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Florals and Folklore

par Bill Tiepelman

Florals and Folklore

The Bloomfather Spring had officially sprung in the hamlet of Mossbottom, and the pollen was drunk on its own power. Birds were tweeting unsolicited advice, bees were aggressively speed-dating every flower, and squirrels were shaking their fuzzy behinds at anyone who looked remotely annoyed by joy. And right in the thick of this blossoming madness stood the one gnome to rule them all—Magnus Bloomwhiff, known in underground gardening circles as The Bloomfather. Magnus was not your average garden gnome. For one thing, he refused to wear red hats, calling them “flamboyant clichés.” Instead, he sported a knitted mustard beanie he’d allegedly stolen off a confused hipster in Portland during a tulip festival gone rogue. His beard? Braided like a Norse saga with tiny sprigs of lavender and rogue glitter, the kind that haunts your home until Yule. Today was The Day. The Equinox Bloom-Off. A sacred, slightly drunken tradition where every forest-dwelling creature with a green thumb, paw, or tentacle brought their best bouquet to the Great Mossy Stump of Judgment. Magnus, never one to half-ass his florals, had been preparing for this since late February, when most of the other gnomes were still curled up in cinnamon-scented hibernation blankets binge-watching cryptid soap operas. “You’re overdoing it again,” muttered his cousin Fizzle, a gnome whose default expression was a judgmental squint and who believed basil was “too spicy.” “You can’t overdo spring, Fizzle,” Magnus replied, cradling his creation with the tender awe of a midwife catching a glowing unicorn placenta. “You can only rise to meet her, like a brave soldier charging a field made entirely of seasonal allergies and bees who want to date you.” The bouquet was glorious. Not just tulips—no no, that would be predictable. Magnus’s bouquet was an **experience**: orange tulips kissed with gold shimmer powder, purple freesia twisted into a spiral of seduction, daffodils that literally giggled when touched, and something suspiciously magical that sparkled when nobody was looking directly at it. By the time he waddled to the stump, the competition was already in full bloom. Fern fairies in leaf-sequined leggings glared at each other over pansy arrangements like they were prepping for a dance battle. A badger in a cravat presented a bouquet arranged in the shape of Queen Barkliza III. Someone had even entered with a carnivorous display titled “Spring Eats Back.” Magnus stepped up. The crowd went hushed. Even the aggressively horny bees stopped mid-thrust. He held the bouquet aloft like a garden-born Excalibur and cried out in his famously scandalous voice, “Behold! The Bloomination!” Gasps. Applause. A spontaneous haiku composed by a chipmunk with a lute. It was going swimmingly—until the bouquet let out a sneeze and a puff of glitter-fused pollen exploded in every direction, sending fairies into allergic fits and temporarily turning the badger’s cravat into a tulip-themed parasol. “Oops,” Magnus whispered. “Might’ve used too much ent-pollen.” “You idiot!” hissed Fizzle, now sparkling against his will. “You weaponized your florals!” But it was too late. The Bloomfather’s bouquet was... evolving. And the forest, so fond of order and pollen-permitted debauchery, was about to get a serious makeover. The Petalpocalypse The air shimmered with an unnatural hue—somewhere between rose gold and “whoops.” Magnus Bloomwhiff, still clutching his mutinous bouquet, stared in dumbstruck awe as the ent-pollen supercharged his flowers into what could only be described as sentient botanical theater. The tulips grew mouths. Beautiful ones, pouty and smirking, whispering garden secrets in French-accented nonsense. The freesia began reciting Shakespeare. Backwards. The daffodils? Now had legs. Several pairs. And they were tapping. “Sweet seed of Sunroot,” Fizzle moaned, hiding under a compostable umbrella. “They’re forming... a chorus line.” Magnus, on the other hand, was gleeful. “I KNEW spring would break into song eventually.” It was around that time the Mossbottom Bloom-Off devolved from lighthearted competition into a full-scale Petalpocalypse. Pollen clouds mushroomed into the sky. Vines shot from the bouquet like