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Lathan, Inspired by the King in Yellow


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#1 Frankthedm

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Posted 04 April 2005 - 05:05 AM

The skullmask is a heroquest skeleton skull. The cloth was made from some DataWipes {clothlike paper towels used for computer screen cleaning] and i added the kris dagger and a very gnarled wooden staff form a mageknight lizard shaman.
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#2 Nikmal

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Posted 04 April 2005 - 05:45 AM

Man this is cool! I am impressed with it that you have had such an original idea such as this and made it come to life so quickly!! I look forward to your next piece!
-jon

#3 Vikinglodge

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Posted 04 April 2005 - 06:08 AM

That is cool imagination at work. Intresting what a few pieces of stuff lying about can create. Very Cool ::):

#4 Niloc

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Posted 04 April 2005 - 10:28 AM

LOL ... wow, that's cool Frankthedm. What a neat idea ::D:
... your pal, Niloc
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#5 Niceman

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Posted 12 April 2005 - 06:02 AM

Very cool :) The one wing makes me think of Venger from the old D&D cartoon :P
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#6 Nikmal

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Posted 12 April 2005 - 03:46 PM

Very cool :) The one wing makes me think of Venger from the old D&D cartoon :P

Funny.. I thought of something like that too.. but I just could not remember vengers name for some reason... but none the less it still looks awesome!
-jon

#7 Errex

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Posted 12 April 2005 - 04:20 PM

Not familiar with the character. Who is this King in Yellow you mention?.

Looks like a good conversion here, though.

#8 Frankthedm

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Posted 24 August 2005 - 04:57 PM

The King in Yellow
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.


The King in Yellow by Robert W. Chambers is a 1895 collection of short horror stories loosely connected by their shared references to a fictional play of the same title. The significance of the color yellow is either from its use to indicate quarantine or from the feudal reservation of the color fauvel for those who were incapacitated by fear. Yellow also signified decadence and aestheticism at the turn of the 19th Century, as in the Yellow Book, a literary journal associated with Oscar Wilde and Aubrey Beardsley.

The stories are macabre in tone; the central characters are, more often than not, decadents and artists; Paris is the most frequent setting. The characters in the book who read the play The King in Yellow go mad or meet horrible dooms; as if to protect his own readers, Chambers quotes only the briefest passages of the play.

After H. P. Lovecraft read the book in 1926, he incorporated it into the Cthulhu Mythos through "The Whisperer in Darkness", one of the seminal Mythos stories. August Derleth further developed this connection and tied the King in Yellow to Hastur. In later Mythos materials, the King is an avatar of Hastur, so named from his appearance as a thin, floating man covered in tattered yellow robes.

The book is cited by some as influencing Lovecraft to create his own fictional dangerous texts like the Necronomicon, although it is now believed that Lovecraft did not actually read Chambers until 1927.

As to the play itself, there have been several attempts to write the full text of the play. Writers who have presented their own versions of it have included James Blish and Lin Carter. Karl Edward Wagner used it as a motif in his novella The River of Night's Dreaming.

More recently, Lawrence Watt-Evans adopted the name for a villainous character in a series of novels (The Lure of the Basilisk, The Seven Altars of Dusarra, The Sword of Bheleu, and The Book of Silence, collectively known as The Lords of Dus).

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#9 Jabberwocky

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Posted 24 August 2005 - 07:51 PM

Nice one!

A piece of art is never finished. It is simply abandoned. --Whizard Hlavaz

 

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#10 LordColdsteal

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Posted 26 August 2005 - 09:00 PM

Very interesting job
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#11 Frankthedm

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Posted 21 September 2005 - 12:56 AM

new photo, a bit more clear.

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http://img353.images...athanpic3um.jpg

"Life gives you lemons you make lemonade, Life gives you whales... whale burgers." -Cadaver





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