Arwen Undomiel - Tumblr Posts - Page 2

1 year ago
My Arm Is More Or Less Fine Now, So I Will Probably Post More New Art, Rather Than Old (like This Arwen

My arm is more or less fine now, so I will probably post more new art, rather than old (like this Arwen from October). I will also, hopefully, finish my fic soon and start posting chapters :))

This one is a bit more stylised than others, but I still like it :))


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1 year ago

Thank you both so much đź’ś

@sotwk it's not as bad as my criminal minds portrait collection (about 80 drawing, I believe), but I'm getting to it!! Thank you for your support đź’ś

@firelightinferno I looked the original picture up and I concluded she is wearing the same dresses as in the Helm's Deep cut scene, however in the movie her hair was braided. I found a different picture with Aragorn, promotion material of some sort, and the dress seems to match up to the one in the movie and the hair to the one from my drawing. So no and yes haha. Same costume, just a photoshoot <3

My Arm Is More Or Less Fine Now, So I Will Probably Post More New Art, Rather Than Old (like This Arwen

My arm is more or less fine now, so I will probably post more new art, rather than old (like this Arwen from October). I will also, hopefully, finish my fic soon and start posting chapters :))

This one is a bit more stylised than others, but I still like it :))


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1 year ago
Arwen, 04.2024.

Arwen, 04.2024.

I dislike this piece with a burning passion. But I have no clue when I'll post next (I'll be quite busy this week), so I'm posting what I have.

Anyway, enjoy! I love you all and hope you have a good day.


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1 year ago
Arwen & Aragorn, 05.2024

Arwen & Aragorn, 05.2024

Hi and hello, I know I'm not very active (again, I'm working on my portfolio), so I'm feeding you with the scraps I have...

Anyway, I'm highly considering starting a side blog for podcasts (malevolent and tma) once I'm done with all this. Wish me luck guys đź©·


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1 year ago
Liv Tyler As Arwen And Viggo Mortensen As AragornTHE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE TWO TOWERS2002 | Dir. Peter
Liv Tyler As Arwen And Viggo Mortensen As AragornTHE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE TWO TOWERS2002 | Dir. Peter
Liv Tyler As Arwen And Viggo Mortensen As AragornTHE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE TWO TOWERS2002 | Dir. Peter
Liv Tyler As Arwen And Viggo Mortensen As AragornTHE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE TWO TOWERS2002 | Dir. Peter
Liv Tyler As Arwen And Viggo Mortensen As AragornTHE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE TWO TOWERS2002 | Dir. Peter
Liv Tyler As Arwen And Viggo Mortensen As AragornTHE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE TWO TOWERS2002 | Dir. Peter

Liv Tyler as Arwen and Viggo Mortensen as Aragorn THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE TWO TOWERS 2002 | dir. Peter Jackson


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I just wanna remind y'all real quick that it is only the post-War of Wrath half elves who got to choose mortality/immortality. The only (known) half elves at this time were Earendil, who became a star and possibly a Maia immediately after, Elwing, who would rather abandon her children to die than die herself, and Elrond and Elros.

There was no precedent for the choice. Of course they didn't have time to think it through and consult one another, Elwing and Earendil were completely separate from their children, who were separate from one another.

This also means that no other Half Elf would get the choice. Dior, Elured, Elurin and the potential children of Haleth and Caranthir (you can't tell me they weren't a thing) all did not choose. The grandchildren of Elros did not choose. No one but those four, and later Arwen, Elladan and Elrohir, Vardamir, Nolimon, Manwendil, Atanalcar and Tindomiel got the choice, and we don't even know if the last five actually did or were simply counted as mortal because of their father.


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See one of my favorite Rivendell headcanons is that even though it's a wonderful, peaceful sanctuary, pretty much everyone there could be incredibly dangerous if they wanted to be. Like, let's think about who lives in that valley.

