Wednesday, May 31, 2017

Percolating on Poetry: inspiration & spark

This post is Part 2 of a series to augment the Author's Manifesto available for free download. Start with Part 1 here.

This and other inspirations of mine are gathered in the Spark Directory for you to explore.

Find more prophetic poetry in my Portents Directory.



In Part 1 of this series, I set aside poetry after a 5th grade assignment left me disenchanted. But then I encountered the idea of non-rhyming poetry in 7th grade, when a girl in my drama class shared a few of her poems with me.

Though I'd spent the past year salvaging dreams into half-finished short stories, I'd neither shared my writings with anyone nor attempted a poem since my first brush with critique two years prior. But my brazen 12-year-old classmate had discovered something liberating about poetry that I had yet to fathom - it didn't have to rhyme. She'd not only written poetry exempt from rhyme or meter, but she found it within herself to share those poems with me.


Check out this Author's Manifesto for more of my inspirations!


Infused with her disregard for the normative, I took up non-rhyming poetry myself. We bonded over our mutual creative expression, and formed a poetry club at our middle school. Eventually, eroded by the wanton ravages of pre-teen drama, the club fell apart, but my love for poetry had been resuscitated. With the burgeoning internet at my fingertips, I found new venues to share my poems as I progressed into my teens. I pasted them line-by-line into chatrooms, earning new friends and alienating others. I posted every poem I'd ever written on Poetry.com and eagerly awaited feedback.

Ironically, the poem that got the most attention was my very first poem, a rhyming cacophony of unclear messages. The website published a yearly anthology of selected poetry. Contributing poets went unpaid, but could buy the anthology at a discounted price. Angry they'd overlooked my non-rhyming works of genius to select my debacle in rhyme for the anthology, I signed off on the publication, but didn't buy a copy for myself. In retrospect, I'm a bit surprised my parents didn't order a copy, but the price was somewhat prohibitive and my poem was just one of hundreds. To this day, I'm not even sure what the anthology was called.

Still, the publication encouraged me to continue my poetic expression, and reopened rhyming as an arena for experimentation. With Dickinson and Shakespeare, my English classes imparted the concept of poetic meter, later enhanced by the scansion of ancient Roman poet Catullus in my Latin class.

As I began work on my Tales of the Known World saga, I found the rules of meter trite and rigid, and I discounted its usefulness for my own poems. When a friend introduced me to poetry slam, the live performance of poetry, I fell in love with the spellbinding rhythms behind the spoken words, but I failed to connect this organic pulse to the sterile metrical concepts I'd learned in school. Simultaneously, I was left in awe of true poets and rejected the structural bedrock of their prowess.


That's it for this post! Up Next: The onset of riddles in rhyme...

Download the Author's Manifesto here, or start your adventure below.






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Wednesday, May 24, 2017

How to Make Fantasy Maps in Photoshop: a cartography exclusive

This post is part of a series to augment The Worldbuilder's Handbook available for free download.

This and other world workshops are gathered in my Worldbuilding Directory for you to explore.

Find more map-making content in my Cartography Directory.



Hello, there! Thanks for your interest in my mapping techniques. My name is D.N.Frost, and I'm a fictional cartographer, fantasy author, and world-builder. I began creating digital fantasy maps for my Tales of the Known World saga, and after making over twenty maps for my first book, I started offering map commissions to fellow storytellers.

How exactly do I map a fictional world? Through tutorials on YouTube, hours of experimentation, detailed notes, and a lot of trial and error, I taught myself how to use Photoshop to create professional fantasy maps. To help you make your own publish-ready maps, please enjoy this collection of short mapping insights and step-by-step instructions.


Download How to Make Fantasy Maps in Photoshop:


This is an exclusive guide to creating your own fantasy maps. The how-to provides detailed step-by-step instructions for making maps in Photoshop, and it provides some great information on how to build a realistic world. If you are a world-builder looking to create a map yourself, this exclusive download will guide you through both the concepts and the technical processes of map-making in Photoshop.

This exclusive resource also links to a number of fantasy workshops and longer blog posts, so you can delve deep into your favorite cartography tips. I'm proud to offer you these instructions on creating professional-looking maps you can be proud to share, and I hope you use this resource to enhance your fantasy world.


That's it for this post! Check out the latest worldbuilding workshops for more.

For How to Make Fantasy Maps in Photoshop, enter your email above.






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Wednesday, May 17, 2017

My Great Awakening: inspiration & spark

This post is Part 2 of a series to augment the Author's Manifesto available for free download. Start with Part 1 here.

