Entry tags:
Illya Dreaming
I find myself enjoying this photo manipulation tonight. It is the last MFU manip I ever made (and the only one I made outside of the intense depressive episode during which I created the others). I never did get around to posting it on AO3, partly because I liked having my farewell to Robert Vaughn as the last item in that album. I did post it on DeviantArt, though. Here's the copy I wrote at that time:
"In dreams, impressions and memories run together to create new worlds that are nevertheless familiar. Illya is dreaming of his childhood as seen through that kaleidoscope."
(For a better fit to your window, try clicking on the image.)

Based on a screencap from The Foxes and Hounds Affair.
Foreground from the Soviet animated film Winnie-the-Pooh and a Busy Day (1972), which is the last in a series begun in 1969.
Background combines detail from a 1941 Soviet propaganda poster with a stock image of the night sky.
Created January and May, 2017.
Some of the photo manipulations I made during 2016 impress me quite favorably now. I made some new manips earlier this month for the Professionals seasonal card exchange, and I found that I had forgotten many of the techniques I learned then. I also found that I did not have the seemingly infinite patience that I had during that spurt of single-minded productivity. (Not that I didn't spend hours on each of the Pros manips during which I could have been making a start on Moby Dick.)
"In dreams, impressions and memories run together to create new worlds that are nevertheless familiar. Illya is dreaming of his childhood as seen through that kaleidoscope."

Based on a screencap from The Foxes and Hounds Affair.
Foreground from the Soviet animated film Winnie-the-Pooh and a Busy Day (1972), which is the last in a series begun in 1969.
Background combines detail from a 1941 Soviet propaganda poster with a stock image of the night sky.
Created January and May, 2017.
Some of the photo manipulations I made during 2016 impress me quite favorably now. I made some new manips earlier this month for the Professionals seasonal card exchange, and I found that I had forgotten many of the techniques I learned then. I also found that I did not have the seemingly infinite patience that I had during that spurt of single-minded productivity. (Not that I didn't spend hours on each of the Pros manips during which I could have been making a start on Moby Dick.)