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You might find the Land Bonus card fit better if you tilted the other way
the on thing about the legend that bothers me on the bottom is the train. One of the most distinctive things about a stream engine is the stack, and the train you have here has the stack up under France. If you can arrange it so the stack can be seen, that'd be great!
porkenbeans wrote:The white text on Schleswig, Belgium, Netherlands, Corsica, and Sardinia, should be made to match the rest.
Also while I'm on the text, The train stations are a different font from the other territs, this is good, but I would take it a step further, and make them a different color as well.
porkenbeans wrote:Or maybe even better, Just make the map a ticket. Something along these lines.RedBaron0 wrote:It's the whole thing as it's put together. The elements are 19th century, but are just arranged in such a way that just does not convey that, at least for me. The way it is, it's just a MAP.
That new legend, in that orientation, would be a vast improvement. I get a sense of someone, traveling, holding their map seeing where they're going, with a ticket laying on top of their map.
Besides not only looking unique from every other CC map, It allows you to drop the play area down closer to the action buttons.
ghirrindin wrote:porkenbeans wrote:Or maybe even better, Just make the map a ticket. Something along these lines.RedBaron0 wrote:It's the whole thing as it's put together. The elements are 19th century, but are just arranged in such a way that just does not convey that, at least for me. The way it is, it's just a MAP.
That new legend, in that orientation, would be a vast improvement. I get a sense of someone, traveling, holding their map seeing where they're going, with a ticket laying on top of their map.
Besides not only looking unique from every other CC map, It allows you to drop the play area down closer to the action buttons.
Well hold on here. Throwing away the ticket is your prerogative as the mapmaker, but there's something to be said for adding colors to the regions. Your map lacks the warmth of the contemporary print culture, which is essential if you want to convey the luxury and opulence commonly associated with the OE. I'd also suggest changing the color of the oceans so they don't look forbidding, cold, and murky. You went off on that really bizarre tangent about a time-traveling train-mogul and if that's truly the direction you want to take the map, wouldn't the train-mogul want to make the map, brochure, or whatever it is you have here attractive to potential investors and riders? Think of the train-mogul..
Yes I did add color, but I also hue'd out everything, so as to tone down the vividness and brightness of the map. The problem as I see it is, the colors are too fresh and bright. Colorful is cool, and to the period. But you need to hue the tone down, to what that poster has. Also the white on the map should be yellowed to something like the poster.The Bison King wrote:ghirrindin wrote:porkenbeans wrote:Or maybe even better, Just make the map a ticket. Something along these lines.RedBaron0 wrote:It's the whole thing as it's put together. The elements are 19th century, but are just arranged in such a way that just does not convey that, at least for me. The way it is, it's just a MAP.
That new legend, in that orientation, would be a vast improvement. I get a sense of someone, traveling, holding their map seeing where they're going, with a ticket laying on top of their map.
Besides not only looking unique from every other CC map, It allows you to drop the play area down closer to the action buttons.
Well hold on here. Throwing away the ticket is your prerogative as the mapmaker, but there's something to be said for adding colors to the regions. Your map lacks the warmth of the contemporary print culture, which is essential if you want to convey the luxury and opulence commonly associated with the OE. I'd also suggest changing the color of the oceans so they don't look forbidding, cold, and murky. You went off on that really bizarre tangent about a time-traveling train-mogul and if that's truly the direction you want to take the map, wouldn't the train-mogul want to make the map, brochure, or whatever it is you have here attractive to potential investors and riders? Think of the train-mogul..
Disagreed. When I look at this map the last thing I think is that it needs to be more colorful.
The Bison King wrote:Schleswig, or Amsterdam
ghirrindin wrote:Well hold on here. Throwing away the ticket is your prerogative as the mapmaker, but there's something to be said for adding colors to the regions. Your map lacks the warmth of the contemporary print culture, which is essential if you want to convey the luxury and opulence commonly associated with the OE.
The Bison King wrote:...I know you're going to hate me for saying this but I think the orientation of the Land Monopoly card looked better the first way you had it. It drew the eye into the image rather than how it is now where it leads your focus of attention out of the image.
Yes I did add color, but I also hue'd out everything, so as to tone down the vividness and brightness of the map. The problem as I see it is, the colors are too fresh and bright. Colorful is cool, and to the period. But you need to hue the tone down, to what that poster has.
The top Schleswig is the same as the bottom one, but has the opacity turned all of the way up, to show how I disguise the glow. The one to the left has no glow. The procedure is to widen out the size and pump up the spread to around 70 or 80. Then just turn down the opacity till you are happy.
porkenbeans wrote:OOOps, almost forgot. When you do the glow, make it with a blue tint instead of yellow. Very important to achieve the effect over a blue back.
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