smile that had always been wideβnow felt fuller, like it had finally found the missing piece of its puzzle. As she thanked Solara and bounced back to her patch of the meadow, Gloombloom realized that she wasnβt just glowing with sunshine anymoreβshe was blooming with love. The hearts floating around her werenβt just decorations; they were little sparks of joy she could now share with the world. The Happiest Flower in the Meadow From that day on, Gloombloom wasnβt just the most colorful flower in the fieldβshe was the happiest. Her quirky, rainbow smile was now fueled by both the light of the sun and the warmth of love, and every creature in the meadow could feel her joyful energy. Even the grumpiest of caterpillars couldn't help but grin as they slinked by. And so, Gloombloom lived her days spreading positivity and love to anyone who needed a little boost. Because in the end, as she now knew, you need both sunshine and love to truly grow and flourish in life. Light may make you shine, but love? Love makes you bloom. And letβs be honest: the world could always use a little more blooming. Β Β If youβve fallen in love with the joy and positivity of Gloombloomβs vibrant world, you can bring a piece of that happiness into your own home! Prints, products, and downloads of this whimsical image are available for purchase. For licensing or to explore other delightful creations, visit Garden Smiles Collection on our archive. Spread the light and love wherever you go!
by Bill Tiepelman
Crisp Leaves and Curious Eyes
Thereβs something special about the pumpkin patch at night. Sure, it's a wholesome place by dayβfilled with giggling kids, hayrides, and apple ciderβbut come dusk, it changes. Maybe itβs the shadows from the jack-o'-lanterns flickering just a bit too long, or the way the wind howls through the cornfields, whispering secrets like itβs in on a joke you donβt quite get. For Evie, it was more than just a patch. It was her escape. An escape from the grown-up nonsense of bills, laundry, and men who couldnβt text back within a 48-hour window. Tonight, though, she was here for one thing: answers. Her straw hat was tipped low over her face, a ridiculous scarecrow get-up she borrowed from the bottom of her atticβs Halloween bin. The patch wasnβt open to the public at this hour, but Evie wasnβt exactly the rule-following type. So, under the guise of βblending in,β she figured scarecrow attire would be just inconspicuous enough. Because who questions a girl holding a black kitten, after all? She didn't name itβcats werenβt her thingβbut it showed up one day, eyes glowing like it was auditioning for a Tim Burton movie. The damn thing followed her everywhere now, like a fuzzy, judgmental shadow. "Alright, mystery pumpkin patch," she muttered to herself, kicking a random gourd with the tip of her boot, "what are you hiding?" Evie wasnβt entirely sure why sheβd come back. Maybe it was the weird note sheβd found stuffed in her grocery bag last week. βYour answers are in the patch. Come alone.β She'd chuckled when she first read it, thinking some loser from the dating app was trying to get creative with his pick-up lines. Or worse, some MLM hun trying to sell her organic pumpkin spice oils. But curiosity got the best of her, as it often did. As she crept deeper into the field, the pumpkins seemed bigger, more sinister. The moonlight danced on the orange skin of each one, giving them a strange, almost human expression. She caught herself staring a little too long at a particularly squat one that looked like it could pass as her high school gym teacher. "You judging me too, Coach Johnson? Yeah, well, screw you. Your crossfit circuit was a joke," she muttered under her breath, glaring at the gourd. The kitten meowed, as if in agreement. Or maybe protest. Who knew with cats? A Rumble in the Patch Suddenly, there was a rustling in the rows of corn nearby. Evie froze, her heart doing that weird skippy thing it always did when she felt like she was about to be caught doing something she shouldnβt. The kitten, on the other hand, seemed utterly unimpressed, licking its paw like the possibility of danger was an afterthought. "Whoβs there?" she called, her voice wobbling only slightly. She might be a grown woman, but cornfields at night had a way of bringing out the nine-year-old in anyone. There was no answer, but she could feel eyes on her. And not just pumpkin eyes. Evie tightened her grip on the kitten, which, again, seemed more annoyed than protective. She spun around, her gaze darting from one oversized pumpkin to the next, half expecting one to stand up and start chasing her like a scene from a B-movie horror flick. Then, from behind a particularly large patch of sunflowers, a figure emerged. "Well, well, if it isnβt Little Miss Scarecrow. You really went all out, huh?" The voice was annoyingly familiar. It was Todd. Of course, it was Todd. The only guy she knew whoβd break into a pumpkin patch for kicks and who, for some reason, believed showing up unannounced was 'quirky' and not just downright creepy. "Todd? Seriously? The note was from you? What the hell?" Todd smirked, stepping forward into the moonlight, revealing a mismatched pirate costumeβcomplete with an eyepatch that seemed to be slipping off his head at an unfortunate angle. "Yeah, yeah, sorry about the theatrics. But I needed to get your attention. You havenβt been answering my texts." Evie rolled her eyes so hard she was sure they were going to pop out of her skull. "You canβt just lure me to a damn pumpkin patch with some cryptic-ass note, Todd. And your texts? What part of 'we broke up three months ago' didnβt get through to your tiny, pirate-infested brain?" "I thought it was romantic. You know, like an autumn mystery? You like mysteries." "I like mysteries involving crime, Todd, not my ex-boyfriend who canβt let go." The Real Mystery Just as Evie was about to tear into him furtherβbecause if Todd deserved anything, it was a proper verbal smackdownβa loud rumble shook the ground. The pumpkins trembled. Even Todd, with all his βIβm just a cool guyβ bravado, took a step back. "Uh... did you feel that?" Evie asked, her anger momentarily replaced by actual concern. "Yeah," Todd nodded. "Was that...an earthquake?" "In Ohio? Really? Thatβs your answer?" Before either of them could come up with a better explanation, the ground started to shift again. This time, it wasnβt just a tremble. Somethingβsomethingβwas pushing its way up through the soil. Evieβs heart leapt into her throat as a giant pumpkin began to rise, roots snapping, dirt flying everywhere. "Okay, WHAT THE ACTUALβ" Todd blurted, eyes wide as dinner plates. The giant pumpkin cracked open, revealing...a man. A man? No, not just any man. He was dressed in a suit, covered in dirt, and holding a clipboard. "Excuse me," the man said, adjusting his tie like this was the most normal thing in the world, "Iβm here to conduct the annual Pumpkin Patch Inspection. You two are trespassing." Evie stared, mouth agape, the kitten meowing in confused irritation. "You mean...this is about zoning regulations or something?" she asked, unable to process the absurdity of the moment. "Yes," the inspector said, flipping through his clipboard nonchalantly. "This patch is in violation of several autumnal codes. Youβll need to leave." Evie and Todd exchanged bewildered glances. This night had taken a turn that even Evie, in her wildest mysteries, couldnβt have imagined. "So, uh, no haunted pumpkin conspiracy then?" Evie asked. The inspector sighed. "No. Just poor agricultural planning." With that, the giant pumpkin closed back up, sinking into the ground as if nothing had happened. Evie stood there, utterly baffled, wondering what the hell she just witnessed. "Well," Todd finally muttered, "at least you got your answer." "Shut up, Todd." Β Β Bring the Magic of "Crisp Leaves and Curious Eyes" Home If you're as enchanted by the whimsical charm and autumn magic of Evie and her fluffy feline companion as we are, you'll love these unique products featuring the stunning artwork "Crisp Leaves and Curious Eyes" by Bill and Linda Tiepelman. Perfect for adding a touch of autumn to your home or to give as a quirky gift! Autumn Tapestry β Hang a piece of fall magic on your wall with this beautifully detailed tapestry. Wood Print β Bring rustic autumn vibes to your space with this textured wood print. Puzzle β Get cozy on chilly nights while piecing together this fun, detailed autumn puzzle. Tote Bag β Carry a bit of autumn wonder with you wherever you go with this charming tote. Explore the full collection and bring the playful spirit of fall into your world with these delightful pieces!
