Professor Lilac Crosby

April 22, 2011 12:00 AM
It had come to Lilac’s attention, in a roundabout way, that her lessons were reportedly too difficult for the younger years. Now, the brunette had expected some of them not to accomplish the spell on the first try, maybe not even on the first day. Eventually, however, even a first year could, with practice, accomplish everything she had assigned. That was called pushing themselves. That was her goal.

Apparently, however, that wasn’t good for some students. Maybe they were becoming discouraged. In any case, Lilac was going to have to decrease her difficulty level for the beginner’s class. At least, that was, for the first years. Maybe she would do different things for the different levels.

Perhaps a usual Lilac would have been disheveled by her classes needing change--which she often hated, especially if it wasn’t change by her own accord--but she was still metaphorically walking on air. As happy as the perky professor usually was, she radiated joy nowadays.

In any case, she decided to make her lesson a bit more traditional. As usual the spell wouldn’t be expected and possibly not understood, but not for difficulty reasons this time. All of the desks were lined in perfectly straight rows. The door was open welcomingly, awaiting them hospitably. Even Lilac herself looked more… normal. She had muted her normally outrageously bright appearance. Instead of slippers that she tended to wear for comfort, she wore black dress shoes. A pencil skirt to her knee, a white blouse, and a pull-over sweater finished her teacher-y look. For the first time, she wasn’t wearing a speck of orange.

Rising from behind her desk and walking to the door when she was pretty much certain everyone who was coming was already seated, Lilac ran a hand through her brown hair, which was also looking more normal than its usually explosive mess of curls and tangled. Just as she had for the Sinclair party, she had straightened it, but now that shoulder-length hair was pulled up in a professional ponytail. Gently shutting the door, she turned her attention to the students.

“Welcome to class, students,” she began. “As many of you have noticed, my classes have been less than typical for a while, maybe too difficult. Since that is the case, I apologize. Please know I was only trying to push you all towards your best.”

“Today we will be going a bit backwards,” explained the Russian. “Inanimate to inanimate transfiguration.” She pulled her wand from her pocket and traced letters through the air, which left readable words behind it. Second years: “Usorlibrum” First years: “Ignis Acu”

“First years, your spell is one of the simplest Transfigurations spells out there. You will turn matches into needles,” she elaborated. Picking up a match from the counter, Lilac demonstrated. “There is no wand motion other than pointing. Ignis Acu. What was once a match in her hand was now a pointy needle. “Simple. Please do your best not to hurt yourselves. If you find this spell too easy, after you accomplish it, you may take a crack at this other spell.”

“Second years, your spell is a bit unconventional,” Lilac confessed. “You will need a shoe. You can either practice on your own shoe, or there are shoes on the counter as well. These shoes have never been worn, so don’t fret about hygiene.”

Removing her own shoe from her foot and holding it up, the twenty-seven year old continued, “Now, watch. Your wand should flick left, then back to the right before going straight down.” In demonstration, she performed said movement and incanted, “Usorlibrum.” Where her shoe had been was now something else.

“If you correctly performed the spell,” she said with a smile, “you should be holding a book. Which book it becomes will generally depend on what sort of thoughts you are having while incanting or what you thought last before using the spell. You may begin.” With that, she sat down at her desk and began to read her shoe book. It was one of her favorites.
Subthreads:
0 Professor Lilac Crosby Pointy things and shoe-books. [First and second years!] 0 Professor Lilac Crosby 1 5


Josephine Owen

April 27, 2011 8:57 AM
Josephine laothed transfiguration with a passion. She was a creative sort of person, she had a good imagination, and so when she could get the spell right she usually managed something of quality and originality. Yet getting the spell right drew a far greater amount of concentration in this subject than she would have liked. The Pecari liked charms, and sometimes DADA, and occasions where she got to use her ingenuity and initiative. Being told what to do and trying to understand the logic behind it before she could actually get the spell right was not the sort of class she enjoyed, so although she liked Professor Crosby and her querky nature, Josephine often struggled sufficiently in transfiguration to put her off the subject almost entirely.

