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Saturday 29 May 2010

Pan's Labyrinth

This movie is told with the air of a classic fairy tale, not the watered down versions we give our children today but the real ones with fangs and claws. There is an atmosphere of danger and suspense that constantly surrounds the girl, Ophelia and in response to that there is a persistent arousal of hope, or fantasy. Ophelia's environment is not ideal. She is in some camp under the jurisdiction of a heartless man who has married her mother and who only cares about producing an heir. Everything around her is militaristic and hard and cold, and yet she continuously bumps into this other world of wonder and mystery, of fairies and fauns and the like. It's like the metaphor of the flower that grows out of concrete. finding the extraordinary in the ordinary.
It's debatable whether she is actually interacting with this other world and that it exists, or if she's creating this world to escape her less than ideal reality. I suppose your answer would come from what kind of person you are and how you perceive the world. I enjoy the experience of believing it is real with a constant skeptic in the back of my mind nay saying everything the believer says, so I guess my view would change depending on what day you chanced upon asking me. The bottom line is that story is very well put together and whether or not you believe the world the girl is interacting with to be real, you'll enjoy it either way.



Here's the film's website http://www.panslabyrinth.com/

Thursday 27 May 2010

Josephine Wall

I'm pretty sure many people may be able to recognize Wall without actually knowing who she is. I've seen her work on various websites, on cards in various stores, etc. So there's a good chance that people who aren't usually into fantasy art have already seen something.

This is one I see most often



here are some others



Those are only a few examples but you can check out her website http://www.josephinewall.co.uk/art_gallery.html

Fairy Dust

Want your own fairy dust to apply at will? Well lucky for you efairies.com has a few products that might spark your interest.



http://www.efairies.com/clothing_costumes_fairydust.htm

For the younger girl in your life http://store.fairydust.com/glitter.html might be a better bet as it's packaged in a more youthful way.

And for those who want a DIY version http://www.educatall.com/page/250/Fairy-Dust.html has a reasonably cost-effective recipe.

Wednesday 26 May 2010

The Blue Girl by Charles De Lint

This was a really good book. I picked it up on a whim having heard good things about it, and it lived up to its expectations. I was kind of hesitant to get into it because it's about some street tough girl who has a run in with faeries, and I suppose there is a huge potential for this story line to destroy itself with cheesiness. But I was pleasantly surprised at how well it was put together.

Imogene's a bitingly clever, strong, mature heroine. The book starts with her family moving to a new town and her attending a new school. She was with a rough crowd in her old town and was raised by hippie parents who gave her space to live her life, so as a result she's seen enough of the world to be comfortable with who she is when we meet her and has a kind of inner calm, not getting too caught up with the appearance of things, like social status. So she befriends a solitary girl named Maxine.

I really enjoyed the beginning of the book, it was full of adventurous energy and I wouldn't have minded if it continued on without any supernatural interference. But she meets a ghost who unintentionally brings her to the attention of some unfriendly faeries. Even though faeries are introduced to the story, the mood doesn't go all whimsical and light-spirited. This is a great dark faerie tale for teens.

Imogene tackles all of her problems by herself, which I found refreshing. She didn't go running to her boyfriend or family or friends for help, though she recognizes that they are there for her and her friends don't let her go into trouble by herself, she doesn't cling to them and finds strength within herself. I've read many stories trying to achieve this character or this mood and they always fall short of success. This is one of the few teen books I would recommend to someone without commenting on what I found unsuccessful about it. It was just really well written. I recommend.



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Wicked Lovely by Melissa Marr

This story ran pretty smoothly and wasn't at all a difficult read. It's about a shy girl who can see fairies but is told by her grandmother to ignore them or face the consequences. Then one day the fairies start singling her out as if she were someone for them to take note of and one even comes to her school to try to get closer to her. She decides to confront them and finds out that she's been selected as a candidate to break a curse.

She has a guy that she likes, Seth, and a romance develops between the two. Though I liked the character of Seth (he seemed like a really easy going guy, with lots of peircings) I found his immediate acceptance of the situation to be somewhat unbelievable. If there had been more hesitation at what she was saying in the beginning and then the unquestioning faith I think it would've been more believable, but the relationship between the two was a good one. He was a steady guy and was always very supportive of her. A healthy, 'modern' relationship that's good for teens to expose themselves to.

