#winter spirits
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
the Winter Ones: Folkloric Figures of Winter, Yule, & Christmas
by Keziah
The winter holidays are ebbing ever closer for those of us in the Northern Hemisphere. With each passing year, more and more practitioners of witchcraft and/or followers of pagan paths have looked to taking up the customs of their ancestors or incorporating those customs into their practices in some way. Holidays have become a popular way of embracing such traditions, traditions that can make diasporic practitioners feel a little closer to home, traditions that can bring one nearer their ancestors, traditions that can aid in making one’s practice and customs truly unique to them.
Winter has many customs and traditions, and those practices differ from region to region. One of my favorite aspects of winter is the amount of figures associated with the season – folk figures unique to the regions from which they hail. For many people, if you ask them about figures they associate with winter, you’ll hear Father Christmas, Krampus, and maybe even a nod or two to Hans Trapp, but there are so many more winter figures out there! In this post, we’ll meet a variety of these folk spirits, and we’ll learn a bit about their tales. It’s my hope that readers of this blog may find a new way of incorporating beliefs or customs of their ancestors or of their homelands (for our readers who are members of diasporic populations), and that, in doing so, their winter holidays may be brighter for it. Now, shall we dive in? Who to meet first…
GRÝLA, JÓLASVEINAR, & JÓLAKÖTTURINN
Grýla, the Yule Lads, and the Yule Cat
(Icelandic Folklore)
A prominent feature in Icelandic Christmas and Yule folklore is the tale of a mountain-dwelling family that descends upon Icelandic communities during the Yule season, or during the 13 days leading up to Christmas. This family consists of –
Grýla – a large, frightening giantess, ogress, or half-troll/half-ogre (depending on what version of the tale you hear) who feasts upon naughty children;
Jólasveinar / the Yule Lads – Grýla’s thirteen thieving, tricksy sons;
and Jólakötturinn / the Yule Cat – Grýla’s pet cat, a massive, vicious, people-eating creature.
According to lore, throughout most of the year Grýla and her crew keep to themselves in some isolated mountainous area. If not in the mountains, it’s often said that Grýla and co. live in Dimmuborgir (lava formations in north Iceland). During the Yule or Christmas season, though, Grýla and her brood leave their domain behind to bring a bit of terror to the inhabitants of Iceland.
For thirteen nights, Grýla’s sons, the Yule Lads, will leave gifts for (and party with, play games with, and perform for) well-behaved children, and leave tricks or warnings for naughty children, but this version only came about after a shift in the tone of the tale. Most sources state that the Yule Lads were once purely horrible and simply wreaked havoc for the thirteen nights leading up to Christmas. Why the change? Well, apparently the original lore was so terrifying that the parliament of Iceland officially outlawed its use as a scare tactic against children. Thus, the brighter lore of playfully mischievous Yule Lads was born, differing greatly from the ‘creepy and revolting’ ways exhibited in the earlier tales.
As the stories go, one-by-one, the Yule Lads go into inhabited areas of Iceland and sow a little terror and chaos, each carrying out his own special form of mischief. They could only do their deeds at night, and were quite terrifying to behold – large, dirty, and ‘humanoid and bestial in equal measure’ (though now most depictions of the Yule Lads feature cheerful, bearded men with woolen clothes and pointed hats). The Yule Lads arrive (one per night) starting thirteen days before Christmas, and each continues their mischief spree for thirteen nights, only then departing (again, one per night).
The Yule Lads are:
Stekkjastaur ‘Sheep-Cote Clod’ – from the 12th - 25th of December, Stekkjastaur sneaks into pens and stables to harass sheep, attempting to suckle them all, though this is made difficult by his long, stiff, wooden legs, which don’t allow him to bend his knees and kneel on the ground.
Giljagaur ‘Gully-Gawk’ – from the 13th - 26th of December, Giljagaur hides in the gullies near homes until all the household has fallen asleep. Then, he makes his way to the cowsheds to steal milk.
