Professor Skies

July 24, 2016 12:33 AM
“Good morning,” Selina greeted the beginners class. “Today, we’re going to be focussing on a slightly different element of Transfiguration - design.” The design lesson was a key one, that usually cropped up somewhere in the second term, once students had enough of the basics under their belts to be getting some consistent results.

“Whilst exams may seem a long way away, a common way of differentiating grade levels in Transfiguration tests is not only completeness of the finished project but detail. Essentially, the more ornate you make the finished product, the higher your grade. We will therefore spend certain lessons throughout your time in this class focussing on spells you’ve previously achieved but adding more in the design element. That’s not to say you shouldn’t strive for it the rest of the time - I would always encourage you to aim for something above the plain and the ordinary, even if it’s just changing the basic colour of your object, and to stretch yourself when trying new spells. However, from time to time, we will pause and make that our soul focus.

“Today, we will be revisiting the crayons or pencils into candles that we did last term. I would like all first years to use crayons, and any second years who feel uncertain about this spell, as the point today is to make your objects beautiful, not to stretch yourself in terms of your ability to change the raw materials,” in truth, she would be a little concerned about any second years who opted for the easy project this far into the term, and would be making a note to give them some extra attention before the end of term.

“The spell, as you know from last time, is candere - remember to pronounce that final ‘e’,” she added, in case the students had been skimming their old notes without calling the details to mind. Hopefully they were getting better at realising that spell words didn’t always follow the normal rules of English, but she felt it prudent to remind them, “With a sharp straight flick of the wand.

“You may use whatever means you like to help you prepare for the spell. Transfiguration tables may be useful, although they tend to focus on material properties. Some people find sketching out their ideas helpful. As always, the key is good visualisation, so do whatever helps you to achieve that.

“You may talk quietly amongst yourselves. Please begin.”

OOC - points will be awarded based on length, creativity, relevance and realism. As noted in the lesson, this is a spell your character should be familiar with, and able to achieve the basics with relative ease.
Subthreads:
13 Professor Skies Beginners - I feel pretty, oh so pretty 26 Professor Skies 1 5

Jozua Sparks, Teppenpaw

July 28, 2016 2:31 PM
Jozua was still avoiding Lily in classes. This weekend, he had decided, after they defeated the evil dragons in the Gardens, while he was still feeling brave, he would finally broach the subject of the ball, get it over with, and everything could go back to normal. First, though, there was the rest of this week's classes to slog through.

Transfiguration was neither his favorite (DADA was) or his least favorite (actually, of Sonora's classes, maybe it was, but it was way better than Math or English, and truthfully Sonora didn't have any classes he actively disliked really, so it wasn't any failing of Skies or the subject that put it at the bottom of the pile; he just liked the other ones more).

The thing Transfiguration did have going for it was that there was a lot of room for embellishment, once you got the basic spell down, and Jozua had an excellent imagination, so once he figured out his fancy flourishes had to come from his mind rather than from flamboyant wand motions, his classwork had dramatically improved over the course of last term.

Today's lesson seemed to be designed (heh!) specifically to cater to his most favorite part of the subject, and he was pretty excited to see what he could do with a crayon to candle transfiguration now. The last time he'd done this one, he had still been laboring under the misconception that fancy wand motions would improve the final product instead of hindering it from getting created at all. Once Professor Skies helped him discover the folly of that idea, he had started liking Transfiguration a lot better and consequently his grade had also risen. He thought that was the causality, though the two often went hand-in-hand for him, so it was hard to say for sure. If he liked a subject, he worked harder at it, and he tested better in it, and liked it more. Conversely, if he didn't do well in a subject to start with, he was predisposed to dislike it, not do any work, and get worse at it. It was a feedback cycle that he'd been glad to get turned around pretty early.

He was just starting to sketch out some of his candle design ideas - he was pretty lousy at drawing, but bad drawing helped him figure out where the mismatch between the picture in his brain and the picture on the paper was so he could be sure to focus extra well on that when casting, when another paper hit him on the arm and fell atop the miserable sketch.

Confused, he uncrumpled it and read the handwritten words in growing dismay. Clearly, avoiding Lily hadn't been enough to escape this predicament. Mom would not be happy with him is she found out. Fortunately, he had no intention of telling her, so he didn't know how she could, so he was off the hook for not asking properly before now.

Well, the good news was he could sit with his best friend again next class instead of next week.

In the meantime, he did not turn to acknowledge Lily or answer her question, he just bent over his drawing and made furious adjustments to his design before settling the revised picture of his candle firmly in mind and casting the spell with the precise wand motion he'd eventually gotten right during office hours.