The story in itself had the feel of a faery tale... meaning a tale about faeries. It was almost reminiscent of Melling's Fairy Chronicles in the way in which the two went about trying to protect themselves for the fae. The story had life and emotion, overall a decent read.

Tuesday 25 May 2010

Wendy Froud

Wendy Froud is an artist who focuses on making dolls and puppets. Her most well known piece would probably be Yoda from The Empire Strikes Back, but she has also done work in the films Dark Crystal and Labyrinth.

A few books of hers are A Midsummer's Night Faery Tale, The Faeries of Spring Cottage, and The Winter Child

This is her profile on the Froud's website http://www.worldoffroud.com/www/about/bios/wendy.cfm

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Fae Magazine



http://www.faemagazine.com/

Monday 24 May 2010

Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries by W.Y Evans- Wentz

This book is a good source of fairy culture from Ireland, Britain, Scotland, Whales, Cornwall and the like. There are case studies as well as just general beliefs and stories. The author of this book is an anthropologist who went around the British Isles collecting fairy lore. He uses stories from the people he meets and later gets into different aspects of the fairy faith. This is a wonderful resource and a must read for all seriously obsessed with fairies.

Sunday 23 May 2010

Fairy Wedding

When people get married they usually pick a theme that shows up throughout the wedding. Some people pick colour combinations, some people pick locations, like a beach theme. And some people pick a faery theme. That's right folks, step right up for your own custom faery wedding. We're talking dresses, wings, wands, and dust. Enjoy!

http://www.fairyfashion.de/frame.html

http://www.favorideas.com/wedding-themes/seasonal-themes/midsummer-nights-dream-favor-ideas/

The Green Fairy

Absinthe is one of the most notorious alcoholic beverages of all time and as many people are aware, it also goes by the name of the green fairy. This fairy is a metaphor for the artistic inspiration one supposedly has after drinking absinthe. Here's a decent history of it http://absinthe.msjekyll.com/ wikipedia is also an option, but it's good to check out a variety of sources in wikipedia's case, just to be on the safe side http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absinthe.

Essentially absinthe was drunk in the late 1800's by artists and poets to release their inner muse, the green fairy. This site discusses this in greater detail http://www.absinthefever.com/green-fairy . Many popular artists drank absinthe back in the day, people like Picasso, Oscar Wilde, Monet, ...







There have been a few modern pop culture references to the green fairy also. There's a scene in both the films Moulin Rouge and Eurotrip. Even the Disney version of tinkerbell is suggested by some to be a version of the green fairy.

This is a little visual history of it





Saturday 22 May 2010

Child of Faerie, Child of Earth by Jane Yolen

This is a great book, both to read out loud and to read to yourself. I found this a couple of years ago and I loved it instantly. It's a simple story about a girl who meets a faerie buy and goes off to faerie land with him. In return she shows him what her life is like on earth. In the end the come to the conclusion that they are better off in their own worlds, but part with a gift. They don't part forever and remain friends until they're both old and grey, but no one ends up getting spirited away.

This book is wonderful. The illustrations are energetic and colourful, but soft and whimsical at the same time. The best part though it always the way in which the story is told, and Yolen presents this story in poem form. Here's an example;

He was a child of faerie folk,

A child of sky and air,

And she was a child of humankind,

Of earth and toil and care.

They met in the dusk of Hallow's Eve,

When widows grieve

In widow's weave

They met in the dark of Hallow's Eve,

She had flowers in her hair.

It's almost lyrical way it's told both sets the mood of the story and makes it very easy to read. It's also great because it's one of the few faerie stories for children that features a male faerie. Most of the faeries in children's books are female and this opens up faerie love to young boys too. And the fact that Jane Yolen is the author doesn't hurt!