by Bill Tiepelman
Flames of Jubilation
In the heart of the Everbright Forest, where the trees whispered secrets older than the stars and the air pulsed with a quiet magic, there lived a creature of boundless joy. Her name was Lyra, a flame sprite born from the first spark of creation itself. With fiery hair that danced like a wild inferno and feathers that shimmered with the colors of the sunrise, Lyra was a living embodiment of celebration. But not just any celebrationβhers was a jubilation born from hope, renewal, and the laughter that comes after surviving the darkest night. Lyra wasnβt just a sprite of flames; she was a beacon for all lost souls who wandered into the Everbright Forest, searching for something they couldnβt name. They didnβt know what drew them thereβperhaps it was the flicker of her flames between the trees, or the warmth that seeped into their hearts as they ventured deeper into the woodsβbut somehow, they all found their way to Lyra. And when they did, they found more than they expected. The Laughing Healer βOh, you,β Lyra would say, laughing brightly as she floated toward yet another weary traveler. Her laughter wasnβt the quiet, polite kindβit was the belly-deep, face-crinkling kind of laughter that shook you from your core and made you question why youβd ever stopped laughing in the first place. βYou look like you could use some light!β sheβd exclaim, her fiery wings flaring out behind her, creating an explosion of color against the deep green of the forest. She never asked what brought them to her or why they carried the weight of the world on their shoulders. She already knew. It was the same reason every soul came to her forest. They were searching for hope, for healing, for something to ignite the fire inside them that had long since flickered out. Lyraβs magic wasnβt like other healers. She didnβt mend broken bones or cure illnesses with potions or spells. No, her magic was simpler than thatβyet more profound. She reminded people of their own inner light, the flame that never truly went out, even when they felt cold and lost. βLook,β sheβd say with a mischievous glint in her eyes, holding out her hands, palms up. A tiny flame, no bigger than a candleβs flicker, would appear in the center of her palm, glowing softly. βSee this? This is you. It may not look like much right now, but give it a little air, a little encouragement, andββ With a quick puff of breath, the flame would suddenly surge into a brilliant burst of light, like a firework going off in the middle of the forest. Lyra would grin and laugh again, her whole being glowing with delight. ββBoom! Thereβs your spark. It was never gone, just waiting for the right moment to reignite.β The travelers would watch in awe, and sometimes, for the first time in years, they would smileβmaybe even laugh with her. And that was the moment the healing began. The Phoenix of Renewal But Lyra wasnβt alone in her role as the bringer of hope. Nestled close to her heart was a creature of legendβa tiny, vibrant phoenix named Solis, whose feathers glowed with the same radiant energy as Lyraβs flames. Solis wasnβt your typical towering, majestic phoenix. No, Solis was smallβno bigger than a sparrowβbut what he lacked in size, he made up for in power. βDonβt let his size fool you,β Lyra would say with a wink. βSolis here could burn down a mountain if he really wanted to. But lucky for us, heβs a softy. All he wants to do is help me remind people that life can be reborn, no matter how many times youβve been reduced to ashes.β Solis would chirp in agreement, hopping from Lyraβs hand onto the shoulder of whoever needed his warmth the most. And in that moment, they would feel itβa deep, soul-warming glow that spread through their chest like the first rays of sunlight after a long, dark winter. The kind of warmth that made you believe, even if just for a second, that everything could be okay again. βSee?β Lyra would say, nudging them with a playful grin. βYouβre not as broken as you think. Youβre just... in between forms. It happens to all of us. You fall apart, you burn out, but then you rise again. Thatβs the way of things. Thatβs the way of the fire.β The Visitor One day, a woman named Mira stumbled into the Everbright Forest, her heart heavy with grief. She had lost everythingβher home, her family, her purpose. Life, to her, felt like a cruel joke, one she no longer had the strength to laugh at. She wandered aimlessly, hoping the forest might swallow her whole, take away the pain that weighed her down. But instead, she found Lyra. βOh dear, another one!β Lyra said, not unkindly, when she saw Mira standing at the edge of the clearing, eyes downcast, shoulders slumped. βYou look like youβve been dragging a boulder uphill for far too long. Come on in, donβt be shy. Letβs see what we can do about lightening that load, huh?β Mira looked up, confused. βWho... who are you?β she asked, her voice barely a whisper. Lyra floated toward her, her flames casting warm, inviting shadows across the forest floor. βOh, Iβm just someone who likes to remind people how bright they actually are. Youβre Mira, right?β Mira blinked in surprise. βHow... how did you know my name?β Lyra laughed, the sound ringing like chimes in the wind. βOh, I donβt need magic for that. You just have the look of someone whoβs forgotten her own name. But donβt worryβIβm here to remind you.β Lyra took Miraβs hand, placing it gently on her own chest, where the small, glowing form of Solis rested. βFeel that? Thatβs the fire of renewal, the one youβve forgotten is inside you. But donβt worry, itβs still there. Youβve just let the ashes pile up a little too high.β Mira felt the warmth of Solisβs feathers against her palm, and for the first time in a long while, she felt something stir inside her. A spark. It wasnβt much, just a tiny flicker of something she thought was long dead, but it was enough. Enough to make her believe, even for a moment, that maybe, just maybe, she wasnβt completely lost. Healing Through Laughter Lyra grinned and flared her wings. βYou know whatβs really going to help? Laughter.β Mira raised an eyebrow. βLaughter? I havenβt laughed in... I donβt even know how long.β Lyra beamed, her fiery hair flickering with excitement. βWell, youβre in for a treat, then. Because laughter is the best way to remind yourself that life is still worth living, even when it feels like everythingβs crumbling around you. Itβs the most powerful healing magic there is, and the best part? Itβs free.β Before Mira could protest, Lyra spun her around, her laughter infectious, pulling Mira into a twirl that felt both ridiculous and freeing. They danced under the canopy of glowing trees, Solis chirping along, and slowly but surely, Mira felt the weight on her chest begin to lift. It wasnβt gone, not entirely, but it was lighter. And for the first time in years, a small, shaky laugh bubbled up from Miraβs chest. It wasnβt much, but it was something. Lyra beamed, her whole being glowing with joy. βThere it is! Thatβs the sound of life coming back to you.β The Flames of Jubilation As the sun began to set, casting the forest in hues of gold and crimson, Mira sat with Lyra and Solis, feeling a warmth she hadnβt felt in years. She didnβt know what the future held or if her pain would ever fully go away, but for now, she had something she hadnβt had in a long timeβhope. βRemember,β Lyra said softly, as the last rays of light filtered through the trees, βyouβre like this little phoenix here. You may burn out, you may fall apart, but youβll rise again. The flames of jubilation are inside you, waiting for their moment to burst into light. And when they do, itβll be glorious.β Mira nodded, a smile tugging at her lips. βThank you, Lyra. I think... I think I can believe that now.β And as she left the Everbright Forest, feeling the warmth of Solisβs glow still lingering in her heart, Mira knew that the road ahead would still be difficult. But now, she had a light to guide herβand a laugh to carry her through the darkest of nights. Because that was the magic of Lyra, the flame sprite of jubilation. She didnβt just reignite your fireβshe reminded you how to laugh while you did it. Β Β If Lyraβs joyous flame and her message of hope and renewal have ignited something in you, bring a little of that magic into your own world with a selection of vibrant products. For those who enjoy creative expression, the Flames of Jubilation Cross Stitch Pattern allows you to stitch the warmth and energy of Lyraβs spirit into your own work of art. You can also infuse your home and daily life with the glow of Lyraβs magic. The Tapestry adds a burst of color and life to any space, while the Throw Pillow brings comfort and brightness to your home. For those on the go, the Tote Bag is perfect for carrying a reminder of joy with you, and the Puzzle offers a fun way to piece together the vibrant energy of the flames. Whether youβre decorating, crafting, or simply looking for something to remind you of the fire inside, these products will help you carry the flames of jubilation with you, wherever you go.