gossip from a pixie’s lips, entangling judges, contestants, and a few poor squirrels trying to discreetly pee behind a fern. The enchanted bouquet levitated, spinning slowly like a diva making a slow-motion entrance on a reality show. The crowd panicked. Fairies screamed and flew into each other. A wood sprite hyperventilated into a toadstool. Someone accused the bouquet of being an agent of the Spring Rebellion—a radical underground movement demanding longer mating seasons and petal-based universal income. “This is exactly how the Blossom Riots of ’09 started,” groaned an elderly mushroom. But Magnus, ever the showman, climbed on top of the Great Mossy Stump with all the calm of a gnome who once dated a dryad with anger issues and had nothing left to fear. “Everyone, relax!” he boomed. “This is simply a manifestation of spring’s wild, fertile chaos. We asked her to bloom. Well—she did. Now let her speak!” The bouquet, now spinning in place and glittering with pollen like a botanical disco ball, spoke in a collective whispery harmony: “Prepare yourselves for the Age of Bloom. All shall petal, none shall prune.” “A talking bouquet?” a goblin scoffed. “Next thing you know, my begonias’ll be unionizing.” But they did. Not just his. Every plant in a 300-yard radius perked up, shimmied like they’d heard gossip, and began to dance. Moss waved. Ivy wrapped itself into cursive and started spelling dirty limericks. Even the lichen had opinions now, and most of them were sarcastic. Somewhere in the chaos, Magnus and Fizzle were pulled into an impromptu conga line led by a tap-dancing trillium named Bev. “We should probably fix this,” Fizzle grumbled, ducking a flirtatious fern’s advance. “Or lean in,” Magnus said, eyes alight. “We could broker peace between plant and gnome. Be the bridge! The bloom whisperers! The chlorophyll diplomats!” “You just want to be king of the dancing flowers.” “Not king. Emperor.” After three hours of conga-ing, pollen burlesque, and one awkward group marriage between a pinecone, a pansy, and a confused raccoon, the bouquet began to wilt—its power fading with the setting sun. With a sigh and a glittery puff, the magical chaos ebbed away. Flowers returned to their usual non-verbal selves. Moss returned to being soft and judgmental. Even the tap-dancing daffodils bowed and politely ceased existing, as if they knew their time was done. Magnus stood on the stump, shirtless (when had that happened?), chest heaving, beard full of blossoms and two confused ladybugs. The crowd—bedraggled, bewildered, and blinking glitter out of their eyelashes—stared in silence. And then, thunderous applause. Confetti. A badger sobbing into a bouquet of crocuses. A fairy fainted and fell directly into the punch bowl, where she remained sipping through a straw for the rest of the evening. Magnus, still high on the intoxicating mix of pollen and approval, turned to the crowd. “Spring is not a season, my friends. It is a state of chaotic, blooming, feral glory. And I, Magnus Bloomwhiff, am her ambassador!” The mayor of Mossbottom, an ancient hedgehog in a monocle, grudgingly handed Magnus a sash reading “Bloom-Off Grand Champion and Reluctant Floral Messiah.” Fizzle, sipping something suspiciously fizzy, raised an eyebrow. “So what now?” Magnus smirked. “Now we rest. We bloom again tomorrow.” And with that, he strutted home barefoot through a field of daisies that somehow parted in reverence, leaving behind sparkles, scandal, and a legend that would live on in the petals of every mischievous bloom for generations to come. And somewhere in the background, the tulip bouquet quietly giggled… plotting.     If the chaotic charm of Magnus Bloomwhiff and his legendary bouquet made you giggle, grin, or crave a tap-dancing daffodil of your own, don’t worry—you can now bring that springtime sass to your own home. “Florals and Folklore” is available in a variety of enchanting formats. Adorn your walls with a Framed Art Print or a sleek Metal Print, perfect for capturing every glitter-dusted wrinkle in glorious detail. Take Magnus on the go with a vibrant Tote Bag that screams “chaotic garden energy,” or send some spring mischief in the mail with a collectible Greeting Card. Each item is infused with that same playful magic—minus the allergy-triggering ent-pollen, we promise.

