05.16.13 at 23:20   1445   via wildlinging   originally from wolfreivax

The Fall of Harrenhal | (by ReneAigner)
“Harrenhal was the seat of one of the most powerful Kings of Westeros before Aegon the Conqueror united the Seven Kingdoms. With its immensly high and impossibly thick walls, Harren thought himself untouchable. He had not anticipated Aegon’s dragons, however. Their fire scorched and burned the buildings, giving them a molten look, and roasted Harren and his kin inside its very walls.”

The Fall of Harrenhal | (by ReneAigner)

“Harrenhal was the seat of one of the most powerful Kings of Westeros before Aegon the Conqueror united the Seven Kingdoms. With its immensly high and impossibly thick walls, Harren thought himself untouchable. He had not anticipated Aegon’s dragons, however. Their fire scorched and burned the buildings, giving them a molten look, and roasted Harren and his kin inside its very walls.”

05.15.13 at 22:40   285   via spearwife   originally from insideonemind
05.14.13 at 20:40   8869   via spearwife   originally from sansasnark
05.13.13 at 23:20   2137   via interwar   originally from interwar

t-funster:

Cordel literature (“Literatura de Cordel” in portuguese, means “string literature”) are popular and inexpensively printed booklets common in the Northeast of Brazil. They usually contain folk novels, poems and songs, and they are sold at fairs and in the street. Cordel uses in its cover a very specific and traditional kind of xylography, and since I’ve done this kind of aesthetics for another “A Song of Ice and Fire” illustration, I decided to use the same style for a reinterpretation of the book covers.

05.13.13 at 16:04   419   via electricversions   originally from t-funster

Learning how to fly

Learning how to fly

05.12.13 at 15:59   611   via electricversions   originally from t-funster

but now the rains weep o’er his hall, with no one there to hear.

but now the rains weep o’er his hall, with no one there to hear.

03.12.13 at 16:30   533   via thestarkinwinterfell   originally from thestarkinwinterfell

stannisbaratheon:

asian westeros au: china as the north

the wolf on a field of ice and stone. ice, hardened by turmoil. stone, dark with age. they say when you go north, you never truly leave it. the cold, when it comes, stitches spikes upon the skin. this is the land of winter, of a war-hardened people whose blood spill not in rivers but cascade in hail. they say when a northerner dies, the land gets ever harder until no southerner can till the plains and tame the mountains. the age of heroes had been a patchwork of dynasty upon dynasty, each emperor crowned by snowfall, beget with hearts of ice. the qin dynasty unified the greater families and when barbarians threatened their delicate peace, they had built a wall; han breathed upon a swell of new territory and marked the silk road to trade with the south; tang brought the golden age, commerce and renown. they had been the most loved until the death of the recent lord and the coming of the mongols. those born with ice in their hearts refuse to thaw, until their feet too have rooted upon the infertile earth. to pray to the gods is to pray to the past, and every father and mother that leaves the earth only thickens the stone until houses become temples, and palaces are carved with the heavens. they say the north is for the north, and the cold takes care of its own.

03.08.13 at 11:20   926   via wednesdaydreams   originally from stannisbaratheon


she don’t speak.

she don’t speak.

02.14.13 at 22:11   2297   via youngned   originally from thestarkinwinterfell

The Wall — Game of Thrones by *ChristianGerth

The Wall — Game of Thrones by *ChristianGerth

02.01.13 at 21:20   3454   via buffysummer   originally from fantasyscapes