You can call me Starry! I'm a fan artist and fanfiction writer. She/her, asexual. I'm a huge nerd (and by that, I mean I love math, science, and language). I am a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Reblog blog is @starryarchitect-reblogs, queer mormon blog is @acemormon.
166 posts
I meant to draw this back in November when I first read the asexual Jasnah chapter, but uh . . . better late than never, right?
Reading the chapter that revealed Jasnah was ace was one of the happiest moments of my life. No joke, I went to bed that night grinning so hard it hurt the next morning. If there was any doubt about it before, Brandon Sanderson is definitely my favorite author now. Ace Jasnah is awesome.
I understand people being a little disappointed she's not homoromantic or 100% lesbian, but just remember that's she's not heteroromantic either--since the only romances she's ever been in (in any iteration of the Stormlight archive) have been with Taln (WoKP) and Hoid (RoW), she's clearly actually infiniromantic--romantically attracted to people who are at least a few millennia old and way too knowledgeable for anyone's good.
(Also, yes, I will be using ace Jasnah as an excuse to draw her exclusively using purple palettes. I mean, I would've anyway because something about her is just purple, but now I have an excuse.)
Sometimes I wonder if it took the citizens of Paris time to adjust to their new superhero's look.
“The main application of pure mathematics is to make you happy.”
— Hendrik Lenstra
So I guess, arguably, Amelia is the main protagonist of Infinity Train.
That just makes it even worse that we can't get to see the season centered on her
Everyone always compares Infinity Train to Adventure Time or Gravity Falls or Steven Universe, but to me, watching Infinity Train always feels more like watching a studio Ghibli movie: captivating, immersive, and surreal.
Dear Cartoon Network, HBO Max, and whoever else is in charge of Infinity Train these days,
You have decided not to renew Infinity Train because the next season has no child entry point. Though this is a conclusion that makes sense, it is a decision that is largely unsupported and will lead to a great loss, both on your part and on the part of its audience.
Season five does not need a child entry point, because any children watching the show are already invested in the characters that will lead the season. They need no entry point because they have already entered. You do not need to worry about grabbing their attention, because Amelia and One-One have already grabbed it.
Yes, you could argue that since this is a new season, the show has to regain investment from the audience. And, as you believe children make up a large part of the audience, the show has to capture a child's interest. You believe children make up the majority of Infinity Train's audience because animation has always been considered a child's art form. Assuming this is true, then isn't the child entry point the very medium of the season? If the majority of the audience is children, that is because animation appeals to children. And if animation appeals to children, does that not make it a child entry point?
But the truth is, when it comes down to it, you don't need a child entry point. This is because Infinity Train appeals to adults and teenagers, not just children. This is not a weakness or a paradox; if anything, it is a strength. After all, children are not the ones who buy subscriptions—adults are. And it is guaranteed that the adults will be deeply invested in season five, child entry point or not.
You cancelled Infinity Train because the next season does not have a child entry point. But it does, in the form of familiar and beloved characters, as well as animation. And even if those don't count as entry points, the season does not need an entry point, because Infinity Train is not just a children's show, it is a people's show.
Sincerely,
a child who is already invested in season five, no entry point required
Even Simon wouldn't make the mistake of cancelling Infinity Train
No idea who my favorite Infinity Train character is, but Grace is definitely the coolest.
I know I'm supposed to hate him, and I do hate his actions, but I also can't help but relate to him too. In other words, I reserve the right to try and work out my complicated thoughts about Simon Laurent through art.
For some reason, nothing hits me harder than seeing characters laugh hysterically because of frustration or exhaustion or anger or grief. We always talk about how subversive tears of joy are, but man, laughs of sadness are so much worse. Maybe it's just a me thing, but my chest always gets tight and my breathing shallow whenever a character starts laughing because of a negative emotion. I just. Can't. Handle. It.
And Infinity Train uses this trope two times!
First time with Simon:
You could argue that this is laughter because of insanity, not negative emotions, but it still hits hard. No matter how much you hate him. At least if you're me. Seriously, this was my reaction when I first saw Simon's death/breakdown scene:
The second time Infinity Train pulls this is with Ryan:
This, too, killed me! Emotionally, at least. Why is it always the laughing?!