Today the professor seemed more normal than usual. Josephine took the seat behind her brother (she didn't get to talk to James much as they were in different classes, so she liked to sit near him when they had classes together) and doodles with coloured inks on her parchment instead of taking notes. She wrote down the two spells and then picked up the matchstick that was on her desk. "Ignis Acu," she cast on her matchstick, turning it into a sort of fat version of a needle, but it was definitely a needle just the same. Maybe it would be good for darning socks or something - they were usually thicker than, say, sewing needles. Jsoephine had her own beading needle that was very long and thin with an extra large eye for ease of threading beaing wire through. She hadn't brought any of her beading stuff to Sonora because it was difficult to transport, but sometimes she wore her own jewelry creations. She couldn't afford to buy jewelry, so she made it herself out of seeds and shells and cheap beads. That was her creative side again.

"Do you think this counts as a needle?" Josephine asked, holding her creation up for the person at the adjacent desk to see. "Please say yes, then I can move onto transfiguring shoes."
0 Josephine Owen Bettering my brother 196 Josephine Owen 0 5


Alice Adair, Crotalus

April 28, 2011 11:15 PM
Alice was quite a distinctive creature from either of her sisters. Where Jordan and Dani were both emotionally driven, albeit it in opposite ways, Alice was mentally driven. For her, emotions were only a character of weakness and she didn’t dare be vulnerable in any way. As a result, without realization, she suffered by suppressing her emotions creating an abnormal disconnect to others. However, it served her well in academics for her thought patterns seemed on a different wavelength than most. It was probably why, even though Transfiguration had been rather difficult, she had an easier time with it than others.

Though, she was a bit surprised that today they would be doing a match to a needle. It seemed rather mundane in comparison to the work they had previously been doing. Of course, it could have been a forced endeavor. After all, she wasn’t wearing her normal attire. Not that Alice found anything actually wrong with it. If anything, she envied the professor for her bold, attention-drawing choices whereas Alice tended more for the simple. For instance, today under her school robes, she was wearing a light purple v-neck, a black skirt, and Mary Janes. It was an outfit intended to blend in, be as invisible as possible. She didn’t even do anything special with her light brown hair other than brush it. Yes, she was the most average looking person possible.

And as an average person she would do as every average person did, which would be turning her match to a needle. Pointing her wand, she stated the incantation and as expected, her match changed to a perfectly formed needle. She supposed this meant that she was to go on to working on changing her shoe to a book. Pulling it off, she set it in the center of her desk. She was about to perform the spell when the person next to her spoke. Alice turned to see one of the girls in her grade, asking her if her needle looked like a needle. What an odd question. “Yes, why would it not count as a needle? There are many variations on the needle.” This was all said in her very matter of fact tone.
0 Alice Adair, Crotalus Bettering no one. 0 Alice Adair, Crotalus 0 5


Josephine

May 06, 2011 6:05 AM
The girl Josephine had asked - Alice, she thought her name was - replied in a sort of mechanical way that the needle was just that. "I'll take that as a yes," Josephine said, and she placed the fat needle down on her desk with satisfaction. She looked over at probably-Alice to confirm her name, and she saw the other girl had put a shoe on the desk. this demosntrated that she was going to try the second spell, but that fact barely registeres with josephine as she admired the footware. They were just plan Mary Janes, but they were nice-looking. They weren't horribly scruffed or broken or stained because the wrong color polish had been used at some stage in their existence. She was sort of transfixed for a moment, until she realized she'd been staring. Just in case Alice had noticed, Josephine said, "I like you shoes."

The Pecari was momentarily embarrassed by her own shoes, but not enough that she didn't mind taking off the one on her right foot and placing it on the desk. It was an old white buckle-up, except it wasn't white anymore, and the leather was deformed where it had stretched over Josephine's big toe to accomodate her gradual growth (she may be one of the shortest people in the room but that didn't mean she wasn't growing, little by little). The shoe's one saving grace was the large straw daisy that Josephine had tied to the strap. She'd colored the petals in with pink and purple inks to make the shoes more distinctive and attractive. She thought her own addition might make it more difficult to transfigure - since it wasn't tecnically part of the shoe - so she set about untying the flower. With it successfully removed, she placed it to one side and gazed at her own, plain shoe with distaste.

Before she cast the spell, Josephine decided to make the introduction she'd intended on doing earlier. "Is your name Alice?" she asked her neighbor. "Mine is Josephine."
0 Josephine Being average means being better than some 0 Josephine 0 5