--the 4th of Spring, 513AV--
Kaili was hunched over a small scrap of paper, and holding a stick charcoal. To any who looked once, it would seem obvious that she was drawing something, but if you watched for a while, you would notice that there was nothing on the page, and Isur not once moved her hand. She had been like this for the better part of an hour, thinking hard on a design for her next creation. A man had requested a mirror with an ornamented border, and it was this that Kaili was working hard on. She had the mirror, and she had a backing (which was easy), and she knew what she would make the border out of: bent wire. But the design for the border was the hardest part, and was just not coming. The experience was similar to a writers block, but instead with crafting. Once, the woman stood up and wandered around the room, moving towards the forge and away. The desk she was working at was in a large room, with a forge on one side, tools lining two of the walls, and the last wall held this desk and a large opening to the outside. The forge was flaming, and actually also being used. Kaili's mother was working in the same room, in silence, so the brainstorming was in unison to the clang of metal on metal. Some would find this noise irritating, annoying, but Kaili found it soothing and that it helped her think.
Eventually, the Isur gave a small, rare smile, and finally began to draw on the paper. Others might have given a small whoop of joy, or at least said something, but this was not Kaili's way. She could be said to be emotionless, boring almost, and it was quite true. She held no surprises, except perhaps that such creativity lived in such a bland person. Once the drawing was finished, studied, changed slightly, then studied again, Kaili stood up. She picked up a hammer that had been sitting next to her, and went to one one of the walls and took the various tools down that she knew she would need for her work. Also from that wall she grabbed a roll of wire she had made the day previously, in preparation for this project. Moving over to the forge, she put down her tools at another work space, since there was two there, so at least two smiths could work at any given time. Her mother said not a word, but silently continued her work, occasionally dousing the metal she was forming. Kaili took a large pair of tongs, and massive wire cutters, and snapped off a meter long section of the thick wire. She held it carefully over the flames of the forge with the tongs, arm stretched straight, for several minutes. By the end, her arm was shaking slightly from the effort, but she was used to the feeling and recovered quickly. Grabbing a pair of two smaller tongs from next to her, she began to bend the wire. At first she bent the wire in four places, and checked that it was the same size as the outside of the mirror. Seeing that the ends did not connect, she bent it again, this time in the correct places. She heated the two ends of the wire she had been working on, now a rectangle, and forced them together. Once they had stuck, she doused the border in a trough and put it to the side. She repeated the process with a shorter wire, cutting and bending it, until she had a smaller frame to fit into the bigger one. Now for the design. The wires she cut then were much shorter than before, and created into more circular patterns. Doing this was a lot more challenging, and the Isur had to scrap several sections to re-melt them again.
Kail’s work continued like this for quite a while. She and her mother worked for a few hours, until the elder glanced at a large clock on the wall, packed up her things and left. Kaili had finished the other project recently, and was now casually working on some small, personal projects she had been working on the past week. One in particular was a small figuring of a dog, with the beginnings of etchings on it. She worked on engraving more images and shapes on it for quite some time, leaving the forge to die down. She had picked up this skill as a hobby rather than having been taught it, since neither of her parents practiced it. Since it was self-taught, she was not very good at it, so worked very slowly and carefully in order to avoid mistakes. Kaili made grooves around the dog’s eyes, to outline them, and carved little holes to make pupils. She then outlined the ears and made a few designs on them, attempting to repeat the pattern. Looking back on her work, the Isur noticed the eyes were quite shaky, and one pupil deeper than the other. The second ear of the dog was much nicer than the first, obviously showing that she getting better at the art. Sighing deeply, as she didn’t like creating things that did not look nice, Kaili set the dog onto the desk she had been working on earlier. It wasn’t like she was going to sell it or something. The figurine was just for practice. She consoled herself, but she still couldn’t shake off the feeling that she had failed slightly. Deciding that it was time to stop her carving practice, the Isur moved on to other work. She glanced up at the clock after a while, and frowned sadly. It was almost time for Smithis to come for his lessons. She had to stop her work...