5
Aug

August Blog Chain

   Posted by: C Scott Morris   in Blog

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Once again, I am participating in the monthly blog-chain over at the AbsoluteWrite Water Cooler, which is once again hosted by the lovely and talented and blue-haired Ahiela(and to me, blue hair only makes her hotter[I should also note that discussion of hair color this month is perfectly acceptable-hotness, is between her and I]).

Our topic this month is Color, in the context of our writings.

This one was both easy, and difficult for me. I write Steampunk, and if any of you read this fine genre, then like me the first color you think of is Brown.

It was once said, that ‘Brown is what happens when a goth discovers steampunk’. This was inaccurately attributed to Cherie Priest(who also has hot blue hair). Priest is quite a character herself. She lives in Seattle(like Aheila lives too far away for me to stalk), but travels quite a bit to various conventions to both promote her books and to revel in steampunk culture. She has been called the Voodoo Queen of Steampunk. And as much as brown is the official color of steampunk when you think of Cherie Priest, you think of Blue and Green, two colors she loves to dress in, and the colors she most often colors her hair.

Back to Brown. Shades of brown from dirty leather to brick to the red-brown of dried blood. Steampunk revels in brown. It revels in it, celebrates it. Brown is definitely the color of my writing. Even a piece of art I commissioned for my story Toy Maker’s Apprentice is brown. You can see it by clicking on the link to your right. Go ahead, it wont hurt. It’s a nice piece of art by Clockworks artist Shawn Gaston, and I have a link to his comic below.

Then I was thinking about my novel and various stories, most of which are set in the same fictional universe, a dystopian, dark fantasy. Brown and grey. I thought about colors both as descriptions and as an emotional state. There is little green and blue in my world(though Ethan, my MC has blue skin), there is little color at all. The sky is dingy and grey, and like most steampunk settings, everything is covered in a thin layer of ash. Even when I describe people’s clothing, it’s usually shades of brown or grey. And then I once again thought of Ethan, and his blue skin.

Ethan is one of the few bright splashes of color in my universe, both literally and figuratively. Part of steampunk, is the dystopian setting. The people are worn down and tired, and have little spark. But not Ethan. Even in this dreary, soot-covered world, he writes his poems and lives in the moment, one little bright spark surrounded by brown, like a brightly colored minnow darting about a muddy pond.

The only other significant piece of color in my book, is Seji’s flower, which represents her path to personal growth away from the Savant’s control and towards Ethan’s love.

It was an interesting mental exercise to think of these things, and to realize how little color I use in my writing, and how I can(and unconsciously did) use it for contrast.

Please take a moment to visit the blogs of our other participants, and leave a coment.

Aheïla: http://thewriteaholicblog.wordpress.com and direct link to her post
Ralph_Pines: http://ralfast.wordpress.com/ and direct link to her post
AuburnAssassin: http://clairegillian.wordpress.com/ and direct link to her post
semmie: http://semmie.wordpress.com/ and direct link to her post
Anarchicq: http://anarchicq.com/ and direct link to her post
PASeasholtz: http://www.paseasholtz.com/
LadyMage: http://www.katherinegilraine.com/
orion_mk3: http://nonexistentbooks.wordpress.com/
DavidZahir: http://zahirblue.blogspot.com/
aimeelaine: http://www.aimeelaine.com/writing/blog
Alpha_Echo: http://writersramblings81.blogspot.com/
FreshHell: http://freshhell.wordpress.com/
sbclark: http://sonyaclark.blogspot.com/

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This entry was posted on Thursday, August 5th, 2010 at 9:56 pm and is filed under Blog. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.

13 comments so far

 1 

That would be a direct link to “his” post! (Ralfast that is!)

And I agree that brown is the color of steampunk because when I think of steampunk I think of copper, brass and bronze. Although I would think that steampunk doesn’t have to be dystopian, in fact since it is based on the mid-to-late 19th Century thinking and aesthetic a optimistic/Utopian air of ever moving progress might fit as well.

