Regional Versions of Bunad, Norwegian Traditional Outfit
Happy Birthday, Norway (17th of May)
Tag: edain
Dírhaval plucked absently at his lute, repeating the words over in his mind, trying to force them into rhyme. His mind was sluggish in the heat. Under the midday sun, Túrin’s bravery and misery melted from his imagination. The stars served for better inspiration.
Dírhaval groaned and set aside his instrument. The grime was to thick to ignore, after all. He stripped off his shirt and made his way to the water basin, splashing the warm water against his skin.
“Whoa. You look like Atto!”
Dírhaval jumped, startled by the little voice. He spun to see a boy, golden-haired and bright-eyed, standing between Dírhaval’s hanging laundry. Dírhaval reasoned that the boy had playing in the woods and gotten turned around — few wandered from the main camp. One of the Gondolindrim, given the Quenya.
“And I presume your father is dashingly handsome?” Dírhaval asked with a grin. He glanced over the boy’s head in search of a guardian.
“That’s not what I meant,” the boy said. His eyes went wide a moment later and a fierce flush spread across his cheeks. “No, wait! I just meant… Please stop laughing, sir. My father has hair like that. Are all men that hairy?”
My father, Dírhaval thought, suppressing his laughter. That didn’t make sense. The Gondolindrim were all of the Firstborn, most either of the Sindar or the Noldor. Well, except for—
“You are Túor’s son?” Dírhaval asked quickly. “Eärendil the peredhil?”
The boy regarded him at arm’s length, perhaps wary of a stranger who could guess his identity. Dírhaval cursed his bluntness and tried again.
“Forgive me, lad,” he said, then extended a hand. “My name is Dírhaval, Bar Hador.”
“The House of Hador?” Eärendil’s voice lifted. “Really?”
“Aye, my grandfather fought beside Hador Lórindol at Dagor Bragollach,” Dírhaval said.
“That’s my grandfather’s grandfather!” Eärendil boasted. He stepped forward and took Dírhaval’s hand, shaking it awkwardly. Perhaps Gondolin had used a different greeting. “I am Eärendil, Bar Hador.”
Dírhaval grinned. “Now tell me, lad, what brings you out here? Surely your lady-mother did not ask you to hunt mushrooms all on your own?”
“You can hunt mushrooms?” Eärendil asked.
“That’s what they tell me,” Dírhaval said with a shrug. “But it was not my real question.”
Eärendil pouted. He was painfully out of place in Dírhaval’s sparse camp. The boy was dressed in a fine silk tunic, dyed a bright lilac. Could the peredhil sweat? The boy didn’t seem to be bothered by the heat, much like his elven kin.
“I… I wanted to trick my guards,” Eärendil admitted. His eyes were fixed on his sandals. “But I’ve gotten lost.”
“Fortunately, I know the way back to the camps,” Dírhaval chuckled. He grabbed a fresh shirt from the clothesline. It wasn’t silk, but better cotton than shirtless.
“Why do you live out here?” Eärendil asked as they started walking. “Ammë says it’s dangerous at night.”
“If I was farther out, it might be,” Dírhaval admitted. He slowed his pace as Eärendil scrambled up a fallen tree, then began to hop across its length. “I usually stay with the main camp, but I thought the quiet might help with my work.”
“Your work?”
Eärendil leaped over a cracked branch, then jumped onto a nearby boulder. Dírhaval considered stopping him, but the boy seemed surefooted enough. Besides, Dírhaval had heard his sister complain enough about royal tantrums. He had no interest in experiencing one for himself.
“I am a poet,” Dírhaval explained. “I am writing about your father’s cousin, as a matter of fact.”
“Cousin?” Eärendil repeated. He cocked his head. “My father has a cousin?”
Dírhaval’s surprise was short lived. Of course he doesn’t know, Dírhaval chided himself. Túrin’s fate would not have made it to Gondolin, and there were more urgent matters for Túor to attend in Sirion. It was not his place to tell Eärendil a story that his lord-father might still be unaware of.
“It’s a sad story,” Dírhaval said simply.
“So he died.”
Eärendil was ahead of him, standing on an old stump. He turned to Dírhaval for confirmation.
“Why do you say that?” Dírhaval asked slowly.
Eärendil shrugged. He hopped off the stump as Dírhaval caught up. “Every time someone tells a sad story, it ends in death.”
“They tend to do that,” Dírhaval admitted.
“I guess. But Atto says the happy stories end in death, too. At least when they are about men. He says Haleth and Bëor and Malach all died, but their stories are still happy.”