Stúfur ‘Stubby’ –Stúfur will, from the 14th - 27th of December, steal into homes and nab anything leftover in the pans. Some versions say he steals the pan itself, for he likes to eat the ‘crust’ left behind on them from cooking.
Þvörusleikir ‘Spoon-Licker’ – from the 15th - 28th of December, Þvörusleikir sets about his diabolical task of breaking into homes and licking all the spoons (in particular, the wooden spoons).
Pottaskefill ‘Pot-Scraper’ – from 16th - 29th of December, Pottaskefill breaks into homes to steal unwashed pots so he can lick up all that’s left, be that the remnants of sauces, broths, and gravies, or leftover bits of food. He’s also said to eat any unfinished foods from plates.
Askasleikir ‘Bowl-Licker’ – from 17th - 30th of December, Askasleikir hides beneath beds, lying in wait for anyone to set their askur down. An askur is an Icelandic wooden bowl with a lid, which, according to these Yule tales, would sometimes be carried off to bed whilst one was enjoying a late-night snack. The bowl would then be placed on the floor beside the bed or just under the bed, where Askasleikir would be waiting to scarf down whatever is left in the askur.
Hurðaskellir ‘Door-Slammer’ – from 18th - 31st of December, Hurðaskellir starts his rounds, going around slamming doors. He finds it even more fun to do whilst everyone is sleeping.
Skyrgámur ‘Skyr-Gobbler’ – from 19th of December - 01st of January, Skygámur commits the heinous act of robbing any and every pantry or refrigerator he can find of skyr, a traditional Icelandic dairy food similar to yoghurt.
Bjúgnakrækir ‘Sausage-Swiper’ – as if Skyrgámur’s antics weren’t enough, Bjúgnakrækir is a rotten old sausage thief. He sits in the rafters of homes, waiting for everyone to go to bed or to look away. Then, he steals as many sausages as he can manage. Bjúgnakrækir makes his arrival on the 20th of December and leaves on the 02nd of January.
Gluggagægir ‘Window-Peeper’ – perhaps the creepiest of the lot thus far (though someone licking all the spoons is the stuff of nightmares), Gluggagægir makes his rounds from the 21st of December - 03rd of January, peeping through windows into homes, hoping to spy something to steal.
Gáttaþefur ‘Doorway-Sniffer’ – from the 22nd of December - 04th of January, Gáttaþefur, lured to your home by the scent of freshly baked laufabrauð (‘leaf bread,’ a traditional Icelandic Christmas bread), arrives to one’s doorway and will attempt to steal the laufabrauð.
Ketkrókur ‘Meat-Hook’ – from the 23rd of December to the 05th of January, Ketkrókur would find a way to steal the meat from your kitchen. He’d hide in the pantry, behind doorways, in the rafters, up the chimney, and he’d use his long, hooked staff, or meat hook, to quickly snatch away the meat either while it was being prepared or from the holiday table itself.
Kertasníkir ‘Candle-Stealer’ or ‘Candle-Beggar’ – from the 24th of December to the 06th of January, Kertasníker, the last of the Yule of Lads, steals candles, especially from children. Candles were once typically made from tallow and were edible, and some lore states that Kertasníker would steal the candles to snack on.
Nowadays, the Yule Lads are said to leave candies and small gifts for good children, placing the goods in the shoes that kids leave on their windowsills in hopes of finding them later filled with presents. Bad children, however, are said to be left nothing but rotten potatoes.
As for Grýla, well… Grýla comes and kidnaps naughty children, loading them into her sack and carrying them back to her husband, Leppalúði (who most sources say is quite lazy and prefers to stay in his cave than to go with Grýla and the Yule Lads to terrorize Icelandic children). Grýla and Leppalúði then eat the naughty children, cooking them up in Grýla’s giant pot or cauldron. Though Grýla and Leppalúði are known to have a particular fondness for eating children, some sources also warn that they’ll eat adults caught outdoors on their own during those long, dark winter nights.