Anyway, yeah, of course I want Infinity Train to continue, but it might be a good thing that it doesn't if they planned another one of these maniacal laughter scenes in the next season. Not sure I could handle another amazingly animated, amazingly written, amazingly voice-acted breakdown like this.
I can be found in the summation of all the Infinity Train protagonists so far. Simon has my oldest, worst flaws, Min-Gi has my fears and worries, Tulip and Lake have my strengths, Jesse and Ryan have the traits people like most in me, and Grace has the traits I'm developing. Oh, and Ryan has my glasses.
Now this is a Lake drawing I'm actually proud of!
I feel like Lake is such a gender mood that keeping her cis is a betrayal of her character, but at the same time, I watched a hundred minutes of her being a her, and I can't turn off that instinct. So Lake is a nonbinary woman in my head.
some orbs before bed
please don’t tag kin or post to other websites
I'm resisting the temptation to go back through all four seasons of Infinity Train with a notebook, pen, and my writer hat on, because this show is a work of art and I need to analyze every episode five times over to learn how to write well. But I have an AP test in two weeks and now is NOT the time to have another breakdown because of Simon's character arc (dive).
Day 4 of drawing Lake with my non-dominant hand until either Infinity Train gets renewed OR my doctor tells me to stop. Jesse’s hand was going to be in this but oops it turned out so ugly so he got cropped out :(
I tried to draw Lake from Infinity Train, and uh . . .
I am not happy at all with how this turned out. So, obviously, I'll have to redraw her fifty times until I am happy with the result!
Also finished this postcard. The hyperfixation is real.
Here, have a pre-Simon Hazel sketch and be happy
I was practicing piano and hating the metronome, and then I thought of Ryan practicing guitar and hating the metronome (do you use metronomes with guitar? Surely you do (and if not I just might become a guitarist)) and I had to draw this. It's a pretty crappy comic, but eh
He just seems like the kind of person who hates metronomes, you know? They're so annoying. Restrictive. Frustrating. Distracting. Cold. Un-Ryan.
Septimus Heap has the ultimate found family. You start with the core seven-son family, which is already guaranteed to have at least nine members. Not to mention they have a crazy aunt and at least six uncles, as well as a tree or two.
Throw in an adopted daughter, 1.5 ducks and 0.5 of a cat, the youngest son's adoptive mother/mentor/BFF and semi-adoptive father/kidnapper, the adopted daughter's biological dad, the youngest son's best friend who will someday be the adopted daughter's boyfriend, a ghost uncle, the youngest son's first best friend/adoptive brother from his childhood in the army who is probably also the second oldest son's boyfriend, the youngest son's dragon, and the oldest son's wife.
Oh, and don't forget the ghost uncle's ghost girlfriend, the mother, father, and brother of the oldest son's wife, the second youngest son's girlfriend and her transforming panther, maybe a couple witches (or maybe not), the adopted daughter's ghost mom and ghost grandmother, the oldest son's pet tennis ball, the adopted daughter's pet rock(s), and a centuries-old magical grandpa who you can only see by exiting time.
And we haven't even gotten to the sequel series yet!
The bakery enemies AU by @buggachat may be the best thing to come out of this fandom. Which is weird, considering it was created by the same person who created the worst thing to come out of this fandom (Adrichat), but I digress. I can't wait for the next page!
This . . . this might be my favorite thing I've ever written. Well, of the things I've posted online, that is. I just . . . the music and the fluff and the cultural and synesthesia undertones, and the trust, and the singing . . . I'm actually really happy with how this turned out, which is a little unusual. I'm not sure if it'll be quite as heartwarming for other people, but hopefully you'll enjoy it anyway.
Once again, Infinity Train has proven that apparently Owen Dennis has complete and unfettered access to my journal. Or maybe he's seen my memory tape.
Man, this is such a good show.
It just occurred to me that we've heard all the protagonists of Infinity Train sing:
Tulip sang for nearly half of episode four.
Jesse sang "Travel Friends" and Lake improvised on the same song mockingly.
Simon and Grace's VAs sang two lines each in "When I Look at You, I See Me".
Ryan and Min-Gi basically spent all of season four singing.
. . . I'm adding this to my looooong list of reasons to love this show.