mechtild: (Default)
Mechtild's ([personal profile] mechtild) wrote2008-09-22 12:04 am

Happy Birthday, Bagginses: a manip and a poem by jan-u-wine.

~*~


Photobucket



To celebrate the birthdays of Frodo and Bilbo, this year’s mathom is a [rather silly] manip. Also presented are two poems by jan-u-wine, which are not silly at all. I am hoping her poems will dignify the manip, which is meant to be charming more than convincing. In it the illustrious cousins are wearing party crowns. Or, one could think of it as a portrait of the Halfling Prince and the, um, Halfling Regent.

Most of you will recognize the images used. Bilbo’s portrait comes from the LotR calendar made up of black-and-white photographic portraits by Pierre Vinet. Frodo's image comes from a colour portrait by Vinet, from the gorgeous series of publicity stills for FOTR of Frodo and Gandalf.

Making the manip was relatively easy. I cut out the image of Frodo, flipped it, bled out most of the colour, resized it, inserted it into place and tweaked all the parts. This meant trying to match the hues (since no black-and-white photograph is actually black-and-white), the focus and lighting. The same was done for the crown. The crown came from a site selling party favours. After I'd finished the crowns I positioned them on Bilbo and Frodo's heads, manipping in strands and wisps of hair to make the crowns sit better in their curls.


ETA: [livejournal.com profile] lily_the_hobbit asked below if I had a version without the crowns. In fact, I had deleted the png file with the moveable parts. Furthermore, I had done all the fine-tuning with hues and lighting after I had the crowns in place. But I thought I’d give it a go. So I cut the tops of Bilbo and Frodo’s hair out from their source pics, re-tweaked them, fit them onto the crowned version, then clone-brushed the residual crown images out. With a bit more tweaking, they looked good as new.

I hope they will do, Lily! The crownless versions are posted below the poems.



~*~









~ Bilbo and Frodo's Party Portrait: the full manip, reduced to 600 pixels wide:



Photobucket




For a larger version of this manip click HERE.
Be sure to click it open all the way, using the icon
hidden under the lower righ-hand corner.










~ A “close-up”: actually a head-and-shoulders crop of the full-sized image:



Photobucket










Jan-u-wine’s poems.


When I got the idea of making the manip for Bilbo and Frodo’s birthday, I was *hoping* that jan-u-wine might make a poem to go with a birthday manip. Happily, she made two.

To My Cousin, Upon His Birthday contains two poems, one written from young Frodo's point of view, the other from Bilbo's.

I hope you enjoy these exquisite mathoms as much as I do.





~*~







To My Cousin, Upon His Birth-day





To Bilbo:


It is our birth-day.

Ours

Like the hot,

tiny bright
eyes

of fire-works,
the word

ascends,
overwriting,
with soft hope

the shadowy
spaces that lie hidden

within.

If now,
I,

at last

truly belong
somewhere,

am twined to something,
someone,

why,
so is he.

It is a strange thing that a solitary
day,

an hour,
a minute,

took all that mattered to a child's heart
from me,

brown water closing over the heads of those
I loved.

Just as odd the chance, the solitary chance,
out of all time,

that we should share this day.


Within the sharing,
like a circle which has at last come full,
I have found myself again,

found a heart
by whose side my own
might find healing.

Rich brown

closes
over *my* head:

the beloved earth of the Hill.

At last,
I have found Home.

At last,
I have found

our

Birth-day.







To Frodo:


Decidedly,
I recall
the day the lad was born.

How should I not?

The news of it, of course,
found its way from Hall to Hill
some few days thereafter,

I wondered,
greatly, then,

that somehow I should not have known it,
upon the instant,

felt the tiny spark of his presence,
woven tight alongside my own.

Perhaps
I

did know it.

Perhaps it was the watchful
quiet

that fell upon my heart,
that day,


perhaps it was the small
happiness I felt

as the Sun touched the Hill
with the rose-gold fire

of her departure,

perhaps it fell like words
of Elvish making

from the Netted Stars themselves.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

He is
different,

this lad,

my lad,

sunny and yet shadowed,
as if

the world were a joyous
burden

to him,

as if he'd understood,
straight off,

that the pour'd music of
life

is rendered somehow
more

perfect
from the twining of the bitter
midst the sweet......