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The Stolen Child by William Butler Yeats

WHERE dips the rocky highland

Of Sleuth Wood in the lake,
There lies a leafy island
Where flapping herons wake
The drowsy water rats;
There we've hid our faery vats,
Full of berrys
And of reddest stolen cherries.
Come away, O human child!
To the waters and the wild
With a faery, hand in hand,
For the world's more full of weeping than you can understand.

Where the wave of moonlight glosses
The dim gray sands with light,
Far off by furthest Rosses
We foot it all the night,
Weaving olden dances
Mingling hands and mingling glances
Till the moon has taken flight;
To and fro we leap
And chase the frothy bubbles,
While the world is full of troubles
And anxious in its sleep.
Come away, O human child!
To the waters and the wild
With a faery, hand in hand,
For the world's more full of weeping than you can understand.

Where the wandering water gushes
From the hills above Glen-Car,
In pools among the rushes
That scarce could bathe a star,
We seek for slumbering trout
And whispering in their ears
Give them unquiet dreams;
Leaning softly out
From ferns that drop their tears
Over the young streams.
Come away, O human child!
To the waters and the wild
With a faery, hand in hand,
For the world's more full of weeping than you can understand.

Away with us he's going,
The solemn-eyed:
He'll hear no more the lowing
Of the calves on the warm hillside
Or the kettle on the hob
Sing peace into his breast,
Or see the brown mice bob
Round and round the oatmeal chest.
For he comes, the human child,
To the waters and the wild
With a faery, hand in hand,
For the world's more full of weeping than he can understand.

Thursday 20 May 2010

Sky Dancers

Sky Dancers were toys popular in the 90's that were eventually recalled because of the injuries they were causing. The toy consisted of a doll with foam wings for arms that, when you pulled a string on the base it was mounted on, would fly up into the air. It was a cool concept and I remember liking it when I was a kid, but I guess the recall was a reasonable action.

Wednesday 19 May 2010

The Sea Prince and the Fire Child

I love faeries, and anime, and this is the perfect combination of both. Alright, there are definitely some flaws in the movie. The colours are kind of faded, the bad guy is cheesy, and as is typical of 80 cartoons the girl just whines instead of doing something, among other things. My mind was telling me this as I was watching... but a stronger voice drowned that one out and was wishing I'd seen this movie when I was five years old. I would have loved it then. I still appreciate it now, but there's something about a child's perception that makes magic come alive and this story is full of magic.
It's about the son of the sea king and the daughter of the fire queen. As legend has it, the king and queen are siblings and were very close and always together. The wind saw this, became jealous of their happiness and told lies to each of them making them distrust the other. They quarrelled and the fire queen went to live in the sky and the sea god the sea, and the wind was banished to the depths of the sea and his eye was removed. One day the prince of the sea goes to a forbidden place and sees the fire child watching over the eternal flame. He comes back the next day and they fall in love, and from there they try to find a way to make their impossible love work.

One of the things I love about anime is that it's not disnified. What I mean by that is that a romanticized ideal is achieved, but not without cost. There isn't a false message that you can have your cake and eat it too. You should strive to achieve your desires, but you have to know that there may be a price to pay. This isn't ominous by any means, don't take it the wrong way, the movie isn't sinister and won't worry a child. The moral isn't that bad will always come from getting something you want, but more that sometimes you have to choose between two things you might like and if you choose one you might mourn the loss of the other, even though the choice you made was the best one and is what will make you the happiest. This isn't always the message in main stream films. Most of the time the idea expressed is that you go through a tough phase, but then by making the right choices all goes well in your life, happily ever after, without regret or pain or thoughts of what if. The story end with the idea that the couple will always be happy in their paradise, but in real life situations life isn't so black and white, and it's refreshing to see films reflect this every now and again, especially films for children.

The fire people are all faeries, and all except for the fire queen have a sprite-like appearance. The prince is human looking, but very lanky, and all of his subjects are fish (so both boys and girls will watch). It was a great film full of fantasy, adventure, whimsy, and romance. Also animated by Sanrio but not necessarily faerie related are the films ringing bell and the legend of unico. Both are good to look out for.









the trailer is in Japanese, as the movie originated from Japan, but there is a dubbed version (on youtube at the moment, but i didn't say that) that will be easier to watch for the average North American.

