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Picture the inside of the "National Archive of Lost Weather". Every item in the room is weather-themed. Large cabinets. 1870s. Incorporate a goose ironing an umbrella, cabinets with jars filled with things like mist, fog, dried rainbows, folded lightning, frozen sunshine, scattered clouds. In the middle, a female with short red hair tries to contain a whirlwind escaping from a bottle. Books in shelves on the back wall all have strange, weather-related titles. Pencil sketch with liquid waterpainr, dark and moody.
A whimsical, detailed, and slightly chaotic, watercolor illustration depicting the "National Archive of Lost Weather," with a red-haired woman and a goose. The woman, wearing a brown dress and white apron, stands in the center, struggling to contain a swirling grey tornado emerging from a bottle labeled "WHIRLWIND" in her hands. Her expression is one of surprise and alarm. The floor around her is littered with scattered documents or papers, some with weather-related charts. To the left, a white goose wearing glasses and a tan vest is diligently ironing an open black umbrella on a wooden counter. A small sign next to it reads "Goose at Work." Behind the goose and the woman are two tall, dark wooden cabinets filled with various glass jars and bottles, each labeled with different weather phenomena. Labels like "FOG," "MIST," "DRIED RAINBOWS," "FOLDED LIGHTNING," "FROZEN SUNSHINE," "SCATTERED FLOODS," and "SNOW" are visible on the jars. Above the left cabinet, a large sign reads "NATIONAL ARCHIVE OF LOST WEATHER." Above the right cabinet, a shelf holds several old books with titles such as "VANISHED CLOUD