Dírhaval hummed in contemplation. He could hear the din of the main camps and the soft washing sound from the sea.
“And what do you think, princeling?”
“I think,” Eärendil said, slowly choosing each word, “Atto is right. If stories are sad because someone dies, then the Secondborn can only have sad stories.” He nodded at his own answer. “We don’t only have sad stories, do we Dírhaval?”
“No,” Dírhaval agreed. “We have our share of happy stories, too.”
I’m just gonna ask a bunch of these since your tags said you were bored, feel free to ignore any/all of them lol. okay, top 5 Edain
already said Andreth
- Beren
- Bëor the Old
- Tuor
- Morwen or Rían
- …omg the me of several years ago doesn’t believe this but Túrin.
Now mortal OCs, the list goes:
- Kreka
- Bledda
- Bortë
- Boromir (he isn’t an OC but let’s be honest)
And honorable mentions to Haleth, Roas, Barahir and Emeldir, Lalaith, Bandir the Lame….
I wish you would write a fic where…Emeldir fights alongside Barahir.
Barahir falls in love with her when they are both ten, and she shows up for beginning lessons on how to hold a shield in a tunic that is too small over a pair of too-big trousers stuffed into the tops of her boots and rolled thrice at the waist as to not fall off her skinny hips. She brings her own shield, painted bright green. Lessons on holding sticks are saved until next month’s instruction, and they must train for at least one full planting season before sticks are exchanged for dull pieces of metal. Barahir doesn’t realize what he feels for Emeldir is love until years later as she holds a green shield above his body to protect him from arrows, his own shield shattered at their feet. “We were taught to use our shield to protect our heart,” she tells him later. “That is exactly what I was doing.”
Barahir sulks off into the woods to find a moss-covered stone to sit on and attempt to compose heartfelt love songs to match the suave poetry of how Emeldir declared her feelings. Eventually he gives up and trudges back to her house, feeling as if he had returned to the awkward days when his beard first grew in. She meets his eyes with the same cool aplomb he envies and admires, and for a second Barahir worries he misunderstood her declaration. “Dagnir is leading a party down into the plains to hunt for enemy spies. You are the first warrior I want by my side,” he tells her. Emeldir nods. Then, before his courage deserts him, Barahir blurts out. “I want to fight by your side.”
Emeldir blinks slowly. “You said that.”
“I mean it! I mean, what I also meant was I want to be by your side. Always. I love you. I think I always have.”
Emeldir thinks he is ridiculous, and stubborn, and oblivious, and beloved.

Sons of the Edain – Breana Melvin (BUY PRINTS)
The Ages of Arda Anthology is now available for purchase, so I can finally unveil the piece I did for the book.
Eu só serei flor quando tu fores meu verão…
Rian and baby Tuor wish you a wonderful birthday hehehe ^-^ happy birthday, love!!
THANK YOU MY DEAR!!!!!!!
Anonymous said: Andreth telling a story to some of her younger relatives?
names are in the captions!
Howl
Getting around to this. Where The Brides of Death comes from. Overloading on symbolism and call-forwards with Beren.
…
The night of the masks had come again, on the full moon of the last harvest. The last sheath had been gathered, bound, and hallowed in the name of the giver of fruits, and now balance would shift to another, she of grief and winter, and the nights would grow longer than the days. After tonight, the lords and ladies of growing things and warmth would step down from their thrones. With promise the tools of harvest were stored beside the seeds for next year’s planting. The blistering days of the last twilight of summer would become distant memory after tonight, the winds blowing only cold from the north and the pines preserving the only remnant of color. Here came the night of sorrow and memory, but also the night of hope and defiance.
Illuminated by towering bonfires built in the cleared and now empty fields, the people gathered to listen and sing their history. They brought their torches and wreaths and some the masks that hung face down and hidden the rest of the year. This ritual of sacred history was shared only on the full moon before the turn to winter. Once all had gathered around the tallest bonfire did the silence break. The wise woman began the songs in a voice that was strong and piercing, and those that did not sing joined her with clapping hands or feet. What was sung were old melodies, the most ancient songs, for half the words no longer had meaning, and of their significance only the wise woman knew in full. Of the words they still understood were chants for running, for long journeys and sorrow and desperate hope. No names were spoken that night, for none had survived to be recalled. Memory needed the dance and the masks more than the words.
Once they had no fields, no harvest, no food, no home. Once they had only darkness and hunger, travelling ever westward in the hope of freedom and safety. Once only the moon had known them. Only the moon knew their journey and all the words to the songs they had sung.