by Bill Tiepelman
The Incandescent Steed
In a forest where the light danced through ancient trees, casting long shadows that whispered of forgotten legends, there lived a creature unlike any other. The locals called him Aureon, the Incandescent Steed. His mane and coat shimmered with swirling patterns of fire and light, as though his very being was sculpted from the essence of flame itself. He didnβt merely reflect the light of the sunβhe was the light, moving with grace and purpose through the world like a beacon of lifeβs mysteries. Every evening, just as dusk settled and the sky blushed with hues of orange and violet, Aureon would emerge from the depths of the forest. His presence was neither loud nor imposing. Yet, those who caught a glimpse of him felt something shift within themselves, as though his fiery glow illuminated not only the path ahead but something deeperβsomething that had been hidden inside them all along. The Legend of Aureon Legend had it that Aureon was no ordinary horse, but an ancient being sent to guide souls through times of doubt and confusion. Some said he was a manifestation of hope; others believed he carried the light of the stars in his veins, destined to bring clarity to those lost in the shadows. Whatever the truth, one thing was certainβthose who encountered the Incandescent Steed left forever changed. But for all his mystical nature, Aureon had a bit of a humorous side as well. After all, carrying the weight of spiritual transformation was no easy task, and sometimes a little levity was required. βHonestly,β Aureon mused to himself one evening, trotting through the glowing underbrush, βif I have to listen to one more person bemoan their βlife path,β I might just turn into a regular old pony. Everyoneβs so worried about which way to go, and here I am, literally on fire, and no oneβs asking me how Iβm doing.β He shook his mane, flames flickering out in a soft, radiant arc. βSure, guiding lost souls is rewarding and all, but a steed could use a little me-time too, you know?β The Wanderer That night, as Aureon pondered his role in the grand tapestry of existence, a wanderer entered the forest. His name was Talin, a man whose heart was heavy with questions. He had traveled far, seeking answers to the riddles of his life, yet found nothing but confusion along the way. His footsteps were slow, burdened by the weight of uncertainty, and his eyes scanned the dark forest, searching for somethingβanythingβthat might guide him. It wasnβt long before he saw a glow in the distance, a faint flicker of light amidst the trees. Intrigued, Talin followed the light, drawn to it like a moth to a flame. And there, standing amidst the golden beams of the setting sun, was Aureonβthe Incandescent Steed. His glowing form stood out like a beacon in the twilight, every inch of him radiant with swirling patterns of living fire. Talin froze, unsure whether he was dreaming. Surely this creature was a figment of his imagination, born of exhaustion and desperation. βWell, donβt just stand there with your mouth open,β Aureon said, his voice light and teasing. βI donβt bite, you know. Or, well, not unless youβre made of kindling.β He chuckled, the sound like the crackle of a gentle bonfire. Talin blinked, startled. βYou... you can talk?β Aureonβs luminous eyes twinkled with amusement. βOf course I can talk. You humans always seem surprised when something magical happens. You walk around asking for signs and guidance, and then when you find it, you stand there gawking. Come on, walk with me. Weβve got a lot to talk about.β A Lesson in Light Talin hesitated for a moment but found his feet moving toward the glowing steed as though his soul had made the decision for him. They began walking side by side through the forest, the quiet sound of their footsteps blending with the soft rustling of leaves and the distant hum of nightfall. βSo,β Aureon began, his tone still light but edged with curiosity, βwhatβs got you wandering these woods with such a heavy heart?β Talin sighed deeply. βI donβt know. I feel like Iβm searching for something, but I donβt know what it is. Everything in my life feels off balance. No matter what direction I take, it feels... wrong.β Aureon nodded, his mane glowing brighter for a moment. βAh, the old βwhich path should I takeβ dilemma. Let me guessβyouβve spent so much time trying to find the βrightβ path that now youβre not sure if any path is the right one.β Talin nodded, frowning. βExactly. I thought if I just kept searching, Iβd find some clear answer, but now Iβm more lost than ever.β Aureon chuckled softly. βYou humans always think thereβs a single answer to every question, as if life is one big test with a perfect score waiting at the end. Newsflash: itβs not. Lifeβs less of a test and more of a dance, a messy, unpredictable waltz where you sometimes step on your partnerβs toesβand sometimes, the floor catches fire.β Talin looked at the fiery patterns dancing across Aureonβs coat. βSo... what, weβre just supposed to stumble around and hope for the best?β The steed shook his head. βNot quite. Itβs more about understanding that there isnβt a single βrightβ way to do things. Youβre made of light and shadow, just like me, and those parts of you are always shifting, always in motion. Some days, youβll glow bright, and other days, youβll feel dim. Thatβs the way itβs supposed to be. You canβt be all light, all the time.β The Fire Within They continued walking, the trees around them glowing faintly from the aura of Aureonβs presence. Talin let the words sink in, feeling something inside him loosenβa tension he hadnβt realized he was holding. βI guess Iβve been so afraid of making the wrong choice that Iβve been paralyzed by it,β Talin admitted. βIβve been stuck, afraid to move forward.β Aureon nodded, his voice gentle now. βFear does that. It convinces you that if you make a wrong move, youβll ruin everything. But hereβs the secret: there are no wrong moves. Every step you take is part of your journey, even the ones that feel like missteps. The important thing is to keep moving, to keep following that inner lightβno matter how dim it might seem at times.β Talin felt a warmth spread through his chest, a soft glow that mirrored the light of the incandescent steed beside him. For the first time in a long while, he felt something close to hope. βSo, what should I do?β Talin asked, a faint smile tugging at the corners of his mouth. βFollow the light, even if I donβt know where itβs leading?β Aureon smiled, his fiery mane flickering in the twilight. βExactly. Trust that your light will guide you. And donβt be afraid to dance a little in the darkness. Itβs where some of the best stories begin.β A Glowing Path Ahead As they reached the edge of the forest, the first rays of dawn began to break over the horizon, casting a golden glow over the landscape. Aureon stopped and turned to face Talin, his vibrant coat shimmering in the early morning light. βThis is where we part ways, my friend,β Aureon said softly. βBut donβt worryβIβm always around, even when you donβt see me. Just remember: your light is enough. It always has been.β Talin nodded, feeling lighter than he had in months. βThank you,β he whispered, feeling the gratitude well up in his chest. βI wonβt forget.β Aureon smiled one last time before cantering off into the forest, his incandescent glow fading into the distance like a star returning to the sky. Talin stood there for a moment, watching as the magical steed disappeared from view, his heart filled with a quiet sense of peace. And as he turned to face the path ahead, he felt his own light flicker inside himβa small, steady flame, guiding him forward into the unknown. Β Β If Aureonβs glowing presence and his journey through the forest inspired you, you can bring a piece of that light into your own life with a variety of beautiful products. For those who enjoy crafting, the Incandescent Steed Cross Stitch Pattern offers a stunning design that captures the essence of Aureonβs radiant spirit in every stitch. You can also explore a range of home decor items that reflect the magic of the Incandescent Steed. The Tapestry brings Aureonβs fiery glow to your walls, while the Canvas Print offers a timeless way to enjoy his beauty. For a more interactive experience, the Puzzle allows you to piece together Aureonβs incandescent form, and the Greeting Cards are perfect for sharing the magic with others. Whether youβre stitching, decorating, or simply looking to bring some light into your life, these products offer a reminder of Aureonβs wisdom: to trust your inner light, even when the path ahead is unknown.
