Forgetting to answer again...
I value the concern over her beauty, but do remember, guys, that each of us sees the characters differently in their minds.

I've always imagined Linden with a longer, Scandinavian-ish face, and with Watts' features, she'd appear too much like the First again.
I dug out a few quotes from Wounded Land to back up my impression that she does appear "less beautiful" beneath the yoke of the Land's chaotic conditions:
Awkwardly, she reached out, wiped beads of useless sweat from his forehead. "You look awful."
He peered at her through his exhaustion. Dirt caked her lips and cheeks, collected in the lines on either side of her mouth. Sweat-trails streaked her face. Her eyes were glazed.
"So do you."
He awoke cramped and chilled beside a pile of dead embers. The stars had been effaced; and in the dawn, the rapid Mithil looked dark and cold, as fatal as sleet. He did not believe he could survive another day in the water.
But, as Sunder had said, they had no choice. Shivering in dire anticipation, he awakened his companions. Linden looked pale and haggard, and her eyes avoided the River as if she could not bear to think about it. Together, they ate a scant breakfast, then stood on a boulder to face the dawn. As they had expected, the sun rose in a glow of blue, and menacing clouds began to pile out of the east.
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From WordNet (r) 2.0 :
haggard
adj 1: showing the wearing effects of overwork or care or
suffering; "looking careworn as she bent over her
mending"; "her face was drawn and haggard from
sleeplessness"; "that raddled but still noble face";
"shocked to see the worn look of his handsome young
face"- Charles Dickens [syn: careworn, drawn, raddled,
worn]
2: very thin especially from disease or hunger or cold;
"emaciated bony hands"; "a nightmare population of gaunt
men and skeletal boys"; "eyes were haggard and cavernous";
"small pinched faces"; "kept life in his wasted frame only
by grim concentration" [syn: bony, cadaverous, emaciated,
gaunt, pinched, skeletal, wasted]
Around him, his companions dismounted. Almost at once, Linden went over to Hollian. The flesh of Linden's face was pale and taut, stretched tight over her skull. She accosted the eh-Brand purposefully, but then had to fumble for words.
Linden stayed with him. Hunger had abused her face, giving her a sunken aspect; and she carried her head as if the injury behind her ear still hurt. But her jaw was set, emphasizing the firm lines of her chin, and her lips were pale with severity.
There's usually a firm-ish reason behind the way I portray something. Give that wreck a bath, clean clothing, a few stout Giantish meals aboard the dromond, plus some well-slept nights in a proper bed, and she'd look like a completely different person.
High Lord Tolkien wrote:I like her boobs.


You'll need to add a BILHB* subclause to your THOOLAH declaration.
*But I Like Her Boobs.
Ur Dead wrote:Not what I had though Linden would look like. But your talent for drawing and rendering is so fantastic.
So where did you study at??
Can you do a Harchuai??
Thanks for the compliments. Well, I majored in Communication Systems and Hardware in a Finnish university, but that's probably not the answer you're looking for.

I'm, for the most part, a self-taught artist; have studied human anatomy, perspective, and so forth from reference guides and learned a great del by drawing scenery, people, and objects from real life. I'd say talent pertains little to this; it's all the years of hard practice that count most.
When I get the inspiration to continue that Charade's End image again, I'm going to add a Haruchai somewhere to the foreground, perhaps to protect Linden (that was the original idea). I personally envision them with something like West Siberian facial features (Khanty?) added to a darker skin tone and curly hair.