I've finally started hearing back from some artists about commission work — who would have guessed it would be so hard to find someone willing to take your money? We're getting some quotes in, which is neat. And expensive. But neat.
One of the problems I found in a lot of RPG books is that the art is too often impressive looking people standing impressively. It gets too easy for the artwork to devolve into a gallery of "THIS COULD BE YOUR CHARACTER" art, with the notion that if those people look cool/sexy/powerful, you'll find the game to be cool, sexy, and powerful. Or something. I find that I am personally way more drawn into scenes. Little glimpses of a story.
Then I started to actually try and think what kind of scenes I'd actually want to commission. I was not prepared for the enormity of the blank I would draw.
So. This is the official "Cool ideas for art" thread. Feel free to toss in suggestions for ideas. Of particular note, while most of the art will be in black and white for ease of production (a color rulebook will cost nearly twice what a black and white one will), we do need to commission a few big fancy color pieces as splash art or even a potential cover. So if you have particular ideas for that category, so much the better. One way or another, we're going to need at least one big piece of color art that is essentially "what our game is/is about" to be the default promotional piece. How do you even summarize a game like this in a single image?
RPG Art
- Agamemnon
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RPG Art
Sword and Scoundrel: On Role-Playing and Fantasy Obscura
Arrakis teaches the attitude of the knife — chopping off what’s incomplete and saying: "Now it’s complete because it’s ended here."
Collected Sayings of Muad’Dib, the Princess Irulan
Arrakis teaches the attitude of the knife — chopping off what’s incomplete and saying: "Now it’s complete because it’s ended here."
Collected Sayings of Muad’Dib, the Princess Irulan
- thirtythr33
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Re: RPG Art
In no particular order and linked to examples:
maps!
Equipment porn:
Comparing standard gear across culture and age
Cut-aways
Armor (pointing out all the words you use in the book, and why you can't armor your armpits etc)
Weapons
Castles!
More castles!
horses
Clothing
fashion
hats!
funny bags!
Fighting manuals!
weird medieval stuff like
humorism
anatomy
Bestiary, with animals draw from silly medieval descriptions
Scenes
tragedy
murder!
Whatever this is
madness
Landscapes
more landscapes!
Other ideas:
* Use scenes from your own adventures
* Think of a scene using each of the Skills
* Likewise for edges
Trying to nail down one consistent style is pretty important. The erratic art in TROS is one of it's big weaknesses. I don't think my suggestions of the schematic-like cutaways would fit very well next to stylized weird beasts for example.
maps!
Equipment porn:
Comparing standard gear across culture and age
Cut-aways
Armor (pointing out all the words you use in the book, and why you can't armor your armpits etc)
Weapons
Castles!
More castles!
horses
Clothing
fashion
hats!
funny bags!
Fighting manuals!
weird medieval stuff like
humorism
anatomy
Bestiary, with animals draw from silly medieval descriptions
Scenes
tragedy
murder!
Whatever this is
madness
Landscapes
more landscapes!
Other ideas:
* Use scenes from your own adventures
* Think of a scene using each of the Skills
* Likewise for edges
Trying to nail down one consistent style is pretty important. The erratic art in TROS is one of it's big weaknesses. I don't think my suggestions of the schematic-like cutaways would fit very well next to stylized weird beasts for example.
"O happy dagger!
This is thy sheath; there rust, and let me die."
- Juliet Capulet
This is thy sheath; there rust, and let me die."
- Juliet Capulet
- thirtythr33
- Editorial Inquisition
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- Joined: 12 Aug 2015, 03:23
Re: RPG Art
And some stuff probably more in line with what you were asking:
Two people:
* Arguing and shouting at eachother
* Shaking hands, one with a dagger held behind his back
* Haggling or bartering
* Discretely passing a package under a table
* Looking for something in the woods by lantern light
* In a bar fight
* Dancing merrily
* Hunting on horses, with dogs
* One pointing and laughing, the other crying
* Celebrating
* A scoundrel helping a wounded knight
Someone:
* Lying face down and fully clothed on the sea shore
* Hanging off a cliff by their finger tips
* Riding a horse through a royal chamber
* Running from a guard
* Lying wounded in the street
* Leaping from a roof
* On their knees, pleading for their life
* Being led to a noose
* Finding great treasure
* Holding many enemies at bay
* Aiming down