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Whispers of the Luminara Bloom

by Bill Tiepelman

Whispers of the Luminara Bloom

It started, as all ridiculous forest tales do, with a flutter, a sparkle, and someone complaining about pollen. β€œI swear to every sap-sticky deity in this woods, if one more cherry blossom gets in my beak, I’m burning down spring.” The bird in question, of course, was not your average robin or titmouse (though let’s be honest, titmice are already a bit extra). No, this was a creature of scandalous magnificenceβ€”twelve tail feathers of iridescent absurdity, each curling like a salon blowout in a shampoo commercial. She was known in local whispers as Velverina of the Bloom, and she hated being whispered about almost as much as she hated being photographed before her feathers had settled. Which is to say: she hated everything about living in a magical forest. Every year, when the sun returned with its golden glow and the cherry trees released their petal-dust clouds of romance and allergic reactions, the forest would buzz with gossip: β€œWill she sing this year?” β€œDid she finally kill that squirrel who called her a pigeon?” β€œIs she dating the glowbug prince again?” To all of this, Velverina rolled her eyes (which sparkled like black diamonds) and sighed the sigh of a woman who had seen too many mating dances and not enough good lattes. But this spring was different. For starters, the mossy branch she always used as her personal chaise lounge had been overrun by a group of juvenile frogs who had declared it β€œFrogtopia” and were now holding drum circles every morning at dawn. Secondly, the golden lights that gave her feathers their ethereal shimmer had been acting upβ€”flickering like a broken disco ball at a fae rave. And finally, and perhaps most annoyingly, a new creature had arrived in the forest. He called himself Jasper, wore a waistcoat made of dew-drenched fern, and claimed to be a β€œwandering bard and emotional support hedgehog.” β€œYou look like a peacock exploded during a glitter sale,” he said the first time he saw her. Velverina blinked slowly, her tail curling protectively around her like a feathered force field. β€œAnd you look like a bad idea wrapped in moss, dear.” It was love at first insult. Well, not love exactly. More like... tolerated bemusement. And in a forest full of overly affectionate dryads and aggressively matchmaking squirrels, that was as close to passion as it got. The gossip vines (yes, actual vines who spread rumors via pollen bursts) began swirling the news. Jasper had made it his mission to β€œunlock Velverina’s song”—the mythical melody she had allegedly sung a hundred springs ago that caused the cherry trees to bloom in full synchronized ecstasy. She insisted it was just a nasty case of spring allergies and someone with a lute who misunderstood a sneeze, but the legend had stuck. And so, under boughs of dripping moss and beside blossoms too pink to be taken seriously, Jasper and Velverina began their reluctant courtship. It involved poetry (bad), interpretive dance (worse), and stolen moments of sarcasm under the starlight. But somewhere between a pollen brawl with the frogs and Jasper’s attempt to woo her with a lute solo that sounded like a squirrel in a blender, Velverina’s tail began to sparkle just a little brighter. And somewhere deep in the forest, something ancient stirred. β€œOh no,” Velverina muttered. β€œThe prophecy’s trying to happen again.” The Blossoming Ridiculosity Velverina woke the next morning to a flurry of suspiciously coordinated flower petals spiraling through the air like overzealous backup dancers. A tulip landed squarely on her beak. She bit it in half and spat it onto a passing ant. The ant saluted. β€œThis again?” she muttered, tail feathers puffing into defensive spirals. β€œThe forest is clearly trying to set the mood. I hate it when nature meddles.” β€œAh, but meddling is the forest’s love language,” purred a voice from below. It was Jasper, seated under her branch with a mug of dandelion espresso and wearing a leafy cravat so flamboyant it probably had its own moon cycle. β€œAlso, I brought coffee. You strike me as someone who loathes mornings and believes brunch is a human conspiracy.” Velverina blinked down at him. The coffee was steaming, the sun was rising like it had something to prove, and the frogs were croaking β€œBohemian Rhapsody” in three-part harmony. She hated how well he was starting to know her. β€œDon’t you have a lute to break or a squirrel to offend?” β€œBoth are scheduled for later. For now, I thought we might chat. About your song.” She flared one tail feather lazily. β€œAgain with the song? Jasper, darling, if I had a coin for every bard who came sniffing around looking for my β€˜mythic melody,’ I could afford a silk hammock and a full-time peacock to fan me.” β€œYou already have twelve tail feathers that function as a personal entourage.” β€œTrue. But they’re unionized now and they only swish on Tuesdays.” Jasper gave her the look of a man who was either about to compose a sonnet or burn down a gazebo for love. She couldn’t decide