Tuesday 18 May 2010

The Derbyshire Fairy

Fairy corpse found! ... or not according to hoax-slayer.com, but in either case it's an interesting tidbit



The article is on this site - http://www.hoax-slayer.com/derbyshire-fairy-hoax.shtml

The Secret of Roan Inish

I was fortunate to have seen this movie young. This is an extraordinary movie about a young girl who goes looking for her baby brother who was taken away by the sea. Despite the fact that there is no actual magic that happens in the movie, this is one of the most magical movies I've seen.

The girl's name is Fiona and she goes to live with her grandparents for a while because her father is too busy with work to care for her. While with her grandparents she visits an island her family used to live on, also, the island where her younger brother was taken away by the sea. She snoops around the island and catches glimpses of a small boy she suspects to be her brother. as it turns out selkies have taken him away. So the girl, with the help of her cousin, begin to make the abandoned houses on the island habitable again so that they can move back, thereby getting the girl's brother back from the sea. This film is subtle, yet superbly effective in giving you that evanescent, magical feeling. The use of storytelling is capitalized upon as the primary means of introducing the girl to stories of selkies and to the history of the island and the people on it. So many movies try to capture that evasive 'something else' but end up being fake and cheesy but this one makes the cut. The soundtrack is amazing as well. A great collection of celtic folk music.







Monday 17 May 2010

Cicely Mary Barker

Cicely Mary Barker (1895- 1973) is the creator of the famous flower fairies. Her work is almost like a fantastical flower taxonomy, as she draws a flower or plant of some sort and then creates a corresponding fairy to be a spiritual representative of sorts. I love flower fairies because of the art style, I don't know if it's Victorian or what, but it's old school and I like it. I also like the joy and motion the fairies display as they frolic among the flowers or the pensive serenity of those who are just sitting or standing.



the website is http://www.flowerfairies.com/

there are also several books out as well, a good one to look for would be The Complete Book of Flower Fairies, but not all of the fairies are in this book and the newer edition cropped some of the pictures. There is also the option of looking for the books that are just one category of flower fairy, like flower fairies of the spring or flower fairies of the summer, if you get all of those you'll have all the pictures, but if you want an overview the new edition isn't bad.

Sunday 16 May 2010

The Fairy Faith

I came across this film two years ago and purchased it on a whim as it was a documentary on faeries, two things I love. Well, more accurately, the film isn't about faeries themselves, but about the belief in faeries and the superstitions people hold and sacred places, etc.

The narrator takes the viewer around various places in Canada and the U.K., talking to people who believe and looking at locations of relevance. The film doesn't try to convince the audience of anything nor disprove anything. It attempts to achieve an unbiased perspective, taking in the opinions of those who believe and those who don't (mostly the believers though as we're looking at the belief, not a criticism of the belief). I think it successfully documents the fairy faith and does a good job of taking seriously subject matter which the majority of western society sees as nothing more than fantasy and idle past time. I would recommend this to everyone interested in fairies, and anyone with an open mind, because though it isn't asking for the viewer's belief it is asking for the viewer's acceptance of the belief.



the film's website -> http://www.thefairyfaith.com/





Saturday 15 May 2010

The Chronicles of Faerie by O.R. Melling

I believe I was in the 8th grade when I first read the Chronicles of Faerie, and I loved the entire series, and still do to this day. Melling is known for these books and they have been translated into many different languages, you can see which ones and the corresponding cover art on her website. The series written for young adults.

The books are not one single story cut up into four books, rather, each of the books feature different characters (minus the last two) and though the characters from previous books make a cameo here and there, each book can be a stand- alone novel. What ties the books together is the world that they share. The books take place chronologically, so by reading them in order the reader will get a better sense of the world they're stepping into. The first two books, The Hunter's Moon and The Summer King, are similar in plot. there are two girls (in Hunter's Moon they were cousins, in Summer King, sisters) and one of the two girls gets taken away from the other and brought to the faerie realm. The reader is left with the girl who is left behind and that girl undergoes a journey to attempt to get her friend back. The last two books in the series, The Light-Bearer's Daughter and The Book of Dreams, focus on only one girl named Dana and her unique bond with the faerie realm.