The crayon transformed and it was beautiful. Jozua smiled, feeling very proud of himself. It was all one color, the same green as the crayon had been, which couldn't be helped on a first try when the shape was the important part, but the candle's sculpting was perfect. A wick poked out of the top of a leafy tree. Two wax figures, one in robes the other in a gown, huddled against the tree's trunk like they were hiding. Hands covered their mouths but their eyes crinkled like they were stifling giggles. Or at least, they looked that way to Jozua who knew they were supposed to be doing that. They were kinda tiny so he hoped the detail was clear enough for others to make out.

Holding his body between his creation and Lily, Jozua turned the candle upside down and used his quill point to scratch out *For a little while, I guess* into the wax, then turned to pass it to his neighbor to pass to their neighbor and so forth. "Sorry, would you pass that toward Lily?" he requested.
1 Jozua Sparks, Teppenpaw Less Surreptitious Candle Passing 348 Jozua Sparks, Teppenpaw 0 5


Madeleine Dautin, Aladren

August 08, 2016 7:56 PM
Madeleine watched as Jozua Sparks (talk about a pretty cool last name) worked on his candle. She was so absorbed in watching his candle making that she quite forgot that she was supposed to be doing her own. When Professor Skies had given them the assignment, she had known immediately what she would do. Something with gold—gold was a really fabulous colour and Madeleine felt that it properly reflected her status in society. She thought gold looked best with blue and so planned a swirling montage of the colours, similar to a wonderful painting she had once seen in a museum back in Paris.

Jozua’s candle was rather nice but kind of crude in a childlike manner. She tilted her head slightly at the little stick figures holding hands. It was…cute in a way, she supposed, but nothing as beautiful as her candle was. Well, once she got around to actually making her candle, Madeleine thought with a blush and turned back in her seat to focus on her own crayon which was a ghastly shade of pink. The sort that salopes liked to colour their cheeks and lips with and not the kind that Maman or Myrtille did. She was just getting prepared to start work on her candle—she rather thought that having some sparkling stars on it all would perfectly round out what was already sure to be a fabulous candle, when Jozua handed her his candle.

She had seen the note that Lily had thrown at her neighbour earlier and, being someone entirely absorbed in the affairs of others, she had been dying to know what it was about. Now seemed to be her chance. “Of course,” she replied, turning fully in her chair so that Jozua couldn’t see her as she handed off the candle to the next person. Her quick eyes read ‘For a little while, I gue—’ before her neighbour on the other side took the candle away and she smiled awkwardly when her fingers tugged it back so that she could finish reading it. “Sorry,” she muttered quietly to them. “Finger stuck to the, erm…” She frowned, trying to remember the word. “Wax…”

Madeleine turned back to Jozua rather quickly, face blushing from being caught snooping, mind racing with all the possibilities that message could have been about. It had never before occurred to her to ask rather than to spy but for now it seemed like a rather golden opportunity to do so. “What was that all about?” she asked conversationally, planning to do her classwork while they conversed. She already had a pretty good candle idea, she just wanted to make sure it was perfect before starting anything.
10 Madeleine Dautin, Aladren Semi-surreptitious Snooping 340 Madeleine Dautin, Aladren 0 5

Jozua

August 17, 2016 3:00 PM
Jozua watched as Madeleine passed the candle down the row, but before it reached its destination, she turned back to him to ask what was going on. He lost sight of the candle as he addressed his neighbor, defensiveness rising immediately as he realized there were witnesses to this mess.

"Oh, um, well - I was getting to it! I was going to ask her this weekend! I just didn't want to do it in class, you know? But," he stopped abruptly, crossing his arms, and slouched, huffing a bit in irritation. He'd had a plan, and now he had ... this. "Girls," he grumped.

To which Madeleine blinked, seeming a bit confused because Jozua apparently never clarified what 'it' was about. "It?" she questioned.

There was only one it. Wasn't it self-evident? Jozua threw up his hands in exasperation. "The ball! She asked me to the ball! What's the point of avoiding a girl if she's gonna ask you to it anyway?"

"Well you can't expect a girl to wait around forever," Madeleine said pointedly, thinking of how Bastien had just assumed she wouldn't get a date so had waited much too long, in her humble opinion, though, of course, Jozua had no idea about any of that.

Jozua just knew he was being criticized and he defended himself with a protest at her hyperbole. "I wasn't waiting forever. I was waiting until a weekend she wasn't playing Quidditch!"


ooc: conversation hashed out in Chatzy with Madeleine's author
1 Jozua Conversation quick-play 348 Jozua 0 5