which and frankly didn’t want to know. That was the trouble with bards. Too many feelings. Not enough realism. But later that afternoon, as the dew warmed to golden mist and pollen sparkled like fairy glitter in the sun, Velverina found herself humming. Not on purpose, obviously. It was more of a nasal protest buzz. Still, it had rhythm. And unfortunately, the trees heard it. The cherry blossoms gasped. The gossip vines quivered. Somewhere, a unicorn sneezed so hard it did a backflip. β€œIt’s happening!” a daffodil shrieked before fainting dramatically into a puddle. Within hours, the entire forest had transformed into what could only be described as an unsolicited romantic flash mob. Butterflies lined up in choreographed formations. Bees started braiding petals into crowns. Someoneβ€”probably the glowbug princeβ€”had rigged up mood lighting and ambient harp sounds. β€œMake it stop,” Velverina whispered, half-horrified, half-flattered. β€œThis is a nightmare wrapped in florals.” β€œI think it’s rather charming,” said Jasper, lounging on a moss pouf that hadn’t existed two seconds ago. β€œThough I’m fairly sure that acorn just winked at me.” β€œThat’s Gary. He’s a creep.” But the true chaos was yet to come. Because someone had summoned the Elders. Not ancient wise owls. Not mystical deer. No, the Elders were three retired dryads with passive-aggressive energy and wildly inappropriate tea parties. Their names were Frondalina, Barksy, and Myrtle, and they hadn’t agreed on anything in four centuries except their shared disappointment in everything younger than them. β€œYou haven’t sung in over a hundred years,” snapped Frondalina, adjusting her moss wig. β€œI don’t sing on command. I’m not a bard’s jukebox,” Velverina replied, crossing her wings with maximum sass. Barksy tapped her walking stick made of centuries-old sassafras. β€œThe Bloom is wilting. The prophecy needs renewing. The Song must rise.” β€œWhat prophecy?” Jasper asked, sitting up like a hedgehog who’d accidentally joined a cult. β€œOh, just some ancient nonsense about how the song of the Bloombringer”—here they all gestured vaguely at Velverinaβ€”β€œis the only thing that can rejuvenate the cycle of spring, balance the pollen tides, and prevent the squirrels from overthrowing the seasonal order.” β€œSo... totally normal, then.” β€œOh yes. And also, if she doesn’t sing, the moon might fall into a ditch. We’re fuzzy on that part.” Velverina squawked. β€œThis is exactly why I stopped singing. Every time I hit a high note, someone grows a sentient cabbage or starts worshipping a toad. It’s too much pressure.” β€œThen don’t sing for the prophecy,” Jasper said quietly, approaching with the kind of gaze that could melt icicles and blush roses. β€œSing because you want to. Sing because... maybe I’m worth a note.” Her feathers glowed a deep pink, as if mortified by their own sentimentality. β€œDon’t make this romantic. I hate romantic.” β€œYou do not. You just hate being seen.” That silenced her. Not because he was wrong, but because he wasn’t supposed to know that. And before she could hurl an insult or a petal or an emergency pine cone, a wind swept through the forest. The kind of wind that means magic’s about to get weird. All eyes turned to her. The squirrels stood on two legs. The bees harmonized. The trees leaned in. β€œOh damn it all,” Velverina muttered. β€œFine. But if a tree grows legs again, I’m moving to the coast.” She opened her beak. And the first note curled into the air like the scent of a thousand blossoms waking up all at once. It was not sweet. It was not gentle. It was not some dainty lullaby for woodland folk to clutch their pearls over. It was... pure Velverina. Sassy. Bold. A little rude. Like jazz, if jazz had hips and a vendetta. It made the frogs faint, the mushrooms dance, and somewhere a mole proposed marriage to a daffodil. Jasper just stared, slack-jawed, as the song reached its peakβ€”and the entire forest bloomed in a single, thunderous burst of petals, light, and unrepentant fabulousness. She finished, tucked a tail feather back into place, and looked directly at him. β€œYou owe me coffee for life.” β€œDone,” he breathed. β€œAnd possibly a temple.” But before she could roll her eyes or dramatically swoon (she was still deciding which), a faint rumble echoed through the trees. β€œWhat now?” she sighed. β€œDon’t tell me I woke up something else.” The Elders stared into the trees. The squirrels dove for cover. And from the depths of the grove, something enormousβ€”glittery, floral, and just a tad vindictiveβ€”was beginning to rise. Jasper turned pale. β€œOh no.” Velverina’s tail curled tighter. β€œPlease tell me that’s not what I think it is.” β€œI think,” Frondalina whispered, β€œyou just reawakened the Bloom Titan.” Velverina slapped her wing to her forehead. β€œI hate spring.” Rise of the Bloom Titan There are certain things in life no one prepares you for. Like finding out your song just resurrected an ancient floral demigod the size of a cottage. Or discovering your potential soulmate owns three hundred tiny hats and wears them based on emotional state. Or facing the end of