Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/Invisibility Cloak

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Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter - Magic
Invisibility Cloak
Type Magical device
Features Makes wearer invisible
First Appearance Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone

Contents

[edit] Overview

An invisibility cloak is a cloak designed to conceal its wearer. It is made of a special type of material that makes its occupant invisible. When nobody is inside it, it looks like a silvery, almost transparent fabric.

[edit] Extended Description

Beginner warning: Details follow which you may not wish to read at your current level.

Invisibility cloaks are very rare, but Harry receives one for Christmas in his first year; it turns out to have been originally the property of Harry's father, and was given to Harry by Professor Dumbledore. Harry uses it a number of times in the books, whenever he needs to go somewhere unobserved, often with one or more of his friends; he does note that it is a mixed blessing, as it hides you from vision, but you still have to be careful about making sounds or bumping into things or people.

Alastor Moody apparently owns two Invisibility Cloaks; Sturgis Podmore is wearing one of them when he is arrested in the Ministry, and Arthur Weasley is wearing the other when he is attacked by the snake, in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.

[edit] Analysis

The invisibility cloak is the perfect device for moving around undetected. As Harry often has the need to break rules, he needs a device such as this and an invisibility cloak seems like the perfect choice. Unlike the Disillusionment charm, which makes an object a near-perfect chameleon, the invisibility cloak makes the object transparent, and can only be pierced by magical – or possibly cat – eyes: Professor Moody's magical eye seems to be able to see through it easily, and there is the suggestion that both Mrs. Norris and Crookshanks can sense Harry under it, though in fact the cats may be hearing rather than seeing the passage of those within. Peeves also senses Harry, Ron, and Hermione under the Cloak in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, though it is obvious that he is hearing rather than seeing them. Additionally, in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, Professor Dumbledore looks right at Harry and Ron underneath the Invisibility Cloak while in Hagrid's hut, suggesting that Dumbledore might actually be able to see through the Invisibility Cloak. Dumbledore had hinted at this ability in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, when he caught Harry in front of the Mirror of Erised.

[edit] Questions

[edit] Greater Picture

Intermediate warning: Details follow which you may not wish to read at your current level.

It is noted elsewhere that Dumbledore is able to make himself invisible without using a cloak; Dumbledore says this himself in Harry Potter and the Philosophers' Stone. And yet, James Potter left his invisibility cloak in Dumbledore's care. What need of an invisibility cloak would Dumbledore have? The author has stated that this is an important question to ponder.

In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, we learn that this is because James Potter's Invisibility Cloak is, indeed, something special. Talking with Xeno Lovegood, the Trio learn of the possible existence of the three Deathly Hallows. Xeno reminds them that most Invisibility Cloaks are either simple traveling cloaks to which a Disillusionment Charm has been applied, or are woven out of the hair of a Demiguise, but all such become damaged or fade into visibility with time. Only one Invisibility Cloak, the third of the three Hallows, and supposedly the Cloak of Death himself, does not suffer the ravages of time, and cannot be damaged by magic. Harry, Ron, and Hermione are uncomfortably aware at this point that the Cloak in Harry's possession matches this description perfectly.

It turns out that Dumbledore, in his youth, had heard the legend of the three Hallows, and had been trying to find them. Though his active search for them had stopped by the time he was a teacher at Hogwarts, his youthful obsession with them had never completely faded, and he had borrowed James' Cloak, once he had heard of its properties, because he recognized it as a Hallow. It was while he was examining it that Voldemort killed James and Lily, and tried to kill Harry.