All I got from this was that Elrisse's title in the Light College is "Master Chanter". While she's technically a canon character, she might as well be an OC if Boney were to develop her.
Actually, this brings me to a question that I want to ask
@Boney
How do you approach character creation/development, from a planning perspective? As I see it, there are three scenarios:
1. Completely Original Character: This is Mathilde, Abelhelm, Roswita, Wilhelmina, Heidi, Cython, Qretch etc. Characters that don't appear in canon and you have to make from scratch, although you could probably take inspiration from existing characters.
2. Developed Canon Characters in DL: These are characters with established personalities and stories with existing material being adapted into DL. The end product usually ends up very distinct from canon. This is where Thorgrim Grudgebearer, Belegar Ironhammer and Horstmann fall under (although I think you haven't read the Horstmann novel so it doesn't matter. Good, neither have I).
3. Canon Character, but there's next to no material: This isn't exactly OC territory because there is some level of detail, which varies, given in canon for them, but you still have to expand them in a way that makes sense. Characters like Algard, Kragg, Jovi Sunscryer and Hexensohn. Hell, Snorri and Gotrek fall under this heading because while they're developed canon characters, that is after the tragedy they went through.
I'm curious if you're more of an organic planner where you just write and see where it takes you, or if you plan it out first with personal profiles to understand the character better. My guess is that you have more of an organic vibe, as you seem to focus on a person's desires and wants and how they could achieve it most of all. Personally I'm more of a visual writer where I have to visualise what the character looks like and what their mannerisms would be like first, but I think you said before that you didn't really focus on visualisation much.