Now dieselpunk, due to the combination of the Great War and the Great Depression (plus the rise of fascism and racism/bigotry) plus the possible event of nuclear war on the horizon does make for a depressing world view.

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August 6th, 2010 at 10:55 am
 2 

I’m not as familiar with steampunk as others but, yeah, brown and grey do come to mind. Steampunk makes me think of Helena Bonham Carter for some reason and she often wears black. Which is neither here nor there. Nice post. I’ve never thought much about color in my writing before this assignment. And now I’m thinking about it a lot.

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August 6th, 2010 at 11:09 am
 3 

Steampunk intrigues me but I’ve not yet given the genre a whirl though it’s on my to do list. I do see the brown aspect of it perfectly well. Nice post.

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August 6th, 2010 at 3:47 pm
 4 

Steampunk’s an intriguing genre, its heretofore-unknown-to-me sibling Dieselpunk mentioned by Ralfast above even more so!

I tend to think of the era as brown not because of copper (which would become green with use anyway) but rather yellowed paper, sepia photographs, and damaged early films. All the visual reminders (rather than artifacts) we have of that era have been given a brown sheen by time.

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August 6th, 2010 at 4:49 pm
 5 

Great post, CSM! I am not very familiar with steampunk, but I think you hit an important point about the correlation between color and the people being weary/worn/depressed/etc. I’ve battled depression in the past, and I think gray and brown are excellent descriptions of those things. The contrast between the dull, boring, “tired” color and the bright, fresh, “spark” with Ethan sounds intriguing!

Great post!

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August 6th, 2010 at 6:20 pm
 6 

Good point Orion, I hadn’t though of that! Good catch. Also I discovered Dieselpunk through that most addictive of sites, TVTropes.

:)

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August 6th, 2010 at 6:25 pm
 7 

Having read the book, I have to point out another unconscious use of color. (For those that don’t know me, I am the alpha reader. I get it first) There is a character that wears a child’s red dress coat, red is an important color for this character for a couple of reasons, one of which I won’t divulge. It is important also because it is the single brightest color in the whole book and this character is the single character that is happy just to be himself, no matter the situation. He is what he is and that is why I love him.

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August 7th, 2010 at 8:33 am
 8 

This exercise in color has caused me to “see” it more. Every color description in the current book I am reading has me thinking now, wondering if the author was even aware of the impact.

As for steampunk, I am completely clueless regarding the genre, but it is now on the radar. Perhaps I shall do a review in a future issue of my online newsletter.

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August 7th, 2010 at 9:17 am
 9 

I like your post, the way you incorporate the answer to this month’s question into a broader canvas of steampunk and fellow writers.

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August 9th, 2010 at 9:23 am
 10 

Brown is a good choice for steampunk. Great post!

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August 10th, 2010 at 2:46 pm
 11 

I was hoping someone would pick brown, and you did for all of the right reasons! Brown is too easily written off as a gross color, but it is life, history, and the human spirit. It is the interesting dirt and grit that makes it possible for other things to grow. Brown is VERY steampunk.

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August 11th, 2010 at 2:26 pm
 12 

“It was an interesting mental exercise to think of these things, and to realize how little color I use in my writing…”
I think I’m just the opposite. :) But hey … it’s what works for you as a writer, right? So if brown is it, then so be it! :)

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August 12th, 2010 at 10:34 am
 13 

I was left curious, what color is Seji’s flower? I love how you noticed Ethan’s contrast to the brown of his surroundings. People, even those warn by the ravages of hard times, tend to have a special sparkle of color that, while sometimes muted, never really disappears.

@orion_mk3, I think it’s fascinating how you connected to the browned tones of the artifacts that have withstood time. Sepia photographs, washed in brown, paper yellowed with age. It’s a lot like the theme on this blog. :-)

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August 24th, 2010 at 10:55 pm

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