If Grýla and her husband weren’t bad enough, you still have the Yule Cat to worry about, especially if you didn’t receive any gifts of new clothes for the holidays. It’s said that the Yule Cat, on Christmas night, eats anyone it catches that isn’t wearing at least one new item of clothing.
LA BEFANA
(Italian Folklore)
With particular association with Epiphany Eve (the night of the 05th of January), La Befana is witch in Italian folklore (sometimes called, fondly, the Christmas Witch). She’s said to fly around Italy on her broom on the night of Epiphany Eve, when she visits each household with children and fills each child’s stocking with gifts or punishments, depending on whether they were well or poorly behaved. Well-behaved children receive gifts and sweets, while those who were naughtier receive a coal lump, black rock candy, or a stick. Some tales also say that La Befana (who is obsessively tidy in some variations of her origin story) may sweep or clean your house before she leaves.
La Befana is said to be a very old woman with a cheerful, kindly disposition. She dresses simply, usually wearing a shawl either around her shoulders or tied over her hair (sometimes both), and her clothes are soot-covered, as the tales say she flies into each home via the chimney. She carries a wicker basket or cloth sack filled with all of the gifts and sweets she must deliver.
In some Italian regions, bonfires are burned on Epiphany, and those bonfires sometimes feature effigies of La Befana. Many people dress as La Befana at various Epiphany events and festivals in Italy.
ST. NICHOLAS & KRAMPUS
(Central European Folklore)
On Saint Nicholas Day (observed on the 5th or 6th of December, depending on the region), many children throughout Europe (and in diasporic communities around the world), wake up excited to check in their shoes or under their pillows for gifts from St. Nicholas. St. Nicholas, is a tall, lean, cheerful old man with a long white beard, usually depicted as being dressed in fine vestments, including a cape or chasuble, and almost always wearing an ornate miter atop his head. In Central European (and some Eastern European) folklore, though, jolly old St. Nicholas does not work alone.
The Krampus travels as Saint Nicholas’ companion. Usually depicted as a large red, black, or brown demon with cloven hooves and the legs and horns of a goat, pointed ears, a long, pointed or forked tongue, and a frightening, human face with a crazed or menacing expression, Krampus is truly the stuff of childhood nightmares. Saint Nicholas and Krampus make their rounds on Krampusnacht – the night of the 05th of December. While the well-behaved children received gifts from Saint Nicholas, naughty children meet punishment at the hands of Krampus. The punishment varies from one tale to the next – some say that Krampus switches the children with birch branches; some say that Krampus devours the children, often swallowing them whole; and still other tales say that Krampus nabs the children, loading them into the basket or pouch he wears upon his back and taking them to hell.
Despite attempts by the Catholic Church to ban Krampus, belief in the goat demon is very much still alive, with festivals and parades dedicated to Krampus, such as Krampuslauf, booming in popularity.
BELSNICKEL
(Germanic Folklore)
Belsnickel (also often spelled Belschnickel or Beltznickle) is a figure of Germanic folklore that finds its origins in Rheinpfalz, a historic region of Southwestern Germany. The belief in Belsnickel finds life still yet in some areas within this region, as well as in diasporic German peoples (and the descendants thereof) in Pennsylvania Dutch communities (birthed from settlers from the Rheinpfalz region) throughout the US.
Belsnickel is a man dressed in tattered, dirtied furs and clothes. In some versions, he also wears a mask with a long, pointed tongue. Belsnickel travels around at night (usually on the night of Christmas Eve), wielding a long switch in one hand and carrying a sack filled with cakes, candies, fruits, and nuts in the other hand or on his back. Poorly behaved children would receive a switching, while well-behaved children would be given sweets from the sack.