by Bill Tiepelman
Midnight Marionette
In the deepest, weirdest corners of the shadowed city, there existed a puppet. But not just any puppetβthis was Marv, the Midnight Marionette, and he was unlike anything youβd find on Sesame Street or your childhood puppet shows. Picture a mix between a fuzzy creature with a weirdly expressive face, clad in dark, intricate robes, and an offbeat sense of humor that was as twisted as the threads holding him together. Marv wasnβt your typical βcome to life at midnightβ puppet; he had opinions. And, boy, did he let you know about them. For one thing, Marv didnβt have strings. He called that βold-school nonsense.β βWho the hell needs strings these days? Itβs the 21st century,β Marv would grumble to himself, pacing around his dingy apartment filled with mismatched furniture and questionable decor. His hooded robeβcrafted from shadows and what looked like a mix of cobwebs and fabric pilfered from the dumpsterβbillowed behind him like he was some kind of dark wizard... if dark wizards smelled vaguely of mothballs and stale pizza. But at midnight, when most creatures of the night were prowling the streets or doing things too inappropriate to describe, Marv came alive in his true element. And if you thought the witching hour was eerie, you hadnβt experienced it with Marv. The Midnight Rant βYou know what pisses me off?β Marv muttered as he shuffled across his tiny apartment, peering out the cracked window at the flickering streetlights below. βPeople. People piss me off. Theyβre out there, living their lives, getting lattes, walking their dogs, doing their 9-to-5 jobs like theyβve got it all figured out. And here I amβa freakinβ puppetβstuck in this rickety place, wondering how to order takeout without being mistaken for a Halloween decoration.β He threw his fuzzy hands in the air, dramatically flailing as he plopped onto his old, sagging couch, the springs creaking in protest. βI mean, who the hell thought it was a good idea to bring me to life, huh? βLetβs give this puppet sentience,β they said. βItβll be fun,β they said. Fun! HA! Like anyone asked me if I wanted to be a midnight freak show in some forgotten back alley apartment.β Marvβs ranting was a nightly occurrence. Sure, most folksβif theyβd ever seen himβwouldβve been either terrified or completely confused by the sight of a marionette with no strings walking around like he owned the place. But this was his life now. A half-immortal puppet with too much time on his hands and a crass sense of humor that would make a sailor blush. His one saving grace? The one thing that kept him from completely losing it? The one thing that made the endless nights somewhat bearable? Pizza. The Pizza Problem βWhereβs my goddamn pizza?β Marv barked, pacing in front of the door. He had ordered it hours ago, or maybe it was just twenty minutesβtime didnβt exactly work the same when you were a puppet brought to life by some questionable form of magic. Either way, Marv was hangry. Suddenly, there was a knock at the door. Marvβs orange nose twitched in anticipation, his oversized eyes widening as he opened the door with the enthusiasm of a caffeinated raccoon. Standing there was the delivery guy, holding Marvβs beloved pizza, with an expression that suggested he was seriously questioning his life choices. βUh... one large pepperoni with extra cheese?β the guy asked, trying to keep his cool despite the fact he was delivering to what looked like a Muppet version of the Grim Reaper. βFINALLY!β Marv exclaimed, snatching the pizza box out of the guyβs hands with the speed of someone who hadnβt eaten since 1983. βYou have no idea what itβs like waiting for this. The suffering. The torment. Do you realize I donβt eat during the day? Because I canβt freakinβ move until midnight? Youβd think being a night-dwelling marionette would come with some perks, but noooooo.β The delivery guy blinked, his brain clearly trying to process the sheer absurdity of the situation. βUh... thatβll be $18.50.β Marv stared at him for a second, then let out a long, exaggerated sigh. βRight, right. Hold on.β He rummaged through his robe, pulling out a crumpled $20 bill that had clearly seen better days. βKeep the change, kid. Youβre gonna need it after witnessing this level of existential horror.β The guy took the money, handed Marv the pizza, and shuffled away as fast as he could, leaving Marv standing in his doorway with a smug grin on his fuzzy face. Pizza and Contemplation Marv plopped down in front of his ancient, barely functioning TV, flipping through the channels until he landed on a rerun of some late-night infomercial. It didnβt matter. His focus was on the pizza. Glorious, greasy pizza. βAhh, the one constant in this absurd reality,β Marv said, opening the box and inhaling deeply. βCheese, sauce, crust... youβve never let me down.β He stuffed a slice into his oversized mouth, chewing with a satisfied grunt. βIf only life were as simple as pizza. No worries, no magic, no strings attachedβliterally. Just... pizza.β Marvβs reflection on life, as deep as it could go, didnβt last long. He was more interested in how much pizza he could cram into his mouth before the sun came up and he turned back into an inanimate object. The Visitor Just as he was finishing his second slice, there was another knock at the door. Marv groaned, hauling himself up with all the enthusiasm of a puppet whoβd eaten too much cheese. βWhat now?β he muttered, dragging his fuzzy feet across the floor. Opening the door, Marv found a shadowy figure standing on his doorstep, shrouded in an air of mystery and danger. The figureβs dark robes fluttered slightly in the midnight breeze, and their face was hidden beneath a hood. They looked like they were about to deliver some cryptic message from beyond the veil of reality. Marv blinked his oversized eyes. βLook, if youβre here for some kind of ancient prophecy or mystical quest, youβre out of luck. I just ate a pizza, and thereβs no way Iβm leaving this apartment for the next eight hours.β The figure stepped forward, their voice low and menacing. βYou... are Marv, the Midnight Marionette?β Marv sighed, rolling his eyes. βYeah, yeah, thatβs me. What, you want an autograph? A magic lesson? Iβm off the clock right now, pal.β The figure paused, clearly taken aback by Marvβs less-than-enthusiastic reception. βI... I have come to summon you for a great and terrible mission. A mission that willββ βNah, not tonight,β Marv interrupted, scratching his fuzzy chin. βToo full. Come back, I donβt know, next midnight? Maybe send a carrier pigeon or something. Iβll pencil you in.β The shadowy figure, clearly confused by Marvβs lack of urgency, stood in stunned silence for a moment before slowly backing away. βUh... very well. Iβll... return at a later time.β Marv waved lazily. βYeah, yeah, you do that. Donβt forget to knock. Doorbellβs busted.β Another Night in the Life With the dramatic visitor thoroughly dismissed, Marv closed the door and shuffled back to his pizza, flopping onto the couch with a contented sigh. βAh, another night, another ridiculous encounter,β he muttered, reaching for another slice. βMaybe tomorrow Iβll deal with whatever dark prophecy is brewing, or maybe Iβll just order another pizza.β He glanced at the flickering TV, his mouth full of pizza as he contemplated his existenceβor, more accurately, his existence after pizza. βEh,β he said, wiping his mouth with his sleeve, βIβll save the world later. Right now, itβs just me and this pizza, baby.β And with that, Marvβcrass, quirky, and unapologetically fuzzyβsettled in for another midnight, content to let the world figure itself out. After all, the universe could wait. The pizza, however, could not. Β Β If Marvβs offbeat, crass humor and midnight adventures have left you laughing, you can bring a little of his quirky charm into your home with a range of fun, unique products. For those who enjoy crafting, the Midnight Marionette Cross Stitch Pattern lets you stitch Marvβs eccentric personality into a vibrant work of art. You can also cozy up with Marvβs whimsical energy by grabbing a Throw Pillow or wrapping yourself in the warmth of the Fleece Blanket, perfect for late-night pizza binges and existential rants. Decorate your space with the Midnight Marionette Tapestry or grab a bold Poster to bring a touch of Marvβs signature style to your walls. Whether you're stitching, decorating, or just looking for a bit of late-night mischief, these products will remind you that sometimes, even the oddest characters bring the most laughter to your life.