Elrond Peredhel, resident healer and eldritch crime against nature, self-explanatory

Glorfindel, slayer of balrogs, self-explanatory

Erestor, probably Feanorian, definitely dangerous

Old Feanorian diehards, all of whom are probably looking for an excuse to commit morally justified violence

Old Gondolindrim/Iathrim, who, despite what they might tell you, are exactly as dangerous as the Feanorians

Garthaglir the Library Orc, who absolutely remembers how to use the giant battleaxe he keeps behind his desk

A strange, shadowy figure roaming the valley who I'm *sure* isn't Maglor Feanorian, but who is nonetheless a terrifying singer

Elladan and Elrohir, who have spent the last several centuries becoming nightmare fuel for Sauron's forces

Arwen, eldritch, bites

Bilbo Baggins, not to be underestimated, can defeat a grown man with nothing more than his scathingly polite commentary

Dunedain visitors, vaguely feral, highly trained

Aragorn, very feral, highly trained

Lindir, not actually dangerous, but if you upset him you are going to have problems with everyone else on this list

I actually really like the idea that a lot of the people who live in Rivendell are inherently kind of dangerous, because it means that they're actively choosing peace and kindness for themselves and I love that.


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1 year ago

Prompt: language | culture | beauty

One-shot for Day 2 of #lotrweek

There it was, that little shiver of delight that came whenever the new policy was missing a detail, or contained an error. King Elessar had asked him to review it, write a second draft - an improved trade manifesto to Dol Amroth. Faramir had spent days poring over the old one, deciphering the heavy legal language and comparing it to the King's hurried first draft.

His study was in a very quiet corner on the second floor of the Tower of Ecthelion - the very room, in fact, where Mithrandir had taught him as a child, struggling through lessons of geography and history while his mind wandered. The traditional Steward's rooms were just off the King's receiving hall and throne room, but Faramir had opted to use these only for ceremonial purposes. They brought back too many unpleasant memories of his father. King Elessar had understood at once, and given his official blessing for Faramir to retreat to this hiding place to do his more thorough administrative work as Steward, when his business brought him to the White City.

The only noise in the room was the soft scrape of his quill against paper, interrupted periodically when Faramir dipped it into the ink. He already had a pile of scrolls, half unravelled and scattered across his desk, copies of letters from various Gondorian lords, and books spilling from cupboards and shelves, that he used for reference on his document. Yet - he read it again, just to be sure - there! An omission on a proposal that hadn't been resolved in the new policy.

Faramir stood up and stretched, going over to the window for a moment.

A shaft of sunlight streamed through, the sun almost at its peak in the bright blue sky. Good day for a hunt, Faramir thought, despite himself, and smiled. He'd take Éowyn out to the forest the moment this draft policy was finished, if this glorious weather persisted.

For now, though, he took his ring of keys from a hook on the back of the study door and set off for the archives.

They were like a sanctuary for him, even now, when the days of his youth were long past. He felt a sense of importance - the physical act of looking for a book, or a scroll, in the candlelit gloom and towering shelves and shadowy nooks of the Old Archives of Gondor, made him feel as though his work was not purely theoretical. Someone, sometime, had made the effort to document all this information; spent lifetimes working on the lives of the people of Gondor, recounting everything from laws (made or broken) to land boundaries from hundreds of years ago. It was hard, sometimes, to imagine anyone other than his father - or now, King Elessar - presiding in the throne room, throwing feasts in the Merethrond, holding counsel and court alike in the Great Hall, despite generations of kings doing so previously. In the archives however, Faramir got a true sense that people had lived here long before his time; meticulous records of their actions, hundreds of years old, crowded these narrow, dimly-lit halls. The evidence of the truth of all the old legends lived here.

It was incredible.

Faramir held up the flaming torch closer to the bit of paper he’d scribbled the location of a potential source on, to get a better look, and set off down the aisles. He stopped here and there to gaze longingly at some of the volumes, the dusty scrolls - one day he’d have the chance to read them, to discover their secrets. Now he was on a mission.

The sorting system of the Old Archives worked, more or less, but it was very complicated and hopelessly outdated. The first scroll he had in mind was nowhere to be found, at least on the shelf it was supposed to be, according to the archive guide (whose author, long-dead, had had the worst handwriting Faramir had ever seen). The second source was a book of figures with over a thousand pages - even the newly-minted Steward, with all his love of books and hopes and dreams for the archives, recoiled from that.

Finally, Faramir stopped by a cupboard of scrolls with a layer of dust an inch thick on the top. He sneezed about seven times before he finally found the one he was looking for amongst a mess of others, and the result was worth his watering eyes. It was labelled Land laws of Lamedon, dating back about a few hundred years. With their close ties to the princedom of Dol Amroth - it was perfect.

A quick glance showed Faramir that it was written in some form of elvish - only a minor setback. Due to his noble upbringing, he could read Tengwar runes without much difficulty, and translation of official documents into Sindarin had still been mandatory until the time of his grandfather Ecthelion despite the language not being spoken as frequently. Mithrandir had been very thorough in teaching Faramir these elvish languages, though he was not quite fluent.