Brown’s Miscellaneous Writings features a first-hand account (having taken place around 1830) of one Beltznickel tradition from Maryland, USA –
‘One hand would scatter the goodies upon the floor, and then the scramble would begin by the delighted children, and the other hand would ply the switch upon the backs of the excited youngsters – who would not show a wince…’
In some Pennsylvania Dutch communities, it’s said that Belsnickel arrives one-to-two weeks before Christmas to ‘check in’ on how the children were behaving, punishing the bad children and serving as a frightening warning and reminder that they had better correct their ways before Christmas.
PERCHTA
(Alpine Folklore)
Known by many names, such as Pehta Baba (in Slovenian lore), Frau Perchta, and Frau Faste (in some Swiss and Slovenian lore), Perchta is a goddess associated with winter, spinning, and folk magic, particularly in Germany and Austria.
Perchta’s association with winter bears particular emphasis on midwinter and Twelfth Night. It’s said that Perchta would enter homes during the twelve days between Christmas and Epiphany, and she would dole out rewards and punishments. Children and servants of the home who had worked hard throughout the year and who had been good people would wake the next morning to find a small gift left by Perchta (usually a coin or trinket, though some modern customs say she may leave candies).
Her punishments, however, were far greater than her gifts. For children and servants who had been poorly behaved, unkind, and lazy, Perchta enters their bedrooms while they slumber, cuts them open, and replaces their stomach and guts with straw. Some tales say she does not replace one's entrails but simply fills the stomach with straw. It’s also said in some tales that Perchta delivers this same punishment to those who on the night of Perchta’s feast day eat something aside from the traditional foods of her feast day (those foods being fish and gruel).
Perchta’s association with spinning also comes into play in some variations of this tale, in which Perchta’s punishment is reserved for those who did not complete their spinning by the time of her visit. She was also said to trample or set fire to any half-spun fibers she discovered.
Perchta’s links to midwinter come from her ties to the legend of the Wild Hunt. Some tales of the Wild Hunt feature Perchta as the leader of the hunt.
As for Perchta’s appearance, there are two main versions. Perchta is sometimes described as a beautiful, young woman, with white or very pale hair and fair skin, usually dressed in white or silvery white hues. This Perchta differs greatly from that featured in some old depictions, which describe a hag woman dressed in rags, with a wrinkled face and a large beak-like nose made of iron. Some descriptions say this woman carries a cane, and many depictions feature her keeping a knife or blade beneath her skirts or robes.
The difference in these two depictions of Perchta is also reflected in the two variations of Perchten – a term that is used to apply to both the masks worn at festivals and processions honoring Perchta, as well as to figures associated with Perchta and seen as her subjects or helpers. Of these figures, there are two types –
Schönperchten: the beautiful, bright Perchten dressed in silvers and whites, said to deliver blessings of wealth and good luck during the Twelve Nights,
and Schiachperchten: the monstrously ugly Perchten with fangs and tusks, horns, tails, and beastly, fur-covered faces. The Schiachperchten are said to drive away evil spirits, ghosts, and demons.
SPILLAHOLLE
The Spillaholle – also known as Mickadrulle / Mickatrulle, Popelholle (‘Hooded Holle’), Zumpeldrulle – is believed to be a regional variation of Frau Holle or Perchta. She is said to be a very short old woman dressed in ragged, tattered clothing and a hood, and is, in some tales, said to carry stinging nettles with her.
The Spillaholle appears in towns and villages during winter, especially nearing Christmas or during the Twelve Nights of Christmas. The Spillaholle, who is strongly associated with spinning, is said to travel through town, peeking in the windows of each house to check to see ‘if the children and spinsters are spinning diligently.’ If their spinning hasn’t been taken care of by evening or nightfall, it’s said that the Spillaholle will dole out punishments. It’s even said that the Spillaholle will take the lazy spinsters away, beating them with the stinging nettles she carries with her. As for those who have finished their spinning, instead of a punishment, the Spillaholle leaves a blessing of protection – a single nettle is left upon the stoop or at the threshold of the home, a nettle that shall protect the house from various misfortunes for the next year.