This and other inspirations of mine are gathered in the Spark Directory for you to explore.

Find more consciousness content in my Cosmic Directory.



In Part 1 of this series, I began my spiritual journey by asking the great questions about life. When I started paying attention to my own thoughts, a profound shift began to occur within me. If I was analyzing my own thoughts, then where was I? What was the "I" that was analyzing my thoughts?

In spiritual terminology, the awakening is when a person first recognizes that there's a difference between their stream of thoughts and the awareness that perceives those thoughts. If your awareness perceives something, that thing logically can't be your awareness. This core recognition forces the awareness away from identification with the mind, body, and physical world, freeing the self to be more real than ever before.


Check out this Author's Manifesto for more of my inspirations!


Though scientific questioning had brought me to this point, I began exploring different religious tenets to clarify my search for self-recognition. I found every religion laughably false when taken in entirety, but each faith seemed to reduce down to the same basic truths. Virtues like forgiveness, love, compassion, and kindness seemed universal.

I explored Hinduism, Wicca, and the mysticism of tarot cards, but what really caught me was Zen Buddhism. A close friend gave me a book called Hardcore Zen: Punk Rock, Monster Movies, and the Truth About Reality, by Brad Warner. This punk rocker became a Zen master after he moved to Japan to make monster movies. His sardonic voice fit right in with my inner rage against the machine and fanatic love of all things Japanese.

Through his book and others, I came to recognize myself as the awareness that perceives all other things. I even noticed that sometimes I would notice that I had noticed something - which meant that I am the awareness that is aware of its own focus and attention. From this realization, my consciousness expanded, and I began to experience life in a new way. I sought to lead others to similar shifts in their own perspectives, and interwove my Tales of the Known World saga with various expressions of this one simple insight.

My self-awareness brought with it a depth of understanding that cannot be expressed in words. There came a peace and serenity as I recognized the true nature of my self, and the trappings of the external world fell away. Smart/stupid, pretty/ugly, thin/fat, male/female - I saw through dualities as meaningless labels slapped across infinite being, and I came to know my true self as the indescribable beyond.


That's it for this post! Up Next: Sharing my discovery with others...

Download the Author's Manifesto here, or start your adventure below.






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Wednesday, May 10, 2017

My First Constructed Languages: inspiration & spark

This post is Part 2 of a series to augment the Author's Manifesto available for free download. Start with Part 1 here.

This and other inspirations of mine are gathered in the Spark Directory for you to explore.

Find more linguistic content in my Language Directory.



In Part 1 of this series, I discovered my love of language. While in high school, I began working on a number of writing collaborations with a friend. She had a sci-fi world envisioned where psychic plants had evolved to resemble the human form, and for the planet of Zenith, we developed a rudimentary language called Nithii. We cared primarily about the foreign squiggle for each letter of their alphabet, and we established some basic rules for how syllables combined - mostly to invent cool names for characters and deities in the plant pantheon.

Neighboring the temperate planet Zenith was the hellish Zyph, where a runaway greenhouse effect broiled the once habitable planet into a vaporizing oven. Long ago, humans had arrived to colonize Zyph, only to discover that an ecological disaster had occurred during their long journey through space. Their mistake and desperation to survive spurred them to colonize Zenith instead, and the prehistoric psychic plants of the time grew to mimic the bipedal forms of the alien humans. Peace would not last, and over the next few centuries, the Nithii forced the humans off their planet.


Check out this Author's Manifesto for more of my inspirations!


The humans returned to Zyph and tunneled underground, the only place where conditions were livable. They carved out huge warrens through the rock, but the surface temperatures were so dangerous that the humans endeavored some genetic manipulations. Akin to The Dragonriders of Pern, the human settlers crossed their DNA with tiny winged lizards that dwelt on the surface, to ensure their survival.

Though the humans could unrealistically morph between a dragon form and a human form, their language grew to reflect their reptilian modifications. Hissing, guttural sounds with weird spellings made common appearances in names of characters and places. Over time, I dissected the names into different pieces, ascribing meaning to each piece. The language Zyphyr was born.

Well before my Tales of the Known World saga, as my friend and I adventured in our sci-fi world, I invented a new race of beings from the planet Bluith, whose bodies were formed out of crystallized blue light. Though I never invented their language, I described it as a waterfall of consonants, a dizzying and unintelligible language without a single vowel.


That's it for this post! Up Next: Linguistics classes and new creations...

Download the Author's Manifesto here, or start your adventure below.






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Wednesday, May 3, 2017

An Artist After All: inspiration & spark

This post is part of a series to augment the Author's Manifesto available for free download.

