Ialari spoke the steps of the process as she performed them. Tirin observed and offered any additional information she felt Ialari may need to know as she progressed.
As Ialari leaned over the pedestal with her tongs and hammer ready, she first looked into one of the lenses. As she viewed the item through the lens, she saw the basic shape of the item surrounded by a thin layer of what looked like some sort of ooze of slime. Turning her attention for a moment back to Tirin, Ialari had a look of confusion on her face.
Tirin smiled and said, "One of the first principles of auristics is that everyone practicing it will perceive auras in different ways. The appearance of an aura varies with each auristic. It is just how your mind is able process the information it is receiving. You see, the lenses are very simple objects that allow a magecrafter to see the auras of items. They do not grant you the ability to understand what you are seeing, that is why I emphasize again that you need to study auristics. While basic auras can be described by those who can read them, what they perceive will be different from what you perceive. Processing their descriptions and understanding their connections to what was seen will only get you so far and will not help you if something goes wrong with the charging if your own item. That said, what you are seeing now as you look through the lens is the representation of the aura your mind has created, it is what is familiar to you most likely."
Ialari leaned in again to look through the lens and described to Tirin what she was seeing. Tirin listened and said, "It sounds like you are seeing the aura of the hammer as one of the concoctions you work with in the poison lab. Your mind is perceiving the aura as a poison. For now, as you charge the hammer and observe the aura, there should be only a single change in that aura since you are only adding a single property to the item; the ability to charge other items. Multiple changes will create different auras that will be much harder to decipher. But that is all part of basic auristic theory. We are magecrafting right now so let's bring things back into focus. The aura will take one of two paths during the charging process. Either it will go wrong or it will go well. The lens will show you one or the other but it is up to your mind to tell you which the right one is."
Looking at the hammer through the lens, Ialari still saw the slimy, sickly green-brown aura around it. She grasped the hammer with the tongs and turned it slightly while still looking through the lens. As the tongs came in contact with the hammer, the aura rippled slightly but did not change color or consistency. Ialari moved around the pedestal, examining the hammer through the other lenses. Each lens showed the same thing. This was strange for Ialari as she thought that each one would show something different. "Why does each of the lenses show me the exact same thing? Shouldn't the item look different through each?" Ialari asked.
"The lenses are meant to help you view the item from different angles without having to overly manipulate it. That is why they are set in positions that are opposite of the mirrors so that the mirrors can focus the aura better." Tirin replied.
Ialari, now looking through one of the lenses, raised her charging hammer and hit lightly yet firmly, the to-be-crafted hammer. As she did, she saw the aura through the lens emit a blast of yellow light looking similar to the shower of sparks when a blacksmith's hammer strikes a piece of heated metal. The sickly green-brown color of the aura that covered the hammer was now marred by a single spot of golden brown.
A wide grin spread across Ialari's face but any celebration over her success was interrupted almost immediately by Tirin. "That is but the first strike. You will have to watch the item now and make sure the aura changes the right way. This will require you to strike the item a number of times while creating new pathways for the item's djed. As the pathways are created, you will need to direct them along the right path in order to reach your goal. If you are not careful, you could miss the moment you need to strike and lose the whole project. The effects of that could be as mild as the item just not charging properly and becoming useless or it could be dangerous to you and those around you, deadly or even worse. Also, never remove the item from the pedestal until it is finished. It will likely ruin the item.
Ialari listened to Tirin while continuing to monitor the item through the lenses. She saw the golden brown spot on the aura grow ever so slightly during the first several minutes of observation. As she watched, Tirin gave brief lectures on different things related to magecraft. "As you become comfortable with the process, you will find it gets to feel more like blacksmithing as you mold and shape the item's djed. Eventually though, as you craft more advanced projects, you will need to use reagents as catalysts to shape the djed and bring out more unique properties in the item. For most of the more simple projects though, you will not need reagents. The enchantments will be quite basic by comparison and can be shaped rather easily."
As Ialari leaned over the pedestal with her tongs and hammer ready, she first looked into one of the lenses. As she viewed the item through the lens, she saw the basic shape of the item surrounded by a thin layer of what looked like some sort of ooze of slime. Turning her attention for a moment back to Tirin, Ialari had a look of confusion on her face.
Tirin smiled and said, "One of the first principles of auristics is that everyone practicing it will perceive auras in different ways. The appearance of an aura varies with each auristic. It is just how your mind is able process the information it is receiving. You see, the lenses are very simple objects that allow a magecrafter to see the auras of items. They do not grant you the ability to understand what you are seeing, that is why I emphasize again that you need to study auristics. While basic auras can be described by those who can read them, what they perceive will be different from what you perceive. Processing their descriptions and understanding their connections to what was seen will only get you so far and will not help you if something goes wrong with the charging if your own item. That said, what you are seeing now as you look through the lens is the representation of the aura your mind has created, it is what is familiar to you most likely."
Ialari leaned in again to look through the lens and described to Tirin what she was seeing. Tirin listened and said, "It sounds like you are seeing the aura of the hammer as one of the concoctions you work with in the poison lab. Your mind is perceiving the aura as a poison. For now, as you charge the hammer and observe the aura, there should be only a single change in that aura since you are only adding a single property to the item; the ability to charge other items. Multiple changes will create different auras that will be much harder to decipher. But that is all part of basic auristic theory. We are magecrafting right now so let's bring things back into focus. The aura will take one of two paths during the charging process. Either it will go wrong or it will go well. The lens will show you one or the other but it is up to your mind to tell you which the right one is."
Looking at the hammer through the lens, Ialari still saw the slimy, sickly green-brown aura around it. She grasped the hammer with the tongs and turned it slightly while still looking through the lens. As the tongs came in contact with the hammer, the aura rippled slightly but did not change color or consistency. Ialari moved around the pedestal, examining the hammer through the other lenses. Each lens showed the same thing. This was strange for Ialari as she thought that each one would show something different. "Why does each of the lenses show me the exact same thing? Shouldn't the item look different through each?" Ialari asked.
"The lenses are meant to help you view the item from different angles without having to overly manipulate it. That is why they are set in positions that are opposite of the mirrors so that the mirrors can focus the aura better." Tirin replied.
Ialari, now looking through one of the lenses, raised her charging hammer and hit lightly yet firmly, the to-be-crafted hammer. As she did, she saw the aura through the lens emit a blast of yellow light looking similar to the shower of sparks when a blacksmith's hammer strikes a piece of heated metal. The sickly green-brown color of the aura that covered the hammer was now marred by a single spot of golden brown.
A wide grin spread across Ialari's face but any celebration over her success was interrupted almost immediately by Tirin. "That is but the first strike. You will have to watch the item now and make sure the aura changes the right way. This will require you to strike the item a number of times while creating new pathways for the item's djed. As the pathways are created, you will need to direct them along the right path in order to reach your goal. If you are not careful, you could miss the moment you need to strike and lose the whole project. The effects of that could be as mild as the item just not charging properly and becoming useless or it could be dangerous to you and those around you, deadly or even worse. Also, never remove the item from the pedestal until it is finished. It will likely ruin the item.
Ialari listened to Tirin while continuing to monitor the item through the lenses. She saw the golden brown spot on the aura grow ever so slightly during the first several minutes of observation. As she watched, Tirin gave brief lectures on different things related to magecraft. "As you become comfortable with the process, you will find it gets to feel more like blacksmithing as you mold and shape the item's djed. Eventually though, as you craft more advanced projects, you will need to use reagents as catalysts to shape the djed and bring out more unique properties in the item. For most of the more simple projects though, you will not need reagents. The enchantments will be quite basic by comparison and can be shaped rather easily."