MARI LWYD
(Welsh Folklore)
The origins of the Christmas tradition of the parading of the Mari Lwyd are up for debate. Some say it’s an early Christian practice, while many others believe that it’s a surviving pre-Christian tradition that’s been Christianized throughout the years. Believed to have come from a wassailing custom, the Mari Lwyd (said by some to mean ‘Grey Mary,’ ‘Holy Mary,’ or ‘Blessed Mary,’ and by others to mean ‘Grey Mare’) is a hobby horse, puppet, doll, or effigy that is paraded through town, carried from door-to-door by wassail-singing groups. This is done during the Christmas season, often ‘between Christmas Day and Twelfth Night.’
The head of the Mari Lwyd is usually a skull of a hoarse (and in most cases, the same skull is to be used each year), though there have been accounts of a head being carved from wood or shaped from a pillow. The skull (or makeshift horse head) is beautifully decorated with flowers and ribbons (the ribbons usually making up the Mari Lwyd’s mane), and has lights, baubles, or bottle glass for eyes. A white cloth is draped from the horse’s head down over the base of the Mari Lwyd, concealing the carrier of the doll underneath. A spring or stick is usually attached to the lower jaw of the skull, so that the jaw can be made to open and snap shut.
The parade is to begin at dusk or sundown. Singing and dancing is to be enjoyed whilst the Mari Lwyd makes her way along. At each door, the Mari Lwyd procession would perform traditional songs, and the household was to reply (usually through the closed door) with improvised, taunting poetry, usually delivering some kind of funny insult. A competition then ensues, a back-and-forth between the Mari Lwyd party and the household (this is a ritual called pwnco), until one side was bested and gave up, having no reply. Should the Mari Lwyd procession singers lose, they leave empty-handed. Mari Lwyd winning and entering the house, though, is believed to be a blessing that will bring good fortune to the household for the coming year.
The Mari Lwyd is said to be mischievous as well – chasing people, gnashing her jaws to scare children, and even trying to steal things or knock things about when she enters a home.
DED MOROZ & SNEGUROCHKA
(Slavic Folklore)
Ded Moroz (also called Dedushka Moroz – and other variations of Grandfather Frost – and Morozko) is familiar to many as Russian Santa, but Ded Moroz is much, much more than that. Ded Moroz finds his origins in pre-Christian Slavic paganism and folklore as a great magician and wizard of winter. Belief in Ded Moroz and customs surrounding him were banned during the early Soviet era. Nevertheless, Ded Moroz not only lives on, but has become a winter icon in East Slavic culture and is now the main figure associated with Novy God, the secular Christmas-like Russian celebration of New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day.
Ded Moroz – a tall, old man with rosy cheeks and long white beard, who dresses in a floor-length fur coat and fur hat, and usually wields a magic staff – travels about (usually depicted travelling by a horse-drawn sleigh) delivering gifts to children. Some tales say that he delivers gifts all through December as well as on New Year’s Eve night, when he places the gifts under the New Year Tree whilst the household is sleeping.
One aspect of Ded Moroz’s tale that is rather unique is that of Snegurochka – Ded Moroz’s granddaughter who helps him make his deliveries. Snegurochka (also called Snegurka and the Snow Maiden), unlike Ded Moroz, doesn’t find her roots in pre-Christian Slavic lore, but rather in 19th century Russian fairytales. Snegurochka wasn’t depicted as Ded Moroz’s granddaughter until after 1935, when the holiday of Novy God was permitted by the Russia Federation. From then on, Snegurochka became Ded Moroz’s granddaughter and assistant, and has since been more commonly depicted as wearing wintery silver and blue cloaks and a fur hat (sometimes a crown made of glistening snowflakes).