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The Quilted Egg Keeper

par Bill Tiepelman

The Quilted Egg Keeper

Of Eggs, Ego, and Exile Deep in the buttercream-scented meadows of Spring Hollow, far beyond the reach of grocery store egg dye kits and mass-produced chocolate bunnies, there lived a gnome named Gnorbert. Not just any gnome — *the* Gnorbert. The Quilted Egg Keeper. The legend, the myth, the mildly intoxicated seasonal icon whose job it was to guard the most sacred artifact of Easter: The First Egg. Capital F. Capital E. No pressure. His egg — more Fabergé than farm-fresh — was stitched together from enchanted scraps of long-forgotten springtime festivals. Panels of floral velvet, sunbeam-woven silk, and even one suspicious square that may have been repurposed from Mrs. Springlebottom’s old curtain set. It shimmered in the sunlight like a Lisa Frank fever dream, and it was Gnorbert’s pride and joy. That, and his hat. Oh gods, the hat. Spiraled like a unicorn’s horn and dyed in hues not even Crayola had the nerve to name, it loomed over him like a rainbow tornado. Gnorbert insisted it was necessary “to maintain the mystical equilibrium of seasonal joy,” but everyone in the Hollow knew it was just to hide the fact he hadn’t washed his hair since the Great Tulip Debacle of 2017. Every year, just as the last winter icicle packed its snowy bags and slinked back into the shadows, Gnorbert emerged from his quilted abode like a deranged jack-in-the-box, ready to coordinate the Great Egg Launch. It was part ceremony, part fashion show, and entirely unnecessary — but Spring Hollow wouldn’t have it any other way. This year, however, there was… tension. The kind of tension that smells like scorched marshmallow peeps and passive aggression. “You forgot to paint the anti-rot runes again, Gnorbert,” hissed Petalwick the Bunny Cleric, ears twitching with disapproval. “I did no such thing,” Gnorbert replied, elbow-deep in a mug of mead-laced carrot cider. “They’re invisible. That’s why they’re effective.” “They’re not invisible. You used invisible ink. That’s not how magic works, you glitter-soaked garden gnome.” Gnorbert blinked. “You say that like it’s an insult.” Petalwick sighed the sigh of someone who once saw a squirrel outwit a spell circle and still hasn’t recovered. “If this egg cracks before the ceremonial sunrise roll, we’ll have seven years of ugly crocus blooms and emotionally unavailable ducks.” “Better than last year’s pandemic of pastel moths and unseasoned deviled eggs,” Gnorbert muttered. “That was your spell, wasn’t it?” “That was your recipe book.” The two stared each other down while a trio of flower fairies took bets behind a daffodil. Gnorbert, still smug, patted his precious quilted egg, which gave a suspicious squish. His confidence faltered. Just a bit. “...That’s probably just the humidity,” he said. The egg squelched again. This, Gnorbert thought, might be a problem. Crack Me Up and Call It Spring The egg was sweating. Not metaphorically — no, Gnorbert had long since moved past poetic delusions and into the cold, damp reality of egg sweat. It glistened along the velvet petals like nervous dew on prom night. Gnorbert tried to casually rotate the egg, hoping maybe the wet patch was just—what? Condensation? Condemnation? “Petalwick,” he hissed through a forced smile, “did you... happen to cast a fertility amplification charm near the egg this year?” “Only in your general direction, as a curse,” Petalwick replied without missing a beat. “Why?” Gnorbert swallowed. “Because I think... it’s hatching.” A moment passed. The air thickened like expired marshmallow fluff. “It’s not that kind of egg,” Petalwick whispered, slowly backing away like a bunny who’d just realized the grass it was nibbling might actually be someone's vintage crochet centerpiece. But oh, it was exactly that kind of egg now. A faint chirping sound echoed from within — the kind of chirp that said, “Hi, I’m sentient, I’m confused, and I’m probably about to imprint on the first unstable gnome I see.” “YOU PUT A PHOENIX SPARK IN THE QUILT!” Petalwick shrieked. “I THOUGHT IT WAS A SPARKLY BUTTON!” Gnorbert bellowed back, arms flailing with glitter and denial. The egg began to glow. Vibrate. Hum like a sentient kazoo. And then, with the dramatic flair only an Easter phoenix chick could muster, it burst from the patchwork casing in a slow-motion explosion of lace, flower petals, and existential horror. The chick was... fabulous. Like Elton John had been reincarnated as a sentient marshmallow peep. Feathers of gold, eyes like disco balls, and an aura that screamed “I have arrived and I demand brunch.” “You magnificent disaster,” Petalwick muttered, shielding his eyes from the chick’s aggressive fabulousness. “I didn’t mean to incubate god,” Gnorbert whispered, which honestly, wasn’t the weirdest thing anyone had said that week. The chick locked eyes with Gnorbert. A bond was formed. A terrible, sparkly bond of destiny and regret. “You’re my mommy now,” the chick chirped, voice dripping with mischief and diva energy. “Of course I am,” Gnorbert said, deadpan, already regretting everything that led him to this moment. “Because the universe has a sense of humor, and apparently, I’m the punchline.” And so, Spring Hollow got a new tradition: the Great Hatching. Every year, gnomes from across the land came to witness the rebirth of the sparkly phoenix chick, who had somehow unionized the bunnies, taken over the flower scheduling committee, and demanded that all egg hunts include at least one drag performance and a cheese platter. Gnorbert? He stayed close to the egg. Mostly because he had to. The chick, now known as Glitterflame the Rejuvenator, had separation anxiety and a mean left peck. But also, deep down, Gnorbert kind of liked being the accidental godparent of Easter’s weirdest mascot. He even washed his hair. Once. And on quiet nights, when the chick was asleep and the air smelled faintly of jellybeans and slightly scorched dignity, Gnorbert would sip his carrot cider and murmur to no one in particular, “It was a good egg. Until it wasn’t.” And the flowers nodded, and the hat twitched, and the patchwork shimmered in the moonlight, waiting — always — for next spring’s chaos to begin again. Fin.     Bring Gnorbert Home If you're now emotionally entangled with a fabulous Easter chick and a mildly unhinged gnome, you're not alone. Luckily, you don’t have to wait until next spring to relive the chaos. The Quilted Egg Keeper is available in all its patchwork glory across a magical collection of merch that even Glitterflame approves of (after much dramatic flapping). ✨ Transform your walls with the Tapestry 🖼️ Give your gallery wall a gnome-sized glow-up with the Framed Print 🛋️ Cuddle chaos with a Throw Pillow that’s 100% eggplosion-proof 💌 Send joy (and maybe a warning) with a Greeting Card 🥚 Stick some seasonal sass anywhere with the official Sticker Shop now and celebrate the season with a little extra sparkle, sass, and stitchwork. Gnorbert would want you to. Glitterflame demands it.