And it seems to me,
that he

hears them all,

all

the tumbling notes,
too high

(or low)
for fleshly ears to follow.

His heart
follows them,

knows them,
hears them,


answers
them.

I am glad you are here,
little cousin.

I am glad you are here,
upon the

occasion
of our

birth-day.





~*~




More of jan-u-wine's Middle-earth poetry may be found at here, at LOTR Scrapbook.








~ Bilbo and Frodo's Party Portrait *without* the crowns (600 pixels wide):


Photobucket



For a larger version of the “no crowns” manip click HERE.
Be sure to click it open all the way, using the icon
hidden under the lower righ-hand corner.








~ A full-sized head-and-shoulders crop of the “no crowns” version:


Photobucket








Related Tables of Links:



~ Frodo Art Travesty LJ entries: selected manips featuring notes on the artists, manipping techniques, and reflections or poems.


~ Album of all Frodo Art Travesties: a gallery of images only (be sure to click fully open).


~ LJ entries featuring poems by jan-u-wine.


[identity profile] julchen11.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 05:23 am (UTC)(link)
What a lovely manip and it isn't silly at all, sweetie. Kings of hearts I would say.

Jan's poems - oh dear... I read it more than once this morning ... the love for each other is so deep. Her words are overwhelming and simply made me cry.
Frodo needs Bilbo and Bilbo needs Frodo, I'm glad they both found their home.
I'll come back with a proper comment this evening, there's so much to think about ...

Love you both and hugs you tight,
Julchen

[identity profile] illyria-novia.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 10:25 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, the poem wrenches my heart, especially the part when Frodo juxtaposes the safety of Bag End to the loss of balance caused by the death of his parents. And I love how Bilbo, the songmaker, think of Frodo in terms of his ability to intricacies and depth of songs as a metaphor of life. Gorgeous!

And the manip! Hee...I agree with Julchen. Kings of the heart, indeed. :D Thank you for the both of you for this wondrous birthday post for our beloved Bagginses.
shirebound: (Default)

[personal profile] shirebound 2008-09-22 11:33 am (UTC)(link)
Silly is fun! And ohhh, what lovely poems.

I have found myself again,
found a heart
by whose side my own
might find healing.

[identity profile] juliebeth.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 12:10 pm (UTC)(link)
This post made me very happy, indeed. Thank you.

[identity profile] bagendbabe.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 12:18 pm (UTC)(link)
It is a lovely manip and is how they should look - happy and calm. Beautiful poems.

[identity profile] mechtild.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 02:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, "King of hearts" -- that's right on target, Julchen (*gets cupid's arrow to the breast - AGAIN*). Yes, these were a lovely pair - the characters, and the poems.

[identity profile] mechtild.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 02:18 pm (UTC)(link)
And I love how Bilbo, the songmaker, think of Frodo in terms of his ability to intricacies and depth of songs as a metaphor of life. Gorgeous!

I loved that, too. Whenever an LotR artist connects subtly to the theme of the creative music running under and through Tolkien's secondary world, it *gets* me. I hadn't thought, though, about how Bilbo himself is a songmaker. That makes it all the richer, Illyria. Thank you.

[identity profile] mechtild.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 02:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Ah, the healing of the heart. That is a sweet theme.

[identity profile] mews1945.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 02:19 pm (UTC)(link)
The manip is wonderful. It's so beautiful and it shows the love they feel for each other, and the humour of a pair of mischievous, adventurous Bagginses as well. The poems, of course, are magical.

[identity profile] mechtild.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 02:20 pm (UTC)(link)
You are welcome, Juliebeth. I love to see the love of these two affirmed, theirs and ours. :)

[identity profile] mechtild.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 02:21 pm (UTC)(link)
I just love those Pierre Vinet portraits, Bagendbabe. I thought they were artistically pleasing as photographic portraits, of course, but they also drew something wonderful out of the actors. Each one seems to crystallize an aspect of the character. I'd love to have a big coffee table book of them.