The series has always had a special place in my heart and I always remember it fondly. It was an exciting read full of magic and traditional celtic folklore and belief and just a tiny bit of romance, enough for a tomboyish fourteen year old not to get too squeamish when reading it. The faeries in this book aren't all sugar and cream either. These was some of the first books I read that had vicious faeries in it, where the faeries weren't good or bad necessarily, but could 'shed blood without blinking an eye' i think it says somewhere. It was a gateway into discovering that not all faeries are going to be flower fairies or friendly forest spirits, and that even the good faeries could be vicious. I like to think of it as true faerie nature, but that's just me.

anyway, it's a light yet memorable read and I recommend it if you haven't read it yet. the ordering is The Hunter's Moon, The Summer King, The Light-Bearer's Daughter, and The Book of Dreams. The book beneath called The Chronicles of Faerie has the first three books, as the fourth one hadn't been released yet, and then the fourth was released alone in the same format. there is one book with all four called The Golden Book of Faerie, but I think it's out of print.

here's her website, http://www.ormelling.com/index.html





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The Cottingley Faeries

Remember Brian Froud's Lady Cottington Series? well it was based off of this real life event. These two girls, the Cottingley sisters, staged the photographing of faeries.

http://www.cottingley.net/index.shtml

http://www.museumofhoaxes.com/hoax/photo_database/image/the_cottingley_fairies/

Darby O'Gill and the Little People

A classic faerie movie made in 1959. Darby O'Gill and the Little people is about an old man named Darby O'Gill and his attempts to outwit the leprechaun king into giving him three wishes. A young Sean Connery plays the part of a travelling man who comes to work in Darby 's place, as his landlord feels that Darby's getting too old to work. Connery starts falling for Darby's daughter Katie and their love carries on as a sort of side story. the high point of the film is when the banshee comes by one night for-telling Katie's death, and so Darby finds the leprechaun king to use his wish. an amazing, timeless film that captures the magic of leprechauns and the dynamic of a close knit town, as well as emphasize the power of story telling. a must watch.



here's a clip from the movie





Faerie Houses

Ever dream of having a faerie to come visit your backyard? well, faerie houses are the way to go. a faerie house is essentially a little house you can make, either out of natural materials like twigs or tree stumps or from old milk cartons or bird houses. after  you get your house, you can decorate it with different thing you find outside, like twigs, leaves, walnut halves, etc. and put a little something special inside to entice faeries to come visit, like sugar or dried cranberries or the like.

wikihow has a pretty straight forward 8 step guide to building your own faerie house. great for beginners. http://www.wikihow.com/Make-a-Fairy-House

there's also a series of children's books by Tracy Kane about fairy houses, great to get the kids involved.. or more involved than they already are.



this site is another good faq for beginners http://www.fairywoodland.com/page.php?Fairy___Fairy_House_FAQs&page=4 I'm not crazy about the majority of the examples of houses they have on the website, but the furniture and other accessories are cute.

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Wednesday 12 May 2010

Brian Froud

anyone who knows anything about fairy culture, and even some of those who don't, know of Brian Froud. he's famous for his fairy art, and for good reason. there's something very primal and organic, but at the same time, beautiful about his work. in addition to his art, he was also a part of the films dark crystal and labyrinth.

he has several books out, all of which i have.

Faeries, Good Faeries Bad Faeries, Goblins, Runes of Elf Land, Brian Froud's World of Faerie, Lady Cottington's Pressed Fairy Book, Lady Cottington's Fairy Album, Lady Cottington's Pressed Fairy letters, and so on.

my favourite of these would be the cottington books, not because the other books aren't just as wonderful, they are, but because the cottington books have more of a narrative. they follow the tale of a girl as she deals with these pesky fairies that follow her around... even though she keeps trying to squish them. it's sweet and funny and whimsical. Lady Cottington's Fairy Album is one of my favourite books, and was my very first Froud.



http://www.worldoffroud.com/index.html

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