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The Enchanted Duo in Plaid

par Bill Tiepelman

Le duo enchanté en tartan

Le duo enchanté en tartan : le conte d'un gnome Dans les profondeurs de la forêt où les feuilles murmuraient des secrets et où le vent avait le goût du miel, vivait Gornick le Gnome , un personnage excentrique connu pour ses chapeaux à carreaux extravagants et ses pitreries excentriques. Mais Gornick n'était pas n'importe quel gnome des bois ; il était le « Maître de la malice » autoproclamé de la Vallée cachée des bizarreries extravagantes, où la magie et l'absurdité coexistaient dans une étrange harmonie fantaisiste. Un soir, alors que Gornick était assis près de son champignon couvert de mousse, une bouffée de fumée s'échappa de son chapeau – son plus grand chapeau à carreaux jusqu'alors. Ce n'était pas un chapeau ordinaire. Non, celui-ci avait des « sorts qui ont mal tourné » tissés dans sa matière même. Orné de lavande séchée, de pommes de pin et de baies étrangement croquantes, il s'agissait plus d'un raté magique en attente de se produire que d'une déclaration de mode. Mais cela ne dérangeait pas Gornick. En fait, il accueillait le chaos à bras ouverts et trapus. Assise sur ses genoux se trouvait Lilith , sa petite sorcière de compagnie, un être magique de la taille d'une poupée avec un don pour le sarcasme et un cœur aussi sombre qu'un chaudron rempli de soupe de chauve-souris. Elle n'était pas seulement sa compagne ; elle était son petit diable sur l'épaule, lui murmurant des idées diaboliques à l'oreille comme : « Transforme ces écureuils en marionnettes à chaussettes ! » ou « Ensorcelons les champignons pour qu'ils chantent des chansons de taverne grivoises à minuit. » Un soir, Gornick s'était lassé de ses tours habituels (faire flotter des lucioles, faire couler la rivière à contre-courant pour rire), alors il décida qu'il était temps de s'amuser un peu. « Dis donc, Lilith, dit-il en grattant sa barbe hirsute, que dirais-tu de pimenter un peu les choses ce soir ? J'ai le sort qu'il te faut. » Lilith roula ses petits yeux perçants, assise en tailleur sur ses genoux. « Si c'est comme la dernière fois où tu as accidentellement mis le feu à ton pantalon, ne compte pas sur moi. Mes cheveux sentent toujours le gnome brûlé. » « Ce n'était pas ma faute ! » protesta Gornick. « Le livre d'incantation était en langue gnome, et je parle mieux... eh bien, quoi que ce soit. » Il agita ses doigts, provoquant une bouffée de fumée scintillante sous ses ongles. « De plus, celui-ci est infaillible. Nous allons invoquer les Grands Esprits de la Forêt. Ce sera une émeute ! » Lilith avait l'air sceptique, ce qui était son expression naturelle. « Infaillible, dis-tu ? Ton dernier sort a transformé la moitié de la forêt en grenouilles danseuses de claquettes. » « D'accord, admit Gornick. C'était un petit accident de grenouille, mais là, c'est différent ! Crois-moi, ce sort fera de nous les rois de la forêt ! » Il ouvrit son ancien livre de sorts, qui, à vrai dire, ressemblait davantage à un catalogue de courses gnome datant de plusieurs siècles, avec des sections arrachées et remplacées par des gribouillages aléatoires de moustaches. Il chanta l'incantation, sa voix s'élevant jusqu'à un crescendo : « Par les ombres de l'arbre du crépuscule, par la rosée sur le pois de minuit, ô esprits de la forêt, venez à moi ! » Soudain, l’air se remplit d’une odeur de pin et de quelque chose… d’autre. Une odeur nauséabonde, comme du chou trop cuit . Le sol trembla