[identity profile] mechtild.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 02:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, Bilbo's portrait *does* capture a good bit of his humour--and his sense of mischief. And I love the clear-eyed look of Frodo. He looks like the character storytellers have in their minds when they introduce a sentence, "and then our young hero, coming to the castle, and casting fear aside, boldly knocked upon the door," and so forth. He looks every bit a "young hero".

Thanks for stopping by, Mews!

[identity profile] lily-the-hobbit.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 03:37 pm (UTC)(link)
Wow... that's a gorgeous artwork, Mechtild, really! There are way too few pictures of Frodo and Bilbo together. You don't happen to have a version without the crowns that you might lend me to illustrate later chapters of my German story (it focuses on Frodo's childhood 11-33)?

The poems are amazing. The capture both characters so well. Strong, touching sentiments.

[identity profile] mechtild.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 04:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you, Lily. At the moment, no, I don't have such a manip. I put the crowns in place before I did any of the fine tuning. But it's a thought. Maybe I'll work on one. I have a rough version without the crowns, but it would take some work. It *is* lovely to see them together in these two fine Vinet portraits. I loved the ones Vinet shot of Frodo with Gandalf. It is too bad he did not shoot ones with both Frodo and Bilbo. I guess Ian Holm was there in NZ such a short time there wasn't a good opportunity.

[identity profile] mechtild.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 05:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Lily, I did it. I'm glad you asked for the crownless versions because they were not that much trouble and I like them very much.

I adore the hobbit heroes in their party crowns, but it's nice to have a standard portrait of them. I love the way they address the eyes of the viewer, individually and as a pair.

[identity profile] eandme.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 06:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for posting this! The mathom of the manip made me smile and the mathom of poetry made me cry. There is something about Jan-u-wine's poems that goes like an arrow to one's heart. Life in clearer colours, the myth of Middle Earth unveiling reality rather than leaving it. I love those words about Frodo as someone who hears all the notes of life because it really describes him; light and shadow, someone who loves the Shire but has seen the Eye.

I want her poems in a leatherbound volume with all the trimmings. When will it happen?

[identity profile] mechtild.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 06:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Gosh, Eandme, what a beautiful, observant appreciation of jan-u-wine's LotR poems. It is wonderfully...true...to its subject--the heart of its subject--I think. It's as if she has her ear to her characters' breasts. And their minds. It *is* like "unveiling reality".

There is something about Jan-u-wine's poems that goes like an arrow to one's heart.

Oh, yes.

[identity profile] eandme.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 07:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes. But she never considered publishing her poetry? I wish that so many more could have access to it. I think what has been published of "serious" nature about Tolkien and Middle Earth is too much veered toward the intellectual realm. I do love reading articles and commentaries and even linguistic analysis to do with Tolkien's sub-creation, but I think there is a real gap to be filled in terms of understanding with the heart. Most of that is shared online, and only ever reaches very few people. I have to say, there is a real and tangible vacuum there too, in what is available online, in the sense that 95% or so of the creative force online is veered toward the sexual exploration of Tolkien's characters. I don't mind it as such, I just long for more of what *I* take from Lord of the Rings, which is so much more than that. Jan-u-wine's poetry has spoken to my longing, and like you say, she is so close to the characters and she brings us into that closeness. She does not give stones to those who ask for bread, if you will excuse a biblical saying.

[identity profile] frolijah-fan-54.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 08:13 pm (UTC)(link)
What a beautiful tribute to the Birthday Boys!! I don't think it's silly at all - and thanks for giving us both versions. I would love to use them in a birthday post someday (with credit to you of course) if that would be ok.

And Jan-u-wine's poems just move me to my core. What a tribute to Bilbo and the love that helped to heal Frodo. The image of the brown of the water that covered his parent's heads and broke his heart - and the brown of the earth above Bag End that helped to heal him.

ANd Bilbo's description of Frodo and how he can appreciate the joy of life more because of the sadness he has known - but of course she says it so much better than I ever could.

I can't thank you both enough for this amazing tribute to The Birthday.

[identity profile] melyanna-65.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 08:59 pm (UTC)(link)
I love the manips and the poems are also so beautiful. I think that Frodo and Bilbo completed each other's, in a strong and unique kind of relationship.

