At a festival entirely about love, romance, and sex? Maybe some can, but at best I would be bored to tears and would have absolutely nothing to do.I assume aroaces can have fun at a festival? Heh, even if they roll their eyes at other peoples obsessiveness? The festival is an opportunity to meet new people generally.
Aroaces are part of the diversity of the Revelry. What kind of events and activities would you want to see there?At a festival entirely about love, romance, and sex? Maybe some can, but at best I would be bored to tears and would have absolutely nothing to do.
Personally? Anything that had nothing whatsoever to do with love, sex, or romance. Although even more personally, I hate crowds and parties so I wouldn't be going in the first place.Aroaces are part of the diversity of the Revelry. What kind of events and activities would you want to see there?
What about a tent playing D&D games?Personally? Anything that had nothing whatsoever to do with love, sex, or romance. Although even more personally, I hate crowds and parties so I wouldn't be going in the first place.
Shakespeare mentions for the fairyfolk, the colors black, gray, white, and green. I take this to associate the Celticesque elves with nocturnal moonlit forests. Whence the "moon elves" have darkvision and are earthy and vegetative.1. Elves classically live in the forest and live in harmony with nature. Squares are unnatural shapes associated with human civilization (the natural world has circles occasionally but very few right angles). (Though I'm sure those awful dwarves in their halls of stone would love a square...)
2. For the same reason, maybe a tree or leaf shape rather than a circle or square?
3. The colors look a little too reminiscent of RGB or CMYK to me. Recall that the modern pride flags with their tertiary and quaternary colors are the result of an age of high-quality color printing when you can dial up any color you want. Historically, flags stuck to primaries and secondaries--classic European heraldry had black, white, red, yellow, green, blue, and sometimes purple or orange, as well as 'furs' represented by patterns. Of course, elves have access to magic, and obscure colors might reflect that. Still, given that elves usually live in the forest, using more shades of green or brown, perhaps with 'natural' colors like blue (sky), yellow (sun), and red or orange (fire), might give it more of an elven feel.
Shakespeare mentions for the fairyfolk, the colors black, gray, white, and green. I take this to associate the Celticesque elves with nocturnal moonlit forests. Whence the "moon elves" have darkvision and are earthy and vegetative.
For the Norsesque elves, the yellow or white circular sun and the reds and blues of the sky, all work well enough. Whence the "sun elves" dont really associate are more skyey and solar.
Leaves around a circle might work?
Given my most recent post and Faolin’s insight, I could see dwarves coding- if needed- involving opals. Maybe fire agate. (Among the most colorful stones out there.)Actually, instead of having a whole flag thing, you might want to look into, well, things like the old handkerchief codes that gay men used back in the day. There's probably still variants on it today, but I wouldn't know; I'm one of those aroaces who stays home. Elves wear ribbons in their hair or face paint or charms on a belt chain or whatever that shows their interests, and that's how they do it.