This and other inspirations of mine are gathered in the Spark Directory for you to explore.

Find more original art content in my Artwork Gallery.



My whole life, I've always had an appreciation for art. I looked to artists with awe and respect, and I had great esteem for the friends I had who could draw or paint or sculpt. I always felt like artists were cooler than me, with their pretty finished pieces that could be absorbed and appreciated with a glance. I was the less-shiny wordsmith in the corner, sculpting poetry and chiseling away at my set of novels, knowing that every one of their pictures was worth a thousand of my words. In those days, at least in my own mind, I was very much not an artist.

And yet, I dappled in artistic pursuits. An oil pastel here, a chalk and charcoal there, and once an oil painting with speckled white gaps between colors. Nope, not an artist. But I still liked to work with my hands. I expressed my creativity with crafting, particularly textiles, creating latch-hooked yarn rugs from store bought kits. Over time, I started adding more crafts to my repertoire - making candles, braiding rag-rugs, learning to knit and locker-hook with fabric and with yarn. I created my own knitting patterns, designed my own rugs, and even adapted a few traditional rug-making techniques to work with craft yarn and canvas.


Check out this Author's Manifesto for more of my inspirations!


Then one day I heard about the zentangle, a detailed freeform doodle that looks good and does not require "real" artistic talent. I read an article, watched some YouTube videos, and started my own zentangles. The first few were clunky as I drew them, the concepts of the artform still hazy and my hand unsteady as I shoved an ultra-fine Sharpie across the page. But before long, my perspective on my own art had shifted completely. After a few bigger pieces and some glowing feedback from friends and strangers, I realized - I'd been an artist the whole time!

There is an art to making stuff, whatever the stuff. Craftsmanship in this world is ever being replaced by machined parts and assembly. Handmade goods are rare and expensive, well outside the price range of what most people would call reasonable. But I love the feel of string slipping through my fingers to become something manifest, a Zen-like peace in the repetitive motions. I use my crafting time to mull over the secrets of the universe, unraveling the mysteries of the human heart and concocting the greatest stories of my Tales of the Known World saga.

Whether ink and paper, fabric and rug canvas, or yarn and knitting needles, my art expresses a bit about who I am and what I love. But no matter the medium, to me, the greatest prize is the time required to complete each project. Each hour of making art is an hour of honest meditation, self-reflection, and relaxed enjoyment of the physical world. Art gives me time to integrate my life lessons, ground myself in who I really am, and process through all the twists and turns of my epic fantasy adventures. I might have discounted my art as a youth, but with a little Sharpie and a lot of open-minded consideration, I've become one of the artists I respect and esteem.


That's it for this post! Check out my latest inspirations for more.

Download the Author's Manifesto here, or start your adventure below.






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Monday, May 1, 2017

Portent XI of Broken: a riddle in rhyme

Portent XI of Broken: rejoin the caverns from the sky www.DNFrost.com/prophesy #TotKW A riddle in rhyme by D.N.Frost @DNFrost13 Part of a series.
In the novel Broken, there are 24 portents fortelling the events of the unfolding saga.

Start with Portent I here.

These and other riddles in rhyme are gathered in the Portents Directory for you to explore.

Enjoy!


To bitter end the forests clasp
Relent and heed the call
To wrest themselves from hollow grasp
Of hatred's bitter sprawl

In bonded fate their hearts arise
And under curse renowned
Release the long engendered ties
Of enmity unbound

With aid at last to foes reply
Their winged spears untold
Rejoin the caverns from the sky
To smite the curse of old.


Can you decode the future Tales of the Known World?

Share your interpretation!
Comment below with your take on this portent.


This portent tells of an ancient curse broken when a people come to the aid of their enemies. Who do you think released the long engendered ties of enmity unbound, and what foes share their bonded fate?



Download the Prophesy Appendix:

The merfolk culture is built on the prophetic Gift. Nearly all men produce a portent every twenty days, and they devote their lives to interpretation. For more about the role and inner workings of prophesy, check out the Prophesy Appendix above.



Alongside every prophesy is an attribution block. This block contains a byline giving the name of the person who said the prophesy, and a dateline giving the day the prophesy was first said. Here is the attribution for this portent:
Ranyik Rwahnna Rovikya V
2:2:4:7/5, III:IX
The portent attributed here has not yet been interpreted. It was said recently, and it will be repeated every twenty days until either it is correctly interpreted, or it comes to pass.


That's it for this post! Up Next: In exiled shadow voice invites...

For the Prophesy Appendix, enter your email above.






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