A Very Personal Pearl…

Order of the Pearl, on vellum, gouache, gesso and gold leaf, and shell gold.

This particular scroll is dear to me for a number of reasons.

  • First and foremost, it is for my Laurel, Goodwife Michel Almond de Champagne. It is a turnabout that is rare for while she is a Laurel in A&S, she did not receive it in Atlantia. She has a similar award from the East, but she had done so much for Atlantia that all within our Pearls agreed this was due her.
  • Second, we share a love of Fleur de Lys (Lis)
  • I had been drooling over this particular exemplar for quite some time, when the only photos had been when it went up for auction and finally when it was placed on exhibit. Quite a wait indeed!
  • Fourth, I wanted to show what I’d learned (see the Pearl), stretch my wings (trying people for the first time).
  • Finally, I wanted it to the the exact same size as the exemplar, and to have the appearance that I had pulled two pages from within the Hours itself.

This was a scary challenge:of my first non-perg scroll, a concept of attempting exacting size replication, and a gift from my heart to Michel, for without her, my wings would have never taken flight.

A Viking’s Silver Osprey in Gold

Silver Osprey Reinterpretation

This was one of those scrolls that just manifested itself! The award is an Atlantian fighting award of two Osprey around a sword. I was told that the recipient had a Viking persona, and not much more beyond the reason for the award, garnered from the Herald’s report on the Book of Faces.

I have seen variations on these Viking birds for a while as reproduction pieces, jewelry, etc. These pieces are pulled from harness mounts recovered in a find from Gotland in Sweden and dated to about 600 n. Chr. They are now on exhibit in the Statens Historiska Museum in Stockholm, Sweden.) centered around a broad sword.

Errors are Period and Often Fixable…or not!

Putting out the page that shows the progression of Exemplars and unfinished Exemplars made me think about errors. everyone does them and I think that they happen more often than we care to admit. We fully can blame our Patron Demon, Titavillus, but despite our most concerted efforts, errors happen…misspelled words, missing words, ink or paint drips and splashes…but most can be fixed, amended or even pointed out with a “blatant” correction.

I would like to say here that some civilizations feel that nothing can be perfect except that which is made by their deity /divine beings. Examples abound in ceramic painting of plates, cups as well as weaving of rugs, etc. Even in religious texts, errors are often struck through, pointed at or circled rather than erased. Messy for sure, but also an indication that the scribe was merely human.

Sometimes you can correct the error with creative work. Here, I widened the single “L” to either side of the original, allowed the ink to dry, then gently scraped away the center to create the two “L”’s that were in her name. Letter height is approximately 4mm.

Here you will find many errors, including paw prints across sacred texts. At least mine wasn’t urine…..

Cat urine….

“An (sic) here’s another purrpetrator. The Historisches Archiv in Cologne, Germany houses a manuscript with an interesting history. According to the blog MedievalFragments, “a Deventer scribe, writing around 1420, found his manuscript ruined by a urine stain left there by a cat the night before. He was forced to leave the rest of the page empty, drew a picture of a cat and cursed the creature with the following words:”

Hic non defectus est, sed cattus minxit desuper nocte quadam. Confundatur pessimus cattus qui minxit super librum istum in nocte Daventrie, et consimiliter omnes alii propter illum. Et cavendum valde ne permittantur libri aperti per noctem ubi cattie venire possunt. Here is nothing missing, but a cat urinated on this during a certain night. Cursed be the pesty cat that urinated over this book during the night in Deventer and because of it many others [other cats] too. And beware well not to leave open books at night where cats can come. What I would sincerely love to know is whether, almost 600 years later, the urine smell has left the page. Cat owners, you’ll know what I mean.

Most every scroll will have an “oops”, and every scribe has made errors. If one were to tell you otherwise , it would be a blatant falsehood. The learning is in the sharing, knowing that even the best among us can – and do – make mistakes, and that they share the knowledge with up-and-coming scribes makes us all better. Errors suck, but they are not egregious…they’re just a part of the game.