spring via a thirty-foot rage-blossom with hydrangea fists and a carnation crown of doom. Velverina had faced many challenges: drunk fireflies, jealous peacocks, an attempted coup by a trio of nihilist badgers. But this? This was new. The Bloom Titan had fully risen. It stood on two tangled root-legs, vines spiraling from its arms like whips, its face a blooming medley of rose and hibiscus with one unsettling tulip for a nose. Each step it took caused a burst of spores and dramatic musical stingsβ€”like a soap opera made entirely of pollen and existential dread. β€œIT IS SPRINGTIME,” it boomed, voice like thunder and breath like over-fertilized compost. β€œAND I AM AWAKENED!” β€œWell that’s just peachy,” Velverina muttered. β€œAnyone got a net, a garden hose, or a napalm sprinkler system?” β€œI have a kazoo,” Jasper offered, holding it up meekly. β€œIt’s in B minor?” β€œOf course it is.” The Bloom Titan stomped forward. Birds fled. Flowers wilted in reverence. Somewhere, a possum fainted with flair. β€œYou must complete the Song!” Myrtle cried, holding her teacup like a weapon. β€œIt’s the only thing that’ll calm the Titan!” β€œThe last time I finished that song, three clouds got pregnant and a maple tree ascended into sainthood,” Velverina snapped. β€œThat song is not a toy!” β€œWhat if I accompany you?” Jasper asked softly. β€œBalance it out. You sing fire, I play foolery. Yin, yang. Feather, fur.” Velverina stared at him. He looked ridiculous. His cravat was on sideways, he had moss in his beard, and he was holding that kazoo like it might summon a miracle. And damn it, she kind of adored him for it. β€œFine,” she said. β€œBut if this turns into a forest-wide musical, I’m hexing everyone’s eyebrows.” With a dramatic hop (because of course), she flew into the air, tail spiraling like a firework of glam rock dreams. Jasper scuttled up a mushroom to his full height, kazoo poised like a flute in a Renaissance painting painted by a squirrel on mushrooms. The Titan raised its arms. β€œI HUNGER FOR—” Note one: piercing, pink, unapologetic. The air shifted. Petals froze mid-fall. Even the drama-crickets stopped fiddling. Jasper joined in with a kazoo note so spectacularly off-key it looped back into being charming. Velverina’s feathers shimmered like starlight on strawberry jam. She poured her soul into the melodyβ€”sass and sorrow, glitter and gloom. It wasn’t beautiful. It was honest. The Titan paused. Its vine-fists curled. The tulip-nose twitched. Then… It sniffled. A single daisy rolled down its cheek. β€œThat… that was the most sincere seasonal expression I’ve ever heard.” Velverina blinked. β€œDid we just serenade a kaiju into emotional vulnerability?” β€œApparently,” Jasper whispered. β€œI think he’s about to cry again.” The Bloom Titan knelt. β€œI have been angry for centuries… No one ever sang for me. Only at me.” β€œWe all feel unappreciated sometimes,” Velverina said, now thoroughly done with this nonsense. β€œI cope with sarcasm and expensive tail oil. You went full Godzilla.” The Titan sniffed again. β€œWould you… hug me?” β€œAbsolutely not.” β€œReasonable.” It slowly curled itself into a giant flower-petal cocoon and, with a yawn that could mulch a bush, promptly went back to sleep. A final swirl of pollen shot skyward like confetti from the universe’s most dramatic cannon. The forest was silent. Then, applause. Wild, weird applause. Mushrooms clapping with caps. Vines waving like concert fans. A squirrel fainted again. Even the grumpy frogs were croaking in harmony. Jasper lowered his kazoo. β€œWe did it.” Velverina landed, feathers still shimmering with residual drama. β€œI saved spring. Again. And I didn’t even get a croissant.” β€œI could be your croissant.” She blinked. β€œWas that a pick-up line or are you having a sugar crash?” β€œLittle of both.” Velverina snorted. β€œYou’re ridiculous.” β€œAnd yet.” They stood there, surrounded by glowing flowers, blushing trees, and a sense that maybe, just maybe, spring was safe againβ€”if only because no one wanted to risk waking that Titan twice. β€œYou know,” Jasper said, β€œyou’re kind of amazing.” She smirked, tail feathers fluffing. β€œTell me something I don’t know.” And as the sun dipped below the treetops and the gossip vines released a final burst of perfume, Velverina leaned in close and whispered something scandalous in his ear. He blushed so hard his spikes turned pink. Somewhere deep in the trees, the Bloom Titan smiled in its sleep. Spring had returnedβ€”with sparkle, sass, and a tail full of trouble. Β  Β  Bring Velverina Home: If you found yourself rooting for our glitter-tailed diva and her kazoo-slinging hedgehog companion, you can carry a bit of that springtime sass with you year-round. Adorn your walls with a lush tapestry that blooms brighter than the Bloom Titan himself, or add a dash of ethereal glam to your space with an acrylic print that practically sings. Feeling portable? Sling Velverina over your shoulder with our gorgeous tote bag, or let her glam up your gallery wall in a framed fine art print. After all, spring deserves a little dramaβ€”and Velverina delivers it in full bloom.

