Pauline baynes

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a drawing of a woman in a green dress with long hair and flowing leaves on her head

This past week, I have been working on world building, specifically in the area of fantasy creatures and races. Since dryads, selkies, elves, and dragons are running amok in my head, today’s …

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an artistic painting with people and trees in the foreground, on a foggy day

Iconic illustration of Mr. Tumnus and Lucy in Narnia, by Pauline Baynes A former student donated a bag of books that were mostly Tolkien and Terry Pratchett. As I was processing The Tolkien Reader, I noticed some very nice illustrations throughout it, and thought I recognized Pauline Baynes' work. Sure enough, it was. Baynes is best known as the original illustrator of the Narnia books by C.S. Lewis. If you've only seen the cheap paperbacks with only black & white illustrations, you should…

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a drawing of people and cats in a room

Page 22 of The Adventures of Tom Bombadil by J. R. R. Tolkien, George Allen & Unwin Ltd, 7th edition, 1973. Illustration by Pauline Baynes. For the most part, the illustrations in this edition are black and white. But a few use a second color, as in this one of Tom Bombadil.

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an image of a man riding on the back of a horse next to a woman

The Lady of the Green Kirtle, also called the Queen of Underland, the Green-Witch, the Witch-Queen, or (to differentiate her from the White Witch) the Emerald Witch, was a beautiful but villainous sorceress who ruled the Shallow Lands, a country she had magically created underneath Narnia, Ettinsmoor and the Wild Lands of the North. Her origins are unknown, but has a human appearance, much like Jadis. She had the extraordinary ability to transform into a great green serpent. She was...

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an illustration of two people in the woods with birds flying around them and one person holding a bird

Page 14 of The Adventures of Tom Bombadil by J. R. R. Tolkien, George Allen & Unwin Ltd, 7th edition, 1973. Illustration by Pauline Baynes. For the most part, the illustrations in this edition are black and white. But a few use a second color, as in this one of Tom Bombadil meeting Goldberry.

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