Once long before they had possessed fields and homes, but no freedom, for their harvests had not been their own. Once long before their great enemy had claimed them as their own.
In the flickering of bonfires and moonlight, the people hid their faces behind masks of their enemies. They disguised themselves as snarling wolves and monsters, chalk-white fangs and black fur capes lined with wooden beads that rattled and shook as they cavorted and danced. The ones hidden beneath the masks of wolves howled and laughed, stamped their feet and forgot their voices. Hunched over like the beasts that their masks mimicked, they curved fingers like claws. Running to the edges of the field they disappeared in the darkness, then leaped back out to weave patterns and circles in what remained of the winnowed grain. Others unmasked dressed themselves in their simplest garments, the white of undyed cloth bright against the glow of moonlight. They danced in counterpoint with garlands of autumn flowers and leaves crowning their heads, and streaks of ash ran like tear tracks down their faces. The ash came from what had been gathered from their hearths as the people dosed all the fires that morning. On this night the only lit flames would be out in the middle of the harvested fields. They danced for their ancestors who fled from the first fields, those who left homes and hearth for the unknown wilds, running before the wolves of the enemy. Their dance was steadier, forming rings of joined hands and staying close to the bonfire. Until the ones in masks leaped out. Then the hands would break apart, the dancers in white scatter. In mock horror they screamed and skipped away from grasping hands of those masked like wolves. Back and forth went this dance, while the rest sang and rattled strings of bone and beads and clapped and chanted.
A boy spun and leaped free of his older cousins, his laughter rising above the crackle of the bonfire, the rattle of beads, clapping of hands, and stomping of feet. Last year he had been a wolf, and he had howled loudest behind his painted fangs. No one had been a better or more believable wolf. This year he was his ancestor, defying the enemy by running free of the wolves. No one could touch him. The boy spun once more in the air, his white tunic spotted with soot and ash, gray as the moon that witnessed his daring leaps.
The wise woman finally rejoined the dancers with a new crown atop her white-streaked hair, one with three pieces of polished rock crystal instead of flowers, a cloak of black wool across her shoulders. On the finest chair from the feasting hall whom none would remember having fetched and just as mysteriously would none remember returning the chair to the hall once the dawn rose did the wise woman sit enthroned. Surrounded by torches, her face was recast fey and strange. Her eyes heavy-lidded surveyed the dancers before her, and with hand gestures slow and imperious she bellowed that her wolves bring to her the brightest sacrifice. Her piercing voice was pitched low and cold, the mask of the enemy.
In a leaping frenzy the dancers in wolf masks began to ring the bonfire, howling the last song as the dancers in white fetched torches to light. The boy paused and smiled, teeth as bright as the painted fangs of his cousins as he held out his hands. Each grabbed one arm and hoisted their laughing cousin into the air, carrying him through a gauntlet of other dancers, unlit torches crossed above their heads. To their great aunt enthroned with a black crown they brought the boy, and in the enemy’s deep voice she demanded to know who they had brought before her. Ritual words she called out; his name she desired, the labor of his hands, the bounty of his fields.
The boy knew his role, that he was supposed to pretend to be afraid of his great aunt, of the enemy enthroned and crowned, but that he must shout defiance, give no name, as the dancers in masks bowed low and waited for the shout that would allow them to remove their snarling wolf-faces. Together everyone would dip the torches into the bonfire to begin the last procession from the fields back to the feasting hall where they would drink and feast until the dawn. The hearths would be re-lit and masks hidden. Still, the boy could not halt his laughter as the wise woman loomed above him, the pieces of crystal in her crown reflecting off the harvest moon like true gems. Laughter and pride danced in her gray eyes as the boy, released by his pair of cousins, stood and stepped forward. A bold one, she called him, the hint of a smile at the corner of her frowning mouth. Once more she demanded his name, and the dancers shifted awkwardly. The boy could not break tradition.
He wanted to shout his name for all to hear and proclaim it would not matter anyway, for the enemy could not catch him. He wanted to turn the simple taunt into a new song of defiance, to list all that his people had accomplished and would now that they were free. He wanted to sing until the moon heard his voice. To howl like the wolves, forget once more he was a boy. Wanted to lean close and whisper into the wise woman’s ear that she did not frighten him. To kiss her eyes and break the spell that made her terrible and fey. To brush his fingers against the crown of dark branches and pluck free the three pieces of clear stone.
