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Pastel Awakening

by Bill Tiepelman

Pastel Awakening

Yolanda Hatches with Attitude It all began on an unnaturally sunny morning in the enchanted meadow of Wickerwhim, where flowers bloomed with suspicious cheerfulness and butterflies giggled too loudly for anyone’s comfort. At the center of this excessive joy sat a single, oversized egg. Not just any eggβ€”this one was hand-painted by fairies who got into the glitter again. Swirls of gold vines, pastel polka dots, and blooming sugarflowers wrapped around the shell like an Instagrammable FabergΓ© fantasy. And inside this egg? Trouble. With wings. The shell cracked. A tiny claw poked through, then another. A faint voice echoed from within: β€œIf I don't get a mimosa in the next five minutes, I’m staying in here until next spring.” The final crack split the egg in half, revealing a rather unimpressed baby dragon. Her scales were the color of champagne and strawberry macarons, shimmering in the sunlight like she'd been incubated in a spa. She blinked once. Then twice. Then threw a perfectly skeptical side-eye at a daffodil. β€œDon’t look at me like that, flower. You try waking up in a decorative egg without central heating.” This was Yolanda. Not exactly the Chosen One, unless the prophecy was about attitude problems. She stretched one wing, sniffed a tulip, and muttered, β€œUgh, allergies. Of course I’m born in a field of airborne pollen.” Nearby, the local bunniesβ€”wearing waistcoats and monocles, because of course they didβ€”gathered in a panic. β€œThe egg has hatched! The prophecy has begun!” one of them squeaked. β€œThe Flower Dragon awakens!” Yolanda looked them up and down. β€œI better not be in some sort of seasonal prophecy. I just got here, I haven’t even exfoliated yet.” From across the field, the pastel council of Spring Spirits approached. They shimmered like soap bubbles and smelled faintly of marshmallow fluff and judgment. β€œWelcome, O Eggborn. You are the Herald of Bloom, the Bringer of Renewal, the—” β€œβ€”The girl who hasn’t had breakfast yet,” Yolanda cut in. β€œUnless y’all got a caramel-filled peep or something, I’m not saving squat.” The spirits paused. One of them, possibly the leader, floated closer. β€œYou are sassier than expected.” Yolanda yawned. β€œI’m also cold. I demand a blanket, a brunch buffet, and a name that doesn’t sound like a seasonal candle.” And just like that, the prophesied dragon of spring rose from her glitter egg, blinking into the sunshine and ready to sass her way through destinyβ€”or nap through it, depending on the snack situation. She was Yolanda. She was awake. And heaven help anyone who stood between her and the Easter chocolate. Chocolate Thrones & Marshmallow Rebellions By the afternoon, Yolanda had commandeered a sunhat made of woven daffodil petals, two jellybean necklaces, and a throne constructed entirely from half-melted chocolate bunnies. It was sticky. It was unstable. It was fabulous. β€œBring me the soft-centered truffles!” she commanded, draped across the makeshift throne like a decadent lounge singer who'd missed her career calling. β€œAnd I swear if I get one more hollow rabbit, someone’s going in the compost pile.” The bunny council tried to keep up with her demands. Harold, a twitchy but well-meaning rabbit with pince-nez glasses and anxiety issues, scurried over with a basket of foil-wrapped goodies. β€œO Eggborn, perhaps you’d care to review the Festival of Blooming this evening? There will be fireworks and... organic seed cookies?” Yolanda gave him a look so flat it could’ve been served as a crΓͺpe. β€œFireworks? In a flower field? Are you trying to start an inferno? And did you say seed cookies? Harold. Babe. I’m a dragon. I don’t do chia.” β€œBut… the prophecies!” Harold whimpered. β€œProphecies are just old stories written by people who wanted an excuse to light things on fire,” she replied. β€œI read half of one this