SOURCES & FURTHER READING:
Þjóðsögur Jóns Árnasonar - the Collection of Folklore of Jón Árnason The Icelandic Yule Lads and their evil mother Gryla A Journey Around the Figure of the Befana – Manciocco, Claudia; Manciocco, Luigi Krampus | Definition, History, & Facts The Origin of Krampus, Europe's Evil Twist on Santa ‘the Krampus and the Old Dark Christmas: Roots and Rebirth of the Folkloric Devil’ – Ridenour, Al The Winter Goddess: Percht, Holda, and Related Figures: Folklore: Vol 95, No 2 ‘Deutsche Mythologie’ – Grimm, Jakob Holda: Between Folklore and Linguistics Who is Belsnickel in Pennsylvania German Christmas lore? ‘Brown’s Miscellaneous Writings’ – Brown, Jacob Yes Helen, there is a Belsnickel ‘A Dictionary of British Folk Customs’ – Hole, Christina The Mari Lwyd ‘Ritual Animal Disguise: A Historical and Geographical Study of Animal Disguise in the British Isles’ – Cawte, E.C. Mari Lwyd, a Welsh Christmas Tradition ‘A Tour Through Part of North Wales, in the Year 1798, and at Other Times’ – Evans, J. ‘Perchta the Belly-Slitter and Her Kin: A View of Some Traditional Threatening Figures, Threats and Punishments’ – Smith, John B. Felix und Ulrich Mueller - Percht und Krampus ‘the Old Magic of Christmas: Yuletide Traditions for the Darkest Days of the Year’ – Raedisch, Linda "Дед Мороз и Снегурочка" (Grandfather Frost and the Snow Maiden) –Dushechkina, E. B. ‘Encyclopedia of Russian & Slavic Myth and Legend’ – Dixon-Kennedy, Mike
#winter deities#winter spirits#seasonal witchcraft#winter#winter folklore#ded moroz#snegurochka#la befana#gryla#perchta#yule cat#the yule lads#mari lywd#st. nicholas#krampus#spillaholle#belsnickel#winter folk traditions#winter folk customs#mythology#folklore#the wild witch keziah#thewildwitchkeziah#yule#winter magic
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
Winter Spirits - Joan
(aka a Drabble series about spending winter with the ROs)
・ ⋆ ・ ⠄⠂⋆ ・ ⠄⠂⋆ ・ ⠄⠂⋆ ・ ⠄⠂⋆ ・ ⠄⠂⋆ ・ ⋆ ・ ⠄⠂⋆ ・
The fire crackles and blazes orange, washing over your faces as you huddle around it. You don’t have a fireplace but Joan had suggested pulling up a video of one on your laptop. It’s surprisingly cozy with the snow falling outside and a good book in hand.
Jo had opted for a thick textbook they found at the library, no surprise there. They were curled into a blanket, cradling a steaming mug of tea. The loveseat was small enough that even sitting on opposite ends you were pressed into each other's space. You watch as they turn a page then bring the mug up to their face, not drinking but just letting the steam waft over them with a content smile.
You feel the urge to reach over and hold their no-doubt cold face in your own hands. Instead you reach for the mug, your mug of tea that they’ve commandeered for warmth. They relent their hold to allow you a sip without looking up from their book. Heat blooms down your throat and you suspect it's not wholly from the tea. When you hand it back, your hand lingers over their cold fingers tentatively.
This seems to garner their attention and their pale eyes meet yours, studying you. They come to some mental conclusion, transferring the mug to one hand and letting the other wrap delicately around your own. They turn back to their book and it's only when they give your hand a small squeeze that you realize your own book sits abandoned on your lap.
