2,921 notes
Permalink
Reblog
night-shading:

sciencepoints:

Welcome to the new tumblr, everyone!

night-shading:

sciencepoints:

Welcome to the new tumblr, everyone!

11,599 notes
Permalink
Reblog

ccaptain-oats:

if you’re upset about the finale of your show this week, no matter which show it is, take comfort in the fact that anything that happened can’t possibly be as awful as Dan being Gossip Girl

image

(Source: saltfree)

683 notes
Permalink
Reblog

theroleplayarchive:

You don’t understand. If we RP together, I want you to wake me up at 5am with ideas. I want to lose sleep over the fact that they’ve broken up, I want the manips, I want the chatzys, I want the broken heart and the tears. I want all of that. Its part of the experience of falling in love with RP, and its why I started the whole thing in the first place.

#come rp with me and u’ll have it all

(Source: charlieofrps)

2 notes
Permalink
Reblog
helot:

4 camila

eu ia mandar um casting especial de modelos da victoria’s secret para um fashion show na sua casa, mas a cintia dicker tava ocupada aí eu tive que improvisar com essa colagem. insuportável n° 1, parabéns♡

helot:

4 camila

eu ia mandar um casting especial de modelos da victoria’s secret para um fashion show na sua casa, mas a cintia dicker tava ocupada aí eu tive que improvisar com essa colagem. insuportável n° 1, parabéns♡

5 notes
Permalink
Reblog

So this girl on my twitter was like ‘omg, what is this’ to the son of sobek cover so I decided to play nice and sent to her the link.

And after she finished reading she was like ‘omg can’t wait for the book’. Should I tell her now or 

72 notes
Permalink
Reblog
- Percy:I greek I confused need magik?
- Carter:That is the smartest thing you've said
- Carter:...
- Carter:Fcking idiot.
28 notes
Permalink
Reblog

katemoore:

C’MON ANNA

4,588 notes
Permalink
Reblog
— Developing your Characters and Making Them Interesting

referenceforwriters:

Recently I got a message about a person struggling on how to develop their characters, as they normally wrote about already created charactersalso about how to make them interesting and make the people reading your story actually want to continue reading it.

I’d say this is one of the main differences between fanfiction and original work. Writing fanfiction you already rely on the fact people know the charactershow they look (or are supposed to look), personalities, and backgrounds… unless you’re writing an AU.  There’s people that already like the characters and would (probably) be willing to read your story. Now, you focus on a good plot to interest them.

But then we are back on our original stories, our novels, anything we write. We have to create our characters from scratchinteresting characters that can fit and make our story flow. Because good characters can handle a poor plot, yet a good plot can’t handle poor characters. I guess this is all we do here, right? this is the bane of our existence as writers. 

Truth is, there’s no right way to write a story. And there’s no right way to develop a character! I tested this by asking you guys how you do to create and flesh out your characters. Every response was personal and different.

Sometimes it starts with the spark of an word, an archetype, a color, a trait, a flaw, a song lyric, a painting, someone you know in real lifethen you go from there.

Here are some basic steps on developing a character, yet, you can do it as you see fit:

  1. You start with the personality. Once that’s done it’s relatively easier to know how they look like. You sculpt and pick virtues and vices, flaws and qualitiesperfect characters are not interesting. When it comes to protagonists and antagonists, they’re neither 100% good nor 100% bad, because there is not fully good or bad people. Get what I’m saying? Round characters are the thing we’re going for. Take details from people in real life, if you want: funny habits, mannerisms, what makes people human
  2. Work on the appearance of your character. What’s their body type, their eye color, skin color, hair color, shape of their face/nose, if they have birthmarks or scars somewhere… 
  3. Pick a name as you see fit. This can be the first step depending on how you work. Is there a meaning behind it? does it show somehow their character’s personality? remember sometimes they are relevant to the setting/genre. 
  4. Flesh. ‘Em. Out. Think of hobbies and background. How’s the relationship with their family and friends, how they act around authority, what kinds of clothes they like to wear…
  5. Remember always: character development is an ongoing thing. You never “finish” developing your character, just like we, as people, don’t stay the same. 

That being said, be creative with it! Don’t imitate the way your favorite authors develop their characters- create your own way! your characters are all yours! Make playlists about songs that remind you of your characters, keep a journal for them- sky’s the limit.

Good links for you:

-Alex

406 notes
Permalink
Reblog
— Get To Know Your Characters

the-collisioncourse:

I’ve posted quite a few articles about characters, their goals and motivations. And we’ve looked at antagonists and protagonists, seen how they relate to one another and to plot. But I’d like to prime the idea pump with some questions geared toward making you think about your characters in ways you haven’t before.

You’ve probably read lists that help with character development, lists that catalog personality traits and careers and physical characteristics. I want to add to your options by simply asking questions, questions that should help uncover your characters’ hidden history and qualities.

This list goes less to the outer characteristics of a character and instead looks at him on the inside. So you won’t find questions about what he wears or where he shops or about the length of his hair. But you will find questions that’ll help you understand why he responds (or should respond) as he does.

Use the questions—and your answers—as a base for creating story situations and other characters that bring out the more colorful or emotional sides of your main characters.

If you want one character to get under the skin of another, to push his buttons again and again until that second character simply must explode in reaction, then you have to know that character even better than the first character does. You have to design the elements that set a character up to have his buttons pushed. You have to develop and use triggers that will make characters react to stimuli specifically designed to do just that.

Read More

11,739 notes
Permalink
Reblog

englandisenglandyet:

petrichoriousparalian:

gallifrackles:

marrymepizza:

charmslapped:

the world is over. this is it.

holy mother of innuendos

what is goING ON. OMFG. 

OH MY GOD

i have no words for this