by Bill Tiepelman
Quantum Canter
At the intersection of time and possibility, where the wind bends just a little differently and the sun sets in every color imaginable, there is a realm few know about. This is the Field of Infinite Horizons, a place where the laws of physics take a break and let whimsy run wild. In this surreal landscape, one creature galloped across the vibrant fields, leaving a trail of shimmering energy in its wake. That creature was none other than Quasarβthe most eccentric unicorn in existence. Now, most unicorns youβve heard about are likely majestic, elegant creatures, graceful in every step. Quasar was all of that, sure, but with a twist. See, Quasar didnβt just gallop; he quantum cantered. Every time his hooves hit the ground, reality sort of... hiccuped. One second, heβd be in one spot, the next, heβd flicker and appear five feet to the left, or above, or belowβno one could quite predict it. He could shift between moments and possibilities, always riding the waves of probability, like a whimsical surfer on the edge of what-could-be. As Quasar cantered along, his long, iridescent mane billowing behind him in all the colors of a particularly enthusiastic rainbow, he hummed a little tune. Not because he had any pressing destinationβhe didnβt. In fact, Quasar rarely had a plan. The thing about being able to quantum jump through realities is that, eventually, you stop worrying about where youβll end up. Youβll always end up somewhere interesting. The Unicornβs Existential Question βYou know,β Quasar said aloud to the field, which, to be fair, didnβt ask for his musings but was used to them by now, βIβve been thinking.β His horn sparkled as if reacting to the thought itself, casting a flicker of light across the swaying grasses. The field, in its quiet, infinite wisdom, did not respond. It had long since learned that Quasarβs thinking often involved strange paradoxes and nonsensical questions, best left unpondered. βWhat if,β Quasar continued, βweβre all just probabilities? Not actual beings, but a collection of maybes and what-ifs, constantly shifting in and out of reality? Like, are we ever truly here, or are we flickering between possible versions of ourselves?β At this point, a small flock of birds flew overhead, wisely choosing not to engage in any metaphysical discussions with a quantum-leaping unicorn. Theyβd heard his rants before. βMaybe thatβs why no one can ever find me when they need me,β Quasar concluded, cantering in a perfect circle, though, given his nature, half the circle existed in another dimension. βBecause Iβm never in one spot long enough to actually be found.β He snorted, half-amused. βThat, or Iβm just too fast for my own good.β The Time-Looping Hare It was on one of these gallops across space-time that Quasar met an equally curious creature: Harold, the Time-Looping Hare. Harold, unlike Quasar, wasnβt content with slipping between possibilities. Harold was caught in a single moment, over and over againβconstantly hopping, but never quite reaching his destination. Every time he reached the top of his hop, time rewound, and heβd find himself mid-hop again. Heβd been hopping for a very long time. βMorning, Harold!β Quasar greeted as he flickered into existence next to the hare, who was currently in the middle of what must have been his seventy-thousandth hop of the day. βIs it still morning?β Harold asked, his tone weary but resigned to his fate. βTimeβs a bit of a blur for me, you know.β Quasar pranced in placeβwell, in several places, technicallyβtrying to stay in the same timeline long enough to have a proper conversation. βYouβre looking... energetic, as always. Howβs the eternal hopping going?β Harold sighed mid-hop. βYou know, same old. Always hopping, never landing. Itβs exhausting, really. Youβd think time would just give up and let me hit the ground once in a while, but noooooo.β Quasar nodded sagely, his mane swirling with streaks of indigo and violet. βI feel you, buddy. Timeβs overrated anyway. Too linear for my taste.β He paused, flickering out of existence for a moment before returning. βSay, have you ever tried hopping in multiple realities at once? You know, spice things up a bit?β Harold shot him a dubious look. βIβm already stuck in one endless loop. You really think adding more is the answer?β βIt could be!β Quasar said brightly, his horn glowing with excitement. βYou never know until you try. Maybe youβll hop so hard youβll break free of time itself andβpoof!βyouβll be hopping across dimensions like me. Itβs quite the thrill, let me tell you.β βNo thanks,β Harold muttered, mid-hop. βI think Iβll stick to my loop. Iβve... gotten used to it.β Quantum Advice Quasar shruggedβthough he did so in three realities at once, which made the gesture hard to follow. βSuit yourself, but if you ever get tired of that loop, you know where to find me... sort of.β He flashed Harold a wink before cantering off, his hooves leaving ripples of energy in the grass. As Quasar galloped onward, weaving in and out of the fabric of time and space, he found himself mulling over the nature of existence once again. βIf I can be everywhere and nowhere at once, does that make me more real or less real?β he mused aloud. βAnd if reality is just a series of possibilities, is anyone really doing anything, or are we all just... existing? Floating along like dust in a sunbeam?β A passing butterfly, its wings shimmering in fractal patterns, landed briefly on Quasarβs mane before flitting away, as if to say, βYouβre overthinking this.β βMaybe I am overthinking it,β Quasar admitted, though his grin never faltered. βBut what else is a quantum unicorn supposed to do with all this timeβor lack of time?β The Quantum Canter After a particularly wild leap that sent him flickering between dimensions so fast it looked like he was galloping through a field of rainbows, Quasar finally paused to take in the moment. The sun hung low in the sky, casting long golden rays across the infinite fields. His mane, swirling with its own magical energy, caught the sunlight in brilliant waves of color. For a brief, fleeting second, Quasar was still. He was here, fully present, not jumping between moments or dimensionsβjust standing in one place, basking in the beauty of now. He breathed deeply, feeling the earth beneath his hooves and the warmth of the sun on his coat. βHuh,β he murmured to himself. βSo this is what itβs like to just... exist in one spot.β He considered it for a beat longer, then laughed softly. βNah, too boring!β With a flash of light and a flick of his tail, Quasar took off again, quantum cantering into the horizon, disappearing and reappearing in the blink of an eye, leaving trails of shimmering magic in his wake. He didnβt need to know where he was going or what tomorrowβor any other timelineβwould bring. Because in the grand scheme of the universe, Quasar had discovered one undeniable truth: existence wasnβt about where you were or even when you were. It was about the joy of the journey, the thrill of the leap, and the beauty of all the possibilities in between. And for a quantum-leaping unicorn, that was more than enough. Β Β If the whimsical adventure of Quasarβs quantum leaps through reality has sparked your imagination, you can bring a bit of that magic into your own world with a collection of beautiful products. For those who love crafting, the Quantum Canter Cross Stitch Pattern allows you to capture the vibrant energy of Quasar in every stitch. You can also explore a variety of home decor items to keep Quasarβs mystical charm close by. The Tapestry brings the breathtaking colors and fluid motion of Quasarβs quantum canter to your walls, while the Throw Pillow is a cozy way to add a splash of magic to your living space. For a fun and interactive experience, the Puzzle lets you piece together the wonder of this fantastical creature, and the Greeting Cards are perfect for sharing the enchantment with friends and family. Whether youβre crafting, decorating, or simply enjoying the beauty of the Field of Infinite Horizons, these products allow you to keep a piece of Quasarβs magical journey with you.