#ch: jo#winter spirits#drabble#me actually posting the next drabble? what a surprise#I seem to have accidentally made handholding a common theme
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
#utdr#utdr fanart#undertale#toriel#frisk#sans and papyrus#papyrus#sans#toby fox newsletter#newsletter#undertale fanart#undertale art#toby knows how to revive my winter holiday spirit#so many adorables#as always awesome gifs#utdr newsletter
7K notes
·
View notes
Text
#christmas#christmas tree#Christmas Cookies#christmas eve#Christmas countdown#christmas lights#Merry Christmas#christmas time#christmas spirit#white christmas#christmas morning#christmas is coming#christmas chocolate#days until christmas#can't wait for christmas#santa#santa claus#Dear Santa#winter#snow#cuddle#presents#cold#warm#cozy#cosy#xmas#xmas time
2K notes
·
View notes
Text
#memes#christmas season#Santa memes#funny#funny memes#funny post#funny shit#funny stuff#dank memes#halloween#lmao#ha ha funny#lol#meme challenge#christmas spirit#christmas#christmas eve#christmas time#Christmas Day#christmas songs#happy holidays#cocoa cookie#hot cocoa#winter#christmas memes#it’s me#funny humor#humor#meme humor#dark humor
1K notes
·
View notes
Text
DC X DP prompt
A savage winter
The JL attempted to summon the ghost king Pariah Dark. Yet when the summoning happened instead of the Tyrant a different being appeared in front of them.
His dark skin skin was covered with tattoos of constellations. In the middle of his chest was an eight pointed star. He wore a red and blue furred cape and a furred skirt over his pants.
Standing above the entire JL was a savage looking spirit with long braided white hair. An Aurora borealis danced around him, images of various animals appearing in and out of it.
Looking down at the ensemble of heroes, the spirit asked, "Who has summoned me, the embodiment of the Winter Sky,"
#dc x dp#dp x dc#dp x dc crossover#danny phantom#Danny is Frostbite's ghost son#Danny inherited Jack's height and muscles#Savage/Barbarian Danny#Dani and Jazz braid Danny's hair#Danny is a winter spirit#Danny and Gaia/Nother Nature have tea together#Clockwork introduced them
2K notes
·
View notes
Photo
Ghost by Gloomy Grove on Instagram
506 notes
·
View notes
Text
Rotten
#nature#naturecore#witchyvibes#rural#lost places#gothic#forest#forest spirit#swamp witch#goblincore#animal skull#dog skull#skull#nature aesthetic#mossy woods#witchcore#winter forest#weirdcore#dark forest#forest stream#frost#freezing#nostalgia core#decaycore#forestcore#fantasy forest#forgotten places#almost nowhere#nature photography#photographers on tumblr
591 notes
·
View notes
Text
35 days until Christmas Eve is here 🕯️🎄
#christmas#christmas spirit#nordic#christmas time#jolly#merry christmas#christmas eve#christmas tree#christmas decorations#christmas present#christmas decoration#christmas gift#christmas lights#candle#cozy aesthetic#decorations#december#christmas countdown#days until christmas#nature#christmas love#love#winter morning#winter#winter wonderland#xmas 2023#merry xmas#snow man#santa claus is comin' to town#christmas season
421 notes
·
View notes
Text
Winter Spirits - Ash
(aka a Drabble series about spending winter with the ROs)
・ ⋆ ・ ⠄⠂⋆ ・ ⠄⠂⋆ ・ ⠄⠂⋆ ・ ⠄⠂⋆ ・ ⠄⠂⋆ ・ ⋆ ・ ⠄⠂⋆ ・
Cold bites into your fingers, crystals of ice melting with the heat of your skin. You really should have worn gloves but you were only out for a walk with Ash when they spotted a patch of snow not yet melted from the unseasonably warm weather. Too warm for a white Christmas but frigid enough to seep through your winter coat.
You ball the hard packed snow in your hand, making a lumpy head for the tiny snowman Ash has built. It’s barely a foot tall and leaning dangerously to one side with little granite pebbles for buttons and crooked stick-arms. Ash had even managed to find two clumps of mica for the eyes that shine when you stick them to the head.
