Niche of Time
Well, for a start, this shall be the home for my Biographical Inventory of Books. After that, who knows?
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Kings and Wizards and Lizardy Beasts
Besides Teatime with Elf
and Bear, I made another slew of pictures from old drawings early (very
early: at first at 12:10 AM, and then after connectivity troubles, again at 3:30
AM) this morning. Here they are in alphabetical title order.
Druid Circle was
supposed to have them dancing around the stone on a green hill. That is so
divergent from my original concept I may try it again after a little tweaking.
Duel of Doom may
have started at an attempt at another Balrog fight, but with no room for the
demon’s lower half I opted for a snake’s body and an indoor setting.
Fingolfin was
inspired by my first reading of The Silmarillion: “But as the host of Fingolfin
marched into Mithrim the Sun rose flaming in the west; and Fingolfin unfurled
his blue and silver banners, and blew his horns, and flowers sprang beneath his
marching feet, and the ages of the stars ended.” I didn’t realize that, as an
Elf, he hadn’t been around long enough to have a white beard.
In the Barrow
shows a kingly grave-ghost arising in his tomb to protect it from a sudden marauding
beast. Perhaps vaguely inspired by the concept of Barrow-Wights in LOTR.
King’s Hoard was
inspired from the Tolkien poem of the same name. Not a complete match.
Queen of the Universe was
drawn to encourage my niece, sort of an idealized, heroic portrait. The winged cat symbolized
her favorite stuffed toy that had been stowed away out of her reach. The AI
program provided the slogan. Perhaps the latest of the drawings.
Sea Serpent Summon looks threatening, but the Wizard has actually called the beast to do his bidding. AI added the second staff.
An Elf, a Bear, Another Share
Just after midnight the free
ChatGPT became available, and I decided to implement a scheme that I had been
plotting all day. That was to produce an Elf & Bear picture from a
descriptive prompt alone, and to that end I had been honing the parameters of
such all day. Above you can see the result; here is the prompt I used. I
enclose in square brackets my only nitpicks.
“In a Hildebrandt Fantasy
painting style, a brown Bear (7 feet tall) and an Elf (3 feet tall) sit in red
overstuffed armchairs in a cozy drawing-room setting. The Bear looks cheerful
and the Elf a little bemused. The Bear wears a long red and white muffler
around his neck; the Elf has shoulder-length tousled black hair, [a longish
nose, only slightly pointed ears,] a blue tunic, and brown boots. The room has [a
burning fireplace,] bookshelves full of old books, and a side table laden with
a gleaming ham, a steaming pot of tea, and a heavily frosted cake. The Elf
holds a cup of tea, and the Bear holds a wooden mug of ale.”
The results were the closest
I’ve ever come to an adequate representation of the duo.
Out of curiosity, and to be
scrupulously fair, I ran the same prompt through Grok, which, though it gave me
many more variations to chose from, were all more or less in this sort of bland
style:
I grow ever closer and
closer to subscribing to ChatGPT, if only to stop having to wait up so late for
the free service.
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
A Certain Hallucinatory Tone
I was feeling so bad
yesterday I missed my regular Diary Entries; today I’m going to miss Tolkien
Tuesday as well, I’m afraid. Still not quite 100%, as they say; probably only
about 40. One thing that does not take up too much energy is AI Enhancements,
and here is the next batch.
Alien Scene
dates back to middle school. It is one of those kitchen-sink style drawings,
where I would begin any old how and just keep adding more details.
Dain Vs. Azog
is another attempt at a Middle-earth tableau.
Elf and Bear Again is
a correction of an earlier enhancement. Better, but when I said the Elf was
dressed all in blue, I should have mentioned brown boots. Tried an animation of
it, and he inexplicably grew a white beard. Taking the hat as a clue?
Wizard Fights Demon was
a very early attempt at illustrating the primal scene of Gandalf and the
Balrog. I should have specified 1) that it was in a cave on a bridge, 2) the
Balrog carried a broken sword, and 3) that he had wings, as per the picture I
had drawn showed and as I was certain of at the time.
Not much to say about Green
Dragon. Another one of the innumerable dragons I used to draw. It was in a
rather unusual perspective.
Grendel I
definitely drew in high school, probably about the time I drew Troll Hut. Not
period accurate.
Inkraven 2 has
those corrections I was talking about, though I must admit a three-footed raven
was a rather novel idea and seemed to work. No jokes about removing his ‘third
leg.’
Spither is
the result of not wanting to have the bother of drawing all eight legs of a
monster spider. I’ll include some interesting animations of it later.
The Shadow Waits was
drawn not as a particular illustration but more of an ominous ‘tone poem’ about
doom waiting in the falling dark.
Chat GPT keeps setting the
time for my sessions later and later into the night. I’m thinking of just
skipping a day and then seeing if it will reset to an earlier time. Ideally
about 8 PM. Or just breaking down and paying the $20 a month for expanded service.
Monday, March 2, 2026
Monkish Me
This one is based on an
actual photograph of me. In the original I am sitting at the kitchen table
piled with dishes and reading a magazine, perhaps Newsweek. You can still vaguely see the kitchen
cabinets in the background.
The House on the Cliff was
a very simple sketch.
A Dark
Lord on a Dark Throne, if not the Dark Lord. This was another
drawing from middle school; I did not have a very clear idea of Sauron at the
time. What I did have was a half-size spiral notebook that I would draw in. I
was surprised years later when Greg Hildebrandt produced a painting that was eerily
similar.
Eighty-Three
commemorates my first drawing of 1983; the calendar is a clue, and the date is
woven in runes into the tapestry om the table. How well the picture reproduces
the runes or the numbers is moot.
Melichus
illustrates another scene from The Face in the Frost. Prospero and Roger
Bacon peer in on the evil wizard as he’s learning a powerful spell to destroy
the world.
Orc Guard is
just that; I would often idly draw Orcs; since they were ugly and irregular it
didn’t quite matter how they turned out.
The Sword in the Stone is
self-explanatory.
But the jewel of the crop
has to be Troll Hut; a Troll and his Wolf wait to ambush the owner of
the hut. He looks very much like a Norse Troll, or even a Drauger. I include
the drawing to show all the original detail.
I meant to write more details, but I had a rough night and a pretty rough morning.
Sunday, March 1, 2026
Sunday Tour Through the Past
Fir Castle was
another early production of mine, made special at the time by using map colors
to shade it in. Next is The Old Fountain, an early exercise in layering.
Before that, most of my efforts were straight line-ups along the red margins of
the notebook paper. Inkraven looks pretty good, until you realize he has
three claws, a feature not in the original sketch. I'd probably make the potion red next time. Monastary expresses
the rain better than I ever could and elaborates the tiny stick figure I had
climbing the hill into a real character. Morg City was an early
expression of the capital of Forlan; the original was drawn in ink without a
smudge. I now have a more complex idea of it in my head. It features what
appears to be the King Vez Memorial Rollercoaster. Lastly is another shot at Elf
& Bear, from an admittedly rather sketchy sketch. A lesson on giving
explicit notes in your prompt; Bear was strangely (though perhaps not inexplicably)
interpreted as a polar bear, perhaps taking a hint from his muffler. The Elf
should be wearing all blue, and is oddly proportioned.
Maybe I should upgrade my
account to $20 a month. That would make corrections a more affordable endeavor
in terms of time; as it is, I’m lucky if I can do 6 or 7 images a night.

















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