Robe of Aman ("Blue Wizard's Robe")
Woven in the Light of the Trees, these robes are naturally silvery-white in color, but can change to any hue or mottling at the wearer's thought. Many among the Elves wore them in...
Woven in the Light of the Trees, these robes are naturally silvery-white in color, but can change to any hue or mottling at the wearer's thought. Many among the Elves wore them in...
Woven in the Light of the Trees, these robes are naturally silvery-white in color, but can change to any hue or mottling at the wearer's thought. Many among the Elves wore them in the First Age when the Two Trees still shone, but with the passing of time after their destruction they became increasingly rare. Among the Eldar. Galadriel and her mother Eärwen wore robes that possessed the properties given below. So did Elemmíre the minstrel who, ironically, wrote the Aldudénië, the song known to all the Eldar that laments the grievous tale of the destruction of the Two Trees by Morgoth and Ungoliant. Those worn by Gil-galad had a greater degree of protection woven into their fabric, as befitted such a warrior. Gandalf also was know to wear Robes of Aman, of somewhat less power but greater ease of movement. As the Grey, his clothing was fashioned in the Undying Lands, but when he returned as the White, he wore robes made by the Lady Galadriel. These robes were not enchanted except in that they were beautiful and durable; Gandalf the White was almost beyond harm in his new incarnation.