Thanks and many hobbity hugs

[identity profile] lily-the-hobbit.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 09:19 pm (UTC)(link)
That's gorgeous, Mechtild! I totally agree... they adress the reader as an individual and as a pair. It's perfect! I wish there were more pictures of Frodo and Bilbo together. Too bad Ian Holm hasn't been in NZ long enough to take more shots.

Could I use the picture for my story. I'd credit, of course. Although I don't quite know yet where to fit it in.

[identity profile] mechtild.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 09:51 pm (UTC)(link)
But she never considered publishing her poetry? I wish that so many more could have access to it.

As wonderful as it is, and as respectful of Tolkien as it is, I don't think her poetry could be published as long as it is illegal to publish pieces based on works still under copyright. Just as Tolkien fanfic can't be published, neither can poetry based on Tolkien. Unless they have changed the laws since I last looked. :)

I have to say, there is a real and tangible vacuum there too, in what is available online, in the sense that 95% or so of the creative force online is veered toward the sexual exploration of Tolkien's characters. I don't mind it as such, I just long for more of what *I* take from Lord of the Rings, which is so much more than that. Jan-u-wine's poetry has spoken to my longing, and like you say, she is so close to the characters and she brings us into that closeness. She does not give stones to those who ask for bread, if you will excuse a biblical saying.

I don't know what's out there in Tolkien fanfic, Eandme. I have read mostly romantic stories myself, but not that many of any sort. But when I used to look for stories at West of the Moon, it seemed to me that there were *tons* of stories and poems in the "Gen" section. This would include stories portraying Frodo in heterosexual relationships, but these were very few. Most of the stories in the Gen section--going by the posted ratings--had no erotic content.

I could be wrong, but I suspect that what you yearn for, and what Jan's writing satisfies, is a thirst for truly adult Tolkien-based literature. By "adult" I mean works written about adult themes in an adult manner. I don't equate "adult" with "eroticized". A story can be NC-17 and still be very childish in its perspective, making Tolkien's largely adult themes trivial or non-existent. Some Gen fic can be just as childish and far from Tolkien's original.

I think an "adult" work is adult according to its perspective and what it chooses to touch upon in any given story setting, whether it depicts a heated tryst or a hobbit putting out lettuce seedlings. No matter its surface subject, an adult story is going to be threaded through with adult themes, all of which thread through Tolkien's work: loss and the passing of time, the fading of what is beautiful, dealing with failures and uglinesses and sorrows, and learning to experience joy in ordinary things. I think this theme is very strong in Jan's work. This joy can be evoked by the turn of a head, the green-glossy back of a beetle, the sight of a favourite cup set out upon the tea tray when any vessel might have been offered. I think Jan's poem's capture the spirit of this joy--so keen and poignant touching upon small things--and make it a lucid, poignant experience for the reader.

I think she shows in her poetry the "old soul" Frodo is said to have, "old" not because he is prematurely aged or broken down or astonishingly wise, but in the way he exemplifies this "adult" attribute I am trying to describe. In spite of, or because of, what he has been through, he emerges with a keener (rather than dulled) sense for perceiving and rejoicing in these little things. When I was a child I ran heedless across lawns or fields, trampling little flowers and plants in order to get to whatever was the Great View. I still love a great view, but now I can appreciate the less spectular things to see and smell and touch along the way. Frodo seems to have been able to see these things, in an acute way, from early on. Or he does in our imaginations, and certainly in Jan's poetry. His early sensibility only seems to grow--it is not extinguished by what life has dealt him, or, he doen't *let it* become extinguished.

Well, I have rambled on! But thanks for the goad, Eandme. You make me think. :)

[identity profile] mechtild.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 11:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Of course, you may use it. You can crop it, too, but I would like to be credited. (Not that Pierre Vinet doesn't really get all the credit, since he took these beautiful shots!)

[identity profile] mechtild.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 11:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Frolijah Fan, I am so pleased you enjoyed the tribute, both the manip and Jan's poems. Her poems are so beautifully observed. And they let us see the characters through eyes that love them. Let us raise our glasses! Oh -- I see Frodo has already done so in your icon. (What a cool background it has!)

[identity profile] mechtild.livejournal.com 2008-09-22 11:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for stopping in, Melyanna. I'm so happy you enjoyed all the mathoms. We loved making them!

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