Some gift art for https://www.furaffinity.net/user/e5111/, inspired by their character from Headlong Flight, a Kroashent-themed module for the "To Change" TTRPG system.
Eirwen is an oddity among the Eladan, a self-appointed scholar driven by an insatiable curiosity about the denizens of the Continental peoples. Living in a remote village on the Fortunate Isles, she had little interaction with other communities, and struck out on a "grand adventure" to tour the continent. Following a series of strange and erratic "research notes" written by a mysterious benefactor, she sets off to explore. After a long journey of traveling, she came across a pool deep in the forest, and decided to give her feet a break with a much needed rest in its cool waters. As she slithers out of the waters on a new serpentine tail, she realizes that her feet aching from the next leg of her journey is the least of her worries, as she has been transformed into a snakelike Margot!
Alternate version on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Kroashent
Eirwen is an oddity among the Eladan, a self-appointed scholar driven by an insatiable curiosity about the denizens of the Continental peoples. Living in a remote village on the Fortunate Isles, she had little interaction with other communities, and struck out on a "grand adventure" to tour the continent. Following a series of strange and erratic "research notes" written by a mysterious benefactor, she sets off to explore. After a long journey of traveling, she came across a pool deep in the forest, and decided to give her feet a break with a much needed rest in its cool waters. As she slithers out of the waters on a new serpentine tail, she realizes that her feet aching from the next leg of her journey is the least of her worries, as she has been transformed into a snakelike Margot!
Alternate version on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Kroashent
Category Artwork (Digital) / Transformation
Species Naga
Size 1536 x 2048px
File Size 1.42 MB
Heh. The downsides of having a setting under active construction. Originally, I found serpent-maidens in Irish and Welsh myth, but they didn't seem to have a term for them, so I used the placeholder of Nathair (Irish Gaelic for serpent). Since then, I've translated a few more sources of actual Breton folklore and discovered that the Margot were exactly what I needed. So the Nathair became the Margot (Korrigan of the Wells).
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