• Anomalocaris@lemm.ee
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      57 minutes ago

      in theory, they could be cool.

      i imagined a tattoo artist at the beach, painting people with sun tan lotion to create ephemeral body art…

      then you had to put that example.

  • TheOrcWhoWrites@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    sees a fully tatted vampire

    “wow, look at that guy he’s gotta just live in the sunlight. Too bad he won’t be around much longer”

  • TheFogan@programming.dev
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    11 hours ago

    I mean obviously depends on the lore etc… whether sun leaves scars, or burns the whole body evenly regardless of where the point of contact is. If it can be done light enough.

    Or god forbid… just causes the vampire to look glittery. Now I would go on to say that that’s obviously a very modern tweak to the folklore… but actually sunlight itself as something to cause significant harm to vampires appears to have originated with Nosferatu in 1922.

    • INeedMana@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      sunlight itself as something to cause significant harm to vampires appears to have originated with Nosferatu in 1922

      I think it’s older than that. But you’d have to search for folklore about garlic, sliver and sun, instead of a book. And Stoker kind of merged together a few Slavic wights from different countries into his Dracula

      • TheFogan@programming.dev
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        3 hours ago

        Garlic would indeed be covered in one of the precursors, Pijavica (a slovic monster caused by leading a sinful life, warded away with garlic). The albanian Striga can be warded with a silver coin coated in blood. But sunlight, hard to find any old references to that, Some forms have vampires as purely human by day, or their powers get stronger at night. Stoker’s vampires in fact did walk in the sun unharmed.

        Is worth noting, that a lot of vampire lore seems more or less to have been written more or less as personifications of Plagues/Diseases. Of which silver and garlic both have anti-microbial effects for, and oddly many cultures considered them as tools for fighting diseases before even understanding germ theory (Hippocrates recommended silver for treating wounds and storing food in 400 BC), Garlic was used in primitive medicine going back at least 1000 years.

        Sun, while obviously modern knowledge of UV light killing virus’s exists. Doesn’t seem like that was particularly noted in the past, most likely because very few people lacked exposure to the sun. It seems it wasn’t till around the mid 1800s that sunlights effects on microbes was discovered and tested.