However, upon closer inspection, Faramir realised to some consternation that the scroll was written in a form of elvish he did not understand. He made a halfhearted attempt to find some of his old rune charts, but some of the characters he was certain he’d never seen before.

Faramir thought about it. He couldn’t simply leave his policy as it was - Prince Imrahil would be sure to spot the omission even if it was minor enough for King Elessar to let it slide. Imrahil was a decent man, a great soldier, but would not stand for loopholes in trade agreements if it showed Dol Amroth in a bad light. After the war he was trying his utmost to secure the future of his princedom for his sons, which was why he had called in a few favours to get this policy settled so soon.

Faramir rummaged about some more trying to find a different scroll - or at least a translation into something he could work with. This stirred up even more dust, which caused him to sneeze so violently he banged his head on the top of the cupboard and had to sit back and swear quietly to himself for a bit before starting again.

It was all in vain. This scroll, in a language he did not understand, was his best - and only - option.

Then something fell into place, and Faramir hopped up from his position on the dusty archive floor, laughing out loud. Why had he not thought of this before? He put the scroll into one of the protective cases that were available at the warden’s desk, and set off to find Queen Arwen.

Faramir found the queen in her audience chamber - a large, spacious room lined with curtains of soft white silk that fluttered in the gentle breeze, blowing in from the courtyard outside, and large, comfortable chairs. Queen Arwen was sitting in one of these, listening to a young lady pouring her heart out. Lingering in the open doorway, Faramir recognised the young lady as Meluieth, newly married to Elphir, son of Prince Imrahil - perhaps she could also provide some feedback on his policy, if she had the time. The queen spotted him in her peripheral vision and gestured for him to come in.

“I understand your concerns,” she was saying, gravely. “However, I would advise you to be more open about them. Share your grievances with your husband. It is likely he does not realise your anxiety.”

“Oh, I know you’re right,” Meluieth sighed. “It’s just so hard.”

Arwen looked into the young lady’s eyes - Faramir knew how daunting that was, having been on the receiving end a few times. His queen’s eyes were like nothing of this world - depthless grey, like crystal. However, Lady Meluieth squared her shoulders in a show of real determination as Arwen spoke.

“I can see the strength you possess, even if you cannot,” she said. “Coming to me was the first step - that alone took courage. I’m glad we had our talk now, instead of in twenty years when change would be a thousand times more difficult.”

Meluieth hopped up, and dropped a deep curtsey, finally smiling. “I’ll talk to my lord tonight. Thank you, your Grace. Good afternoon, my lord Steward,” she added, hurrying from the room before Faramir could stop her.

“What was that about?” Faramir asked, curious.

Arwen tilted her head slightly. “I don’t want to break her confidence. Suffice it to say, when Princess Lothíriel leaves for Rohan, Meluieth will be the first lady of Dol Amroth and she is feeling rather nervous about it. In her own words, her mother raised her to run a household, not a whole city, and certainly not both at once. What can I help you with, mellon-nîn?”

“I need your help with a translation, your Grace,” Faramir said, bringing over the scroll. Arwen unravelled it on her lap as Faramir took the chair Meluieth had just vacated.

“This is for the new trade agreement, is it not?” Arwen asked, running her fingers over the lines of elegant script and smiling slightly.

Faramir nodded. “What language is it, and why on Earth was it used to write out a list of land laws from Lamedon, of all places?”

“It is a form of Noldorin, one that I have not seen in a long time,” Arwen said absently, engrossed in the text. “And any reason I can think of for this particular translation is only speculation. Perhaps a party of elves was passing through the area, and stayed with the Lord of Lamedon for a time; or perhaps some scholar translated a few random documents to improve his limited knowledge of the language. The latter is probably more correct, as there are some grammatical errors.”

Faramir’s face fell. “Then I probably can’t count on its accuracy in my policy draft.”

Arwen nodded, sympathetically, though she smiled. “No matter how much you love the Old Archives, Lord Faramir, perhaps it would be best to write to Lord Amarthon and ask for the current land agreements between Lamedon and Dol Amroth - or at least their own historical records.”

The Steward of Gondor looked wistfully at the scroll, one last time, before rolling it back up and putting it back into the case. “I probably ought to have done that to begin with, your Grace. Thank you for your help. One of these days I will sort out the Old Archives properly.”