by Bill Tiepelman
Pillow Talk with Mischievous Mice
It was supposed to be a quiet night at the Mouse Manor. The moon was high, the bed was soft, and the pajamas were snug. But of course, thatβs when the trouble always starts. Squeak and Squabble, two tiny mice with more energy than sense, were not the kind of critters to call it a night just because the clock struck midnight. Oh no, they had a better idea. βIβll bet you five sunflower seeds I can knock your tail off with this pillow,β Squeak declared, already gripping the cushion like it was a weapon of mass destruction. His blue-striped pajamas made him look innocentβlike a tiny, adorable menace, ready to ruin someoneβs peaceful slumber. Squabble, never one to back down from a challenge (or a bad idea), grinned in her pink pajamas, which were two sizes too small thanks to her impressive cheese intake. βBring it, you furry little turd,β she squeaked, grabbing her pillow with the determination of a mouse about to make some terrible life choices. The first swing was lightβa tentative hit meant more for fun than for war. A few feathers popped out and floated lazily in the air. But in the heat of the moment, things escalated. Fast. βYou hit like a gerbil!β Squeak shouted, dodging a pillow that wouldβve knocked his whiskers clean off if it had landed. βOh yeah? Well, your tail looks like a chewed-up pipe cleaner!β Squabble spat back, launching her pillow with the precision of a mouse who's spent way too much time practicing for exactly this moment. It was a direct hit, right in the whiskers. Feathers exploded into the air like popcorn at a bad movie. The room became a battlefield. Pillows flew, feathers filled the air like some kind of bizarre snowstorm, and insults were thrown around as recklessly as the cushions. βYou couldnβt hit a barn if you were standing in it!β Squeak taunted, hurling his pillow with all the grace of a drunk hamster. Squabbleβs response? βAt least Iβm not still scared of the vacuum cleaner, you little pansy!β The room erupted into chaos as the mice, now fully committed, began bashing each other with every ounce of tiny, adorable rage they could muster. The moonlight filtered through the curtains, illuminating the carnage. Feathers stuck to their fur, making them look like deranged little cherubs in the aftermath of a really messy angel convention. Both were panting, grinning, and covered in fluff. The bed was a disaster zone. βTruce?β Squeak asked, holding up a paw, his pillow limp and deflated, more of a sack of feathers than a weapon at this point. βOnly if you admit that you lost,β Squabble said, wiping a feather off her nose. βFine, fine. I lostβ¦ to a mouse with thighs that could crush a walnut.β Squeakβs face split into a mischievous grin. βBut Iβll still be the one stealing the last piece of cheddar from the fridge tonight.β Squabble squeaked in outrage. βOver my dead body, whisker-face!β And with that, the battle was back on. Pajama Party Pandemonium Meanwhile, across the hall, two other miceβKnuckles and Nibblesβwere about to experience their own nocturnal disaster. Knuckles, wearing pajamas that looked like theyβd been made from a retired sailorβs wardrobe, was standing on the bed, pillow in hand, looking down at Nibbles, who was peacefully trying to sleep. βHey, Nibblesβ¦ you awake?β Knuckles asked, his voice barely containing his excitement. Nibbles, curled up in his own fluffy pink pajamas, cracked one eye open. βKnuckles, itβs like two in the morning. Go away. Iβm dreaming about cheese.β βBut we could have a pillow fight instead,β Knuckles suggested with a grin that made it clear he wasnβt asking so much as informing. Before Nibbles could answerβor escapeβKnuckles swung the pillow like it owed him money. Feathers exploded, Nibblesβ peaceful slumber shattered like a dropped glass of milk. βYou absolute pile of rat droppings!β Nibbles yelled, scrambling to grab a pillow in retaliation. βYouβre gonna regret that, you flea-infested lint ball!β And so began the second great mouse pillow fight of the night. Feathers flew, insults were exchanged, and soon both mice were so tangled in blankets and pillows that they could barely tell where the bed ended and the fight began. At one point, Nibbles managed to get the upper handβor pawβand pinned Knuckles under a pile of pillows. βIβm gonna suffocate you with this cushion, and no jury of mice will ever convict me!β he cackled. βDo your worst! At least I wonβt have to hear your snoring anymore!β Knuckles wheezed from beneath the mound of pillows, though it was hard to tell if he was laughing or genuinely gasping for air. By the time dawn began creeping through the windows, both pairs of mice were exhausted, lying in their respective beds, surrounded by the carnage of a night spent in ridiculous warfare. Feathers floated in the air like memories of battles lost and won. βWe really need to start going to bed earlier,β Squeak muttered, as Squabble flicked a feather off his ear. βYeah,β she agreed. βBut that would be boring, wouldnβt it?β And so, the mice of Mouse Manor drifted off into the kind of sleep only those truly satisfied by chaos can appreciate, dreaming of cheese, pillows, and the next time they could ruin a perfectly good nightβs rest. Β Β After all the pillow-fueled chaos and mischievous fun, you might be wondering how to bring a piece of this adorable pandemonium into your own space. Whether you're looking to add some whimsical charm to your home or share a giggle with a friend, we've got you covered! Check out these delightful **Pajama Party Pandemonium** prints, available in a variety of products: Tapestries β Perfect for adding a playful touch to any room. Throw Pillows β Cozy up with the same pillows our mischievous mice used in their epic battles! Tote Bags β Carry a bit of cute chaos with you wherever you go. Greeting Cards β Send some cheeky mouse mischief to a friend who could use a laugh! Whether you're decorating your space or gifting a friend, these items will bring a smile (and maybe a chuckle) to anyone who appreciates a little bedtime fun. Browse the full collection here. After enjoying the antics of Squeak, Squabble, and their fluffy, feather-filled chaos, why not bring a bit of their mischievous charm into your home? Whether you're curling up for your own pillow fight or just want to smile at their cute faces, we've got the perfect products for you! Check out the delightful **Pillow Talk with Mischievous Mice** collection: Throw Pillows β Snuggle up with the same cushions that started all the trouble! Fleece Blankets β Wrap yourself in cozy, mouse-approved comfort while enjoying some downtime (preferably without a pillow fight). Framed Prints β Add a whimsical touch to your walls with this playful artwork, perfect for reminding you to never take bedtime too seriously. Ornaments β Decorate your space (or tree) with these adorable mice to keep the fun going all year long. Whether youβre looking for a gift or a cozy addition to your home, the **Pillow Talk with Mischievous Mice** collection is sure to bring laughter and warmth to any space. Browse the entire collection here.
