Physique: Thin. Being undead, he doesn't necessarily need bodily intake to survive, and so sometimes slips in his eating habits, leaving him in a state of lost weight.
Height: Average height for an elf, but tall compared to a human. He stands at around 6'7".
Skin: His skin tones change throughout the seasons. In the spring, his skin is a warm color, but almost has greenish undertones. In the summer, his skin is a more normal shade of fair. In the fall, it is a little more tan, and in the winter, his skin is so pale and cold, it is almost translucent, like a recently deceased corpse.
Scars/Markings/Etc: Over the years of being soulbound to a tree, Laudrel's appearance has warped drastically--he now has clawed hands, twisted horns sprouting from his temples, and legs like twisted branches.
Eyes: Before the change, his eyes were a clear, summery green. Now, they are devoid of color, as white as fine china glass.
Hair: His hair is long, reaching to around the middle of his spine, but like the rest of his appearance, it's color changes with the seasons. In the spring, it is a light brown. In the summer, it lightens to the color of spun gold. In the fall, it becomes a vibrant, fiery red--and in winter, it is white, like the snow that crowns the forest treetops.
Weapons/Powers: Once, he knew well the language of the sword, but he has long since turned from that practice in favor of a new one--magic, and necromancy. In close quarters, however, his claws make effective weapons. His abilities and their strengths change during the solar year, like much of the rest of him. His powers with earth magic and necromancy are at their strongest and fullest during the summer months, and those powers mostly include destructive abilities--to create sparks of fire and to bend the will of the plants around him are what make up most of his magic ability during the summer. In the fall, death and the withering of plantlife are his portion, and in the winter, he can hardly do much at all, and it is during this time when he gets much studying and experimentation done. In the spring, he can call forth new life, and regrow what once lay dormant.