“The whole archive, by yourself?” Arwen’s lips twitched with amusement. “That would be a fierce undertaking indeed.”

Faramir laughed. “With the help of as many scholars as I can find, naturally.”

“And your queen, as resident identifier of strange languages,” Arwen inclined her head. “Now go, my lord Steward, and hurry back to your draft before a storm breaks out over the forests of Ithilien, and the Lady Éowyn brings forth her wrath upon your desk for keeping you away from her for too long.”

Faramir laughed again, bowed, and hurried. He had a letter to write, and sunshine to enjoy, - the war was over. Life had meaning once more.


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1 year ago

I wonder how long it took them to find CelebrĂ­an.

So either she went by herself, which is implied, or Elrond sent a few guards with her, or she travelled with some of Galadriel's people that came over specifically to escort her to LothlĂłrien. Was the trip planned in advance? Was it a regular thing, that she went to LothlĂłrien once every few years to see her parents? Did she take Arwen or the twins with her occasionally? Obviously not this time, otherwise they would have been "waylaid" too. If anyone else was with her they would have been killed, no doubt, and the only reason CelebrĂ­an herself survived her "poisoned wound" and whatever else the orcs did to her was because of whatever high-elf ancestry light-of-the-two-trees Daughter of Galadriel inner powers she had going on.

So it took the Fellowship approximately two months to get to LothlĂłrien from Rivendell, but that's accounting for their massive detour through Moria. CelebrĂ­an took the Redhorn Pass (side headcanon: the Redhorn Pass became impassable only after this incident), and because she was an elf and (presumably) by herself we can knock off about a month, if she was on a horse.

So in the Appendices CelebrĂ­an is referred to as Daughter of Celeborn, not Daughter of Galadriel, which seems more likely given Galadriel's importance in the Lord of the Rings and the history of Middle-Earth in general. That leads me to assume that CelebrĂ­an took after her father way more than her mother - it's likely she couldn't mind speak to the same extent, perhaps she didn't even have the same level of Foresight.

Assuming she would have sent Elrond a letter the moment she was in LothlĂłrien, and Elrond was expecting this, it would have taken maybe a week or two or maybe another month more for Elrond to think something was wrong - maybe she was delayed somehow, by weather etc, maybe the letter was lost on the way, whatever. If her parents were expecting her, it would have taken them equally long to suspect something was wrong.

So then I'm guessing Elrond mind-spoke with Galadriel if he hadn't done so before to ask if CelebrĂ­an had arrived, maybe Galadriel saw something in her mirror and alerted Elrond the same way, whatever. Then finally, after about two months to my reckoning - the 24 hours you wait to file a missing persons report converted to Elf conceptions of time - Elrond sent out the search parties.

(By the way, if her horse somehow survived and found its way back to Rivendell, it would have taken a similar time).

Anyway, if it took her approx. 3 weeks (3/4 of the way from Rivendell to LothlĂłrien) to get to the Redhorn Pass, it took the rescuers the same amount of time - less if they were in a hurry, but they also had to physically look for her. Then they had to bring her back to Rivendell, and I read somewhere (maybe a fanfic, don't quote me on this) that it was the twins that found her - traumatic enough, but imagine travelling home for a few weeks with your half-dead mother beside you on your horse.

Maybe the eagles helped. Idk.

In conclusion, I believe CelebrĂ­an was lying poisoned and half-dead from torture in a cave (presumably without food or water) for at least two or three months before she was found and taken back to Rivendell.

This whole scenario is based on the assumption that nobody saw the attack coming, which, unlikely as it seems, must have been the case as there is no way either Elrond or her parents would have let her travel (alone or otherwise) if this outcome was an option.

This is my Roman Empire.


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1 year ago
Long Live Elessar And Arwen, King And Queen Of Gondor
Long Live Elessar And Arwen, King And Queen Of Gondor

Long live Elessar and Arwen, King and Queen of Gondor


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1 year ago
I Would Rather Share One Lifetime With You Than Face All The Ages Of This World Alone

“I would rather share one lifetime with you than face all the ages of this world alone”


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1 year ago

i dont ship the 3 hunters as a polycule, but this is funny

I see things for the three hunters polycule sometimes where aragorn leaves to be with arwen. But what if arwen joins to be with aragorn? Anyway i just wanted to find a way to apply the 3 weed-smoking girlfriends to something i like.

I Dont Ship The 3 Hunters As A Polycule, But This Is Funny

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