morning. Fell asleep during the β€˜Song of Seasonal Restoration’—sounded like a dehydrated elf trying to rhyme β€˜photosynthesis.’” Meanwhile, whispers rustled through the meadows. The Marshmallow Folk were stirring. Now, let’s get one thing straight: the Marshmallow Folk were not sweet. Not anymore. They had been sugar-toasted and forgotten by the Seasonal Spirits centuries ago, cursed to bounce eternally between over-sweetness and underappreciation. They wore robes of cellophane and rode PEEPSβ„’ into battle. And Yolanda? She was about to become their Queen. Or their lunch. Possibly both. The first sign came as a ripple across the grassβ€”tiny, spongy feet thudding like aggressive fluff balls. Yolanda sat up on her throne, one claw dipped lazily into a jar of hazelnut spread. β€œDo you hear that?” β€œThe prophecy says this is the Hour of Saccharine Reckoning!” cried Harold, holding up a parchment so old it crumbled in his paws. β€œSounds like a mood swing with branding,” Yolanda muttered. She stood, wings fluttering dramatically for effect. β€œLet me guess: angry sentient marshmallows, right? Wearing cute hats?” The horde crested the hill like a menacing cloud of dessert-themed vengeance. At the front was a particularly large marshmallow with licorice boots and a jawline that could slice fondant. He pointed a candy cane staff at Yolanda and shouted, β€œTREMBLE, SHE-WHELP OF SPRING! THE SUGAR SHALL RISE!” Yolanda blinked. β€œOh no. They monologue.” He continued, unfazed. β€œWe demand tribute! One seasonal dragon, lightly toasted and dipped in ganache!” β€œYou try to roast me and I swear, I’ll turn this field into crΓ¨me brΓ»lΓ©e,” Yolanda growled. β€œI just figured out how to breathe warm mist and you want to start a cookout?” Battle nearly broke out right there in the tulipsβ€”until Yolanda, with one raised claw, paused the moment like a director at tech rehearsal. β€œAlright. Everyone stop. Time out. What ifβ€”and I’m just brainstorming hereβ€”we did a peace treaty. With snacks. And wine.” The Marshmallow general tilted his head. β€œWine?” β€œYou ever had rosΓ© and carrot cake? Transcendent,” she smirked. β€œLet’s vibe instead of barbecue.” It worked. Because of course it did. Yolanda was a dragon of unreasonable charm and unreasonable demands. That night, under garlanded moonlight and glowworms strung like fairy lights, the first ever Festival of Fizzing Treaties took place. Marshmallows and bunnies danced. Spirits got tipsy on honeysuckle mead. Yolanda DJ’d using her wings as cymbals and declared herself β€˜Supreme Seasonal Sassmaster.’ By sunrise, a new prophecy had been scribbled into existence, mostly by a drunk faun using syrup and hope. It read: β€œShe came from the egg of pastel bloom,Brought sass and threats of fiery doom.She calmed the fluff, the sweet, the stickyβ€”With brunch and jokes that bordered icky.Hail Yolanda, Queen of Springβ€”Who’d rather nap than do a thing.” Yolanda approved. She curled up beside a basket of espresso truffles, tail flicking lazily, and muttered, β€œNow that’s a legacy I can nap to.” And with that, the first dragon of Easter snoozed off into legendβ€”her belly full, her crown askew, and her meadow safe (if slightly caramelized). Β  Β  Can’t get enough of Yolanda’s pastel sass and egg-born elegance? Bring her magic into your own world with a little help from our enchanted archive! Canvas prints bring her fire-breathing flair to your walls, while the tote bags let you carry attitude and artistry wherever you go. Feeling cozy? Snuggle up in the most extra way possible with a plush fleece blanket. Want a little sass in your space? Try a wall tapestry worthy of any dragon queen’s den. And for those who need their daily dose of pastel power on the go, we’ve got iPhone cases that pack attitude in every tap. Claim your piece of dragon legend nowβ€”Yolanda wouldn’t settle for less, and neither should you.

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