by Bill Tiepelman
Vibrant Eyes of the Ethereal Owl
In the depths of the Whispering Woods, where trees twisted like ancient, gnarled fingers and the stars hung just a little lower in the sky, there lived a creature of legend. The locals called him Argyle, an owl unlike any other. With feathers so intricate they looked as if theyβd been hand-stitched by a goddess and eyes that glowed with an almost hypnotic radiance, Argyle was known far and wide not only for his stunning appearance but for his... peculiar personality. Most owls, as any respectable birdwatcher would tell you, are creatures of silent wisdom and nocturnal stealth. Argyle, on the other hand, was a bit of a loudmouth. And by βa bit,β I mean he could probably be heard complaining from two villages over. His eyesβvibrant pools of green and orange that seemed to swirl if you stared at them too longβhad been both his gift and his curse. βYou call this night fog?β Argyle squawked one evening, perched atop a moss-covered stone as a low mist rolled in. His tone was as indignant as if someone had personally offended him with subpar atmospheric conditions. βIβve seen soup thicker than this. Honestly, itβs like no oneβs even trying to be eerie anymore.β A Legend in His Own Mind Argyle considered himself the self-appointed guardian of all things βmystical,β though he never quite explained who had given him the job. Nonetheless, he took it upon himself to comment on the state of the forestβs ambiance, weather patterns, and frankly, just about anything that caught his eyeβwhich, given the size and intensity of his eyes, was just about everything. βHey!β Argyle called out to a pair of passing deer, their antlers barely visible through the wisps of fog. βAre those your actual antlers, or are you just compensating for something? Youβre going to poke someoneβs eye out with those things!β The deer didnβt stop, and Argyle ruffled his feathers in annoyance. βNo respect for the woodland aesthetic these days,β he muttered to himself, hopping to a higher branch where he could get a better view of the stars. At least the stars werenβt letting him down. They glittered like diamonds across the velvet sky, their light reflecting in his otherworldly eyes, which, despite his attitude, never failed to captivate anyone who was brave enough to look. Argyle had been gifted those mesmerizing eyes by some ancient magicβa long-forgotten enchantment, or so he claimed. Not that anyone could verify it, of course. He was the only owl in the forest who could speak, and despite his questionable conversational topics, no one had bothered to ask where the magic came from. They were usually too busy trying to escape one of his critiques. The Visitors One particularly foggy night, or rather, one arguably foggy night according to Argyleβs standards, something unusual happened. Three travelers entered the woods, moving cautiously through the underbrush, their cloaks pulled tight against the mist. They carried lanterns that glowed with a soft golden light, the kind of light that whispered of adventure, mystery, and perhaps a touch of danger. βWell, well, well,β Argyle hooted, his vibrant eyes narrowing as he observed the strangers. βWho do we have here? A band of fearless explorers? Or just a bunch of lost amateurs? Either way, theyβre about to get a taste of Argyleβs superior guidance.β He swooped down silently from his perch, landing on a low-hanging branch directly above the travelers. βGreetings, mortals!β he announced, flaring his wings for dramatic effect. βYou are now in the presence of the one, the only, the magnificent Argyle, Guardian of the Whispering Woods and Connoisseur of Mystical Happenings!β The travelers froze, eyes wide as they looked up at the impossibly vibrant owl staring down at them. One of them, a young woman with a bow slung over her shoulder, cautiously raised an eyebrow. βDid that owl just... talk?β she whispered to her companions. βTalk? I donβt just talk,β Argyle said with mock outrage. βI deliver wisdom! I provide guidance! I critique the very fabric of the magical universe, thank you very much.β He puffed out his chest, his eyes glowing brighter as if to emphasize the importance of his words. βAnd itβs a good thing I found you when I did. Otherwise, youβd probably end up wandering in circles, lost in this lackluster fog. Youβre welcome, by the way.β The tallest of the travelers, a man with a sword at his side, cleared his throat. βUh, weβre actually here looking for the Ethereal Owl. Itβs said to have eyes thatββ βThat glow with the power of a thousand sunsets and can see through the very veil of time? Yeah, yeah, Iβve heard it all before,β Argyle interrupted with a wave of his wing. βSpoiler alert: Youβre looking at him.β The three travelers exchanged glances. βYouβre the Ethereal Owl?β the woman asked, skepticism clear in her voice. βIn the fleshβor, well, feathers,β Argyle said, flapping his wings for emphasis. βBut donβt let my stunning appearance distract you. What you really need is my help. Now, whatβs your quest? I assume itβs something dangerous and overly complicated. You mortals are always doing the most ridiculous things for glory.β The Quest Nobody Asked For The man with the sword stepped forward. βWeβre seeking the Heartstone of Solas, said to be hidden somewhere in these woods. Itβs a powerful artifact that canββ βBlah, blah, blah, powerful artifact,β Argyle interrupted again. βLet me guess, it βhas the power to reshape the worldβ or βunlock untold richesβ? Iβve heard it all before. Let me save you some timeβnothing good ever comes from chasing magical rocks.β The travelers stood in stunned silence for a moment before the woman crossed her arms, clearly unimpressed. βLook, weβre not here for your unsolicited advice. Can you help us find the Heartstone or not?β Argyleβs eyes glowed even brighter, swirling with amusement. βOf course I can help! I know every inch of this forest. But first, I need to knowβwhatβs in it for me? Iβm not exactly doing charity work here.β The third traveler, who had been silent until now, stepped forward. He was a small man with a bag slung over his shoulder, and he reached inside to pull out a shiny silver trinket. βHow about this?β he offered. βA rare, enchanted mirror. Shows you your reflection exactly as others see you.β Argyle blinked, his beak hanging open in stunned silence for a moment. βExactly as others see me?β he whispered, his voice soft with awe. βDo you realize the potential here? My image could literally go down in legend.β βSure,β the man said with a shrug. βWhatever you want to believe, owl.β βDeal!β Argyle said, swooping down to snatch the mirror in his talons. βNow, letβs go find your precious rock or whatever. And I expect a grand speech about my greatness once this is over.β The Journey of Many Complaints True to his word, Argyle guided the travelers through the woods, though not without offering a running commentary on everything from the state of the underbrush (βWhoβs in charge of trimming this? Absolute chaos.β) to the lack of decent moonlight (βItβs like the moon is barely trying anymore.β). The travelers, to their credit, kept their complaints to a minimum, though it was clear they were beginning to regret their choice of guide. βThere,β Argyle said at last, gesturing with one wing to a large stone embedded in the earth. The Heartstone of Solas glowed faintly, its power humming through the air. βThatβs your shiny rock. Now, if you donβt mind, Iβve got a mirror to examine.β As the travelers approached the Heartstone, the woman glanced back at Argyle. βThanks, I guess. Youβre not as useless as I thought.β Argyle puffed up, eyes swirling with pride. βHigh praise, coming from someone with such a questionable sense of direction.β The travelers retrieved the Heartstone and went on their way, but not before the man with the sword turned back and called, βHey, Ethereal Owl, youβre... something else, all right.β βI know,β Argyle hooted, already admiring himself in his enchanted mirror. βI know.β And so, with his eyes as vibrant as ever and his ego even more so, Argyle the Ethereal Owl continued his eternal watch over the Whispering Woodsβloud, proud, and absolutely unmissable. Β Β If Argyle's quirky charm and the mystique of his vibrant eyes have enchanted you, you can bring this whimsical character into your world with a variety of unique products. For those who love crafting, the Vibrant Eyes of the Ethereal Owl Cross Stitch Pattern offers a detailed and captivating design, allowing you to stitch Argyleβs intricate feathers and mesmerizing eyes with your own hands. You can also explore an array of beautiful decor pieces that capture the essence of Argyle's vibrant personality. The Wood Print adds a natural, artistic touch to any space, while the Tapestry allows you to fill your room with the vibrant energy of the Ethereal Owl. For a cozy addition to your living space, the Throw Pillow is a perfect way to incorporate a hint of magic into your home. And if you're on the move, take Argyleβs lively spirit with you using the Tote Bag, featuring his unforgettable gaze. Whether youβre stitching, decorating, or carrying a piece of the forest's magic with you, these products let you enjoy the eccentric charm of Argyle, the Ethereal Owl, every day.
