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Shell-Mel — Lady Grian Bookmark

Published: 2011-06-24 07:32:05 +0000 UTC; Views: 234; Favourites: 0; Downloads: 2
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Description Edit - Dulled background. It was too vibrant.

Tried the dragons without scales this time. Unsure which one looks better...

This bookmark is coming with me to Avcon, so again, any feedback would be really nice!

Melusine is a figure of European legends and folklore, a feminine spirit of fresh waters in sacred springs and rivers.

2 - The Lady Grian: Open Your Heart

About The Lady Grain:-

'Grain is the sister of the Moon Goddess of the Dragonfae, Aine, and is a solar Goddess/Dragonfae Queen. She is of the golden light and she brings warmth and courage, joy and growth wherever her feet fall. She is the force that drives plant to flower, the fruit to be born from the vine, the seed to spring forth into life. Her hands glow with this life-force, and her Dragonfae compainions breathe flames around her as she sleeps to ensure she is warn. She brings warmth and fire to those in wintry climates and carries with her the coming of spring. She is very spring/summer in her feel, and is very much about the dawn and the new light, and sunset and "dying light". She is necessary for our continued life, for moving forward in comfort, and she is a being who can also bring forth abundance and luxuries; those that spring naturally from the planet. She is very beautiful, warm and comforting. For anyone expecting cold, fatigue and even joint pains, she breathes ease and joy into us.
Grian's Dragonfae-self in her natural form is small and delicate yet, immensely strong - like beams of light and flames from the sun. She is sensuous too in nature, and protected. When Grian breathes out, flowers bloom. Where her feet fall, clover and herbs, green grass and moss spring forth and all that she touches and looks upon is blessed with vibrant life force. She gives and breathes into being life itself. Her radiance is kind and gentle, but immeasurably powerful. She has the power to change landscapes, climates, and our feelings...'

Melusine's story © Lucy Cavendish
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