I thought it worked by size? I’m pretty sure that was stated earlier in the story. And I’d imagine that a boulder like Harry’s father’s rock could be roughly a similar size/wight/mass to a 12 year old girl.
Hmm. My guess, based on the kind of logic that seems to govern most magic, would have been that the amount of magical energy required has something to do with how different the two things you’re transfiguring between are. But again, who knows how the energy requirements of transfiguration really work.
I was also under the impression that Harry had to keep the rock with him at all times to keep it transfigured. Would he also have to keep Hermione with him at all times? Also, the transfiguration stops if Harry exhausts his magic for whatever other reason, and I don’t think he’d want to risk that happening to Hermione.
As it happens, I was reading the The Black Company dark fantasy series lat month; one of the powerful wizards in it, Shifter (he’s a shapeshifter specialist) goes around with a staff carved into a beautiful woman—which was originally just that. He’s a quasi-insane evil villain.
So… the fantasy precedents aren’t that great, I guess I am saying.
I’m not trying to imply anything naughty here, but Hermione is somewhat softer than that rock. (Until you see her angry.)
Not to mention he doesn’t have any obvious need to keep Hermione on his finger all the time, unlike the rock. Just long enough to find some safe spot to hide her. (Unless he plans to revive her within the next couple of days.)
It’s not a long-term solution, especially given Harry’s exciting life. But it’s better than no solution. There’ll be time to brainstorm a better storage system later.
As far as I can tell, transfiguration mana requirements are based on the size of the assumed form, and there can be a huge size change (such as a 20 kg? rocket from a small ice cube taking a long time) and the very easy partial-transfiguration slicing.
Harry doesn’t need to keep the rock at all times. He just needs to contact it more often than once every transfiguration duration.
I thought it worked by size? I’m pretty sure that was stated earlier in the story. And I’d imagine that a boulder like Harry’s father’s rock could be roughly a similar size/wight/mass to a 12 year old girl.
Hmm. My guess, based on the kind of logic that seems to govern most magic, would have been that the amount of magical energy required has something to do with how different the two things you’re transfiguring between are. But again, who knows how the energy requirements of transfiguration really work.
I was also under the impression that Harry had to keep the rock with him at all times to keep it transfigured. Would he also have to keep Hermione with him at all times? Also, the transfiguration stops if Harry exhausts his magic for whatever other reason, and I don’t think he’d want to risk that happening to Hermione.
He now has a ring on his hand without a jewel. He could put Hermione there.
How romantic, in a very… Well, something.
I mean… “keeping your best female friend’s dead body on a ring on your finger”...
As it happens, I was reading the The Black Company dark fantasy series lat month; one of the powerful wizards in it, Shifter (he’s a shapeshifter specialist) goes around with a staff carved into a beautiful woman—which was originally just that. He’s a quasi-insane evil villain.
So… the fantasy precedents aren’t that great, I guess I am saying.
I suspect the ring is Hermione. The dead body in the cell is probably a death doll made from the old ring.
Magical exhaustion would mean cutting off his finger with a restored Hermione. That’s why the rock was transfigured into a jewel and not a ring.
I’m not trying to imply anything naughty here, but Hermione is somewhat softer than that rock. (Until you see her angry.)
Not to mention he doesn’t have any obvious need to keep Hermione on his finger all the time, unlike the rock. Just long enough to find some safe spot to hide her. (Unless he plans to revive her within the next couple of days.)
It’s not a long-term solution, especially given Harry’s exciting life. But it’s better than no solution. There’ll be time to brainstorm a better storage system later.
As far as I can tell, transfiguration mana requirements are based on the size of the assumed form, and there can be a huge size change (such as a 20 kg? rocket from a small ice cube taking a long time) and the very easy partial-transfiguration slicing.
Harry doesn’t need to keep the rock at all times. He just needs to contact it more often than once every transfiguration duration.