This time, we’re stepping away from graveyards, ancient constructs, and things that actively want to dismantle your party. Instead, we’ve got something a little more curious.
A little more… papery.
Still a problem, just in a very different way.
Scribbleknott Sketch
The Original Brief: Scribbleknott (Name locked in immediately. No notes.)
Scribbleknott resembles a cat-sized dragon made entirely of paper. Layers of folded sheets form its body, its wings covered in intricate runes and half-legible scribbles that seem to shift if you stare too long.
It doesn’t move in the usual way. It folds. Refolds. Reshapes itself. One moment it’s a small, perched creature. The next it’s something flatter, wider, or… less helpful to describe.
Each form comes with its own little tricks.
Scribbleknott is endlessly curious. It seeks out libraries, archives, and anywhere knowledge is stored, and makes itself at home. Books don’t stay books for long around it. It wraps itself around them, absorbing their contents directly.
It guards its collection fiercely. Fire and water are, understandably, not welcome.
Some say It is said to have been born from a spellbook that absorbed far too much magical energy. The result is a creature that is equal parts knowledge and chaos… watch out when you’re in the Latchford archives!
Scribbleknott Colouring
Inspiration & Direction
This one came from a slightly different angle. We wanted something that felt magical in a quieter way. Not destructive, not aggressive by default, but still capable of causing a lot of problems if handled badly.
There’s also a bit of a “curiosity gone too far” theme here. A creature that wants to learn everything, but doesn’t really understand boundaries. Or ownership. Or the concept of “please don’t absorb that, we were using it.”
Working With Nick!
Nick leaned straight into the texture on this one.
We asked for something that felt delicate at first glance. He brought in layered folds, overlapping sheets, and just enough irregularity in the lines to make it feel alive rather than constructed.
The runes and markings are deliberately messy. Not clean spellwork, but accumulated knowledge. Notes on top of notes, ideas layered over each other. It looks clever. It also looks like it hasn’t quite finished thinking.
We’ll be back soon with something less interested in your books… and more interested in you.