They’re telling you about the properties of the mineral, their own eyes shining, when a dog breaks free of its owner's hold and barrels off the path, bulldozing the snowman between you. It jumps at Ash with its tail wagging excitedly and tries to lap at their face. The owner rushes over, apologies spilling out, but Ash just turns to you and laughs bright enough that you feel warm despite the chill of the day. After ensuring the owner that it was no trouble, you both head back to the path, Ash’s hand clasped in yours, icy fingers tangled together.
#winter spirits#ch: ash#drabble#I��m writing on my phone so apologies for an grammar/spelling/format problems#gonna try to post each day til new years
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
I am READY for SUMMER you guys
#dragon age#da:d#da:4#solas#fen'harel#dread wolf#it's actually coming in to winter where I live but I'm at the beach in Spirit#i literally cannot express how excited I am counting down the days until SGF I've never been so hyped for a relase#dragon age fanart#dragon age summer#dreadwolf summer#dreadwolf
868 notes
·
View notes
Text
#christmas#christmas tree#Christmas Cookies#christmas eve#Christmas countdown#christmas lights#Merry Christmas#christmas time#christmas spirit#white christmas#christmas morning#christmas is coming#christmas chocolate#days until christmas#can't wait for christmas#xmas#xmas time#santa#santa claus#Dear Santa#winter#cold#warm#cuddle#presents#snow#snowflakes#cosy#cozy
876 notes
·
View notes
Text
creds to meme lord @gothscientist
#band of brothers#easy company#hbo war#george luz#eugene roe#joseph liebgott#david webster#richard winters#lewis nixon#ronald speirs#carwood lipton#joe toye#bill guarnere#floyd talbert#babe heffron#so many other ppl but im lazy#they’re tagged in spirit don’t worry
466 notes
·
View notes
Text
ㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤ🫙 𓈒ིུ ✿͟❀͟ ᰯ20͟0͟7♱ ⎯⎯ Atonement ◌࣪𓇻🗡️࿔
with tears in my eyes,
I begged you to stay.
You said, "Hey, man, I love you,
but no fucking way"
creds x all notes/alt key
hi so every image to the very right of each row of images (starting from the top and work ur way down) has one part of the total 4 parts of the story I wrote to correlate with this moodboard, bc i felt like it idk. Read it if you want, but just know there's an implied trigger warning and I'm not even close to a professional writer so don't go after me. Thank you, Happy Reading!!
- all credits for this moodboard are in the alt text of the divider!
inspo for this style of moodboard and inspo for the symbol layout here goes to @/miumiudaga @/nicodefresas and others!
*lots of notes for this moodboard because I spent so much damn effort here but 😭😭
#ˁ ꤦ ꤦ ᪲ˀ Pretty dead ━╋#re; collections#oh my dear winter#full of endless sorrow and mournful melancoly . . .#put the book back on its shelf and let the restless spirits to lay in their turmoil#kpop moodboard#kpop gg#kpop#kpop icons#aesthetic moodboard#kpop layouts#kpop messy moodboard#kpop gg moodboard#cute moodboard#messy moodboard#vintage moodboard#vintage aesthetic#vintage icons#green moodboard#grunge messy moodboard#grunge moodboard#dreamcore moodboard#dark moodboard#aespa winter moodboard#winter messy icons#winter messy layouts#soft moodboard#pretty moodboard#alternative moodboard#kpop locs
513 notes
·
View notes
Text
The Wild Hunt - AnatoFinnstark
#The Wild Hunt#AnatoFinnstark#winter#Norse#myths#Odin#spirits#clouds#northern lights#fantasy art#digital art
1K notes
·
View notes
Text
František Kobliha (1877–1962) - Balada zimní (Winter Ballad), c. 1940
#františek kobliha#balada zimní#winter ballad#symbolism#horror art#dark art#gothic#ghosts#spirits#illustration#art#etching#lithograph
172 notes
·
View notes