by Bill Tiepelman
Eternal Cycles
In a world beyond time, where the seasons themselves were living beings, there stood a single tree, a tree so ancient that its roots twisted through every corner of existence. It was known as the Eternal Tree, and it lived through cycles that shaped the universe. Its leaves shimmered with the colors of all seasons, from the vibrant greens of spring to the deep purples of twilight. The tree had no beginning and no end; it simply was. The Eternal Tree was at the center of all life, its branches weaving in and out of reality, nurturing the world with the energy of endless cyclesβbirth, growth, decay, and rebirth. The four seasonsβSpring, Summer, Autumn, and Winterβwere not mere concepts in this realm; they were living beings, each with its own personality, wisdom, and quirks. And the tree, well, it had seen everything unfold countless times. If trees could roll their eyes, this one probably would. Legend said that the tree held the secrets of the universe, but if you asked it, it would probably laugh and say, "You mortals overthink everything." Yet the seasons revered it, visiting each year to seek its guidance, its humor, and its unshakable wisdom. The Arrival of Spring It was the first day of Springβs cycle, and as usual, Springβfull of energy and hopeβcame bounding toward the tree like an overexcited puppy. Her flowing gown of bright green leaves rustled as she skipped, flowers blooming in her wake. Spring was all about beginnings, new growth, and optimismβsometimes too much optimism. βOld Tree!β Spring cried out with joy as she threw her arms wide. βThe time has come again! Iβm ready to bloom and grow and spread joy to the world!β The Eternal Treeβs branches swayed lazily. βAh, Spring,β it sighed in its deep, ancient voice, a voice like the creaking of old wood. βSo full of energy, as always. You do remember that itβs a cycle, yes? It wonβt all be sunshine and roses forever.β Spring waved her hand dismissively. βPfft. You say that every time. But have you seen the flowers this year? Theyβre gorgeous! Nothingβs going to ruin this.β The tree chuckled, the sound like wind rustling through centuries-old leaves. βEnjoy it while it lasts, dear. Just remember, balance is key. Itβs not all about beginnings.β Spring wasnβt listening. She was too busy twirling in a field of daisies she had just created, laughter filling the air. The tree simply sighed, knowing well that every spring bloomed with this kind of wild optimismβjust as it knew what was to come. Summerβs Warmth and Wit A few months later, Summer strolled in with a confident, laid-back air. His golden skin glistened under the sun, and his eyes sparkled with warmth. He was the season of abundance and ease, a creature of long, lazy days and laughter. βEternal Tree!β Summer greeted, leaning casually against its trunk. βLooking strong as always. You know, we really should get you a hammock or something. You deserve a break.β The tree let out a deep, amused hum. βAh, Summer, always trying to take it easy. Enjoying your sunshine, are you?β Summer grinned, brushing a hand through his sun-kissed hair. βWhy wouldnβt I? Everythingβs perfect. The sunβs high, the crops are growing, everyoneβs happy. What could possibly go wrong?β The Eternal Tree, having heard this before, smiled knowingly. βYou enjoy the now, but remember, abundance cannot last forever. Change is part of the cycle. Things must cool down eventually.β Summer winked and stretched his arms behind his head. βWeβll cross that bridge when we get there, old friend. For now, Iβm just going to bask in this glorious heat.β The tree chuckled once again, knowing full well that Summerβs carefree attitude would soon give way to the next inevitable part of the cycle. Autumnβs Reflection As the days grew shorter, Autumn arrived, draped in robes of fiery reds, oranges, and golds. He was a thoughtful, introspective being, wise beyond measure but tinged with melancholy. Unlike Spring and Summer, he did not rush; Autumn moved with grace and contemplation, always mindful of the transitions he brought. βEternal Tree,β Autumn said softly as he approached, his voice like leaves falling on a quiet breeze. βAnother year passes, and once again, we begin the time of reflection.β The treeβs branches shifted, cradling Autumnβs words. βAh, Autumn, you always bring such clarity. The harvest is upon us, but you know well what follows.β Autumn nodded, his eyes scanning the horizon as the leaves began to turn. βYes, the time of endings. But in every ending, there is the seed of new beginnings. The world slows down, but in this stillness, we find wisdom.β The Eternal Tree smiled softly, appreciating Autumnβs quiet understanding. βIndeed. You know better than most, that with every cycle, there is growthβeven in the fall of a leaf.β Autumn knelt at the base of the tree, laying a gentle hand on its bark. βThank you for your guidance, old friend. As always, you remind us that change is not to be feared but embraced.β The tree hummed in agreement, though it couldnβt resist a little playful jab. βYou know, you could be a little more like Summer and just enjoy the ride sometimes.β Autumn chuckled softly. βPerhaps. But someone has to prepare for Winterβs arrival.β Winterβs Wisdom And arrive she did, though not as expected. Winter wasnβt the grim, cold figure many feared. No, Winter had a warmth to her wisdomβa quiet, gentle presence that understood the necessity of stillness. Draped in a cloak of shimmering frost, she approached the Eternal Tree with calm, measured steps. βTree of Ages,β Winter greeted with a serene smile, her breath visible in the cold air. βIt is time for rest. The world grows still, and in this stillness, we find peace.β The tree sighed, its ancient bark creaking. βAh, Winter. You always bring such quiet strength. While others fear your cold, they forget the renewal that comes from rest.β Winter nodded, her eyes wise and patient. βThe world needs time to heal, to reflect, to be still. Only then can Spring return, full of energy once more. But for now, let us savor the silence, for it is in this stillness that the world is reborn.β The Eternal Tree smiled, its branches settling as the first snow began to fall. βYes, Winter. You bring the end, but you also make way for the beginning.β Winter laid a gentle hand on the treeβs trunk, her touch cool but comforting. βThe cycle continues, as it always has. And in this, we find eternity.β The Cycle Continues And so, the seasons continued their eternal dance, each one playing its part, learning, growing, and understanding the delicate balance of life. Spring would return with her boundless enthusiasm, Summer with his easy warmth, Autumn with his quiet reflection, and Winter with her serene wisdom. The Eternal Tree stood at the center of it all, watching over the cycles, offering its ageless wisdom and, occasionally, a bit of humor. Because if there was one thing the tree knew after all its years, it was this: the universe had a funny way of keeping everything in balance, and sometimes, the best thing you could do was simply laugh along with it. After all, life wasnβt just about beginnings or endingsβit was about the moments in between, where all the magic really happened. Β Β If the legend of the Eternal Tree and the cycles of the seasons has inspired you, you can bring a piece of this timeless wisdom into your own life with a selection of beautiful products. For those who love crafting, the Eternal Cycles Cross Stitch Pattern offers a stunning and intricate design, allowing you to capture the magic of the seasons through your own handiwork. You can also explore a range of home decor and art pieces that feature the vibrant and spiritual energy of the Eternal Tree. The Tapestry makes a striking addition to any room, while the Framed Print offers a timeless way to enjoy the beauty of the eternal cycles. For a more interactive experience, the Puzzle brings the artwork to life in your hands, piece by piece. And for those looking to add comfort and color to their home, the Throw Pillow is perfect for adding a touch of the seasons to your living space. Whether you're crafting, decorating, or simply enjoying a quiet moment of reflection, these products allow you to carry the wisdom and beauty of the Eternal Tree with you.