et, avec un grand bruit de sifflement, une silhouette émergea de la brume. Mais ce n'était pas l'esprit majestueux et éthéré de la forêt que Gornick avait espéré. C'était plutôt une créature trapue et graisseuse qui ressemblait étrangement à... un hérisson mécontent ? L'esprit était vêtu d'un peignoir en lambeaux et tenait une tasse de ce qui sentait le café de la veille. Ses yeux brillaient de la rage de quelqu'un qui vient d'être réveillé d'une sieste profonde. "Mais qui es-tu ?" grommela le hérisson. « Je… euh, nous… t’avons invoqué ? » bégaya Gornick. « N’es-tu pas le Grand Esprit de la Forêt ? » Le hérisson se moqua. « Grand Esprit ? Je suis Frank. Et ça a intérêt à être bon, parce que j'étais en train de faire quelque chose d'important. » Il sirota son café avec une expression qui disait clairement qu'il n'adhérait pas aux bêtises de Gornick. Lilith renifla : « Eh bien, on dirait que ton sort infaillible vient d'invoquer Frank, le hérisson légèrement grincheux. » Le visage de Gornick devint rouge betterave. « Ok, ok, j'avoue que ce n'est pas ce à quoi je m'attendais. Mais je peux arranger ça ! » Il feuilleta furieusement son livre de sorts. « Ah ! Et voilà. Cela devrait nous donner quelque chose de... plus gros ! » D'un geste de la main et d'un chant qui ressemblait étrangement à quelqu'un qui gargouillait des cailloux, Gornick lança un autre sort. Cette fois, le sol s'ouvrit et, de la fissure, sortit un navet géant avec des yeux. Il cligna lentement des yeux, puis regarda Frank. « C'est… mon cousin, dit Frank d'un ton neutre. Turny. Tu as invoqué un navet. » L'énorme légume émit un gémissement sourd, puis rota, emplissant l'air d'une odeur de compost et de feuilles pourries. Gornick agita frénétiquement ses mains. « Attends, attends, je peux réparer ça ! » Lilith riait hystériquement à ce moment-là, manquant de tomber des genoux de Gornick. « Oh, s'il te plaît, ne le fais pas. C'est le meilleur divertissement que j'ai eu depuis des siècles ! » Alors que Gornick essayait de lancer un autre sort, Turny le navet avait déjà commencé à faire des ravages, aplatissant les arbres avec ses bras massifs semblables à des racines, tandis que Frank le hérisson regardait avec un désintérêt total. « Je vais avoir besoin de plus de café », marmonna Frank avant de s'éloigner dans les bois, complètement indifférent au chaos. Gornick finit par abandonner et jeta le livre de sorts. « Eh bien, c'est un sacré gâchis », soupira-t-il en regardant Turny renverser un vieux chêne avec un bruit sourd. Lilith, essuyant ses larmes de rire, lui tapota le bras. « Tu sais quoi, Gornick ? Ne change jamais. La vie avec toi, c'est comme vivre dans un rêve fiévreux et bizarre. » « Ouais, eh bien, au moins ce n'est jamais ennuyeux », sourit Gornick. Et ainsi, tandis que le navet faisait des ravages dans la forêt et que Frank disparaissait dans la brume, Gornick et Lilith étaient assis ensemble, regardant l'absurdité se dérouler, satisfaits de leur monde étrange et magique où rien ne se passait jamais comme prévu - et c'est exactement comme ça qu'ils l'aimaient. Si vous avez aimé ce conte fantaisiste et l'image enchanteresse de Gornick le Gnome et de Lilith, vous pouvez ramener la magie à la maison ! Des impressions, des produits dérivés, des téléchargements numériques et des licences pour les œuvres d'art sont disponibles dans notre galerie ici . Explorez une large gamme d'options pour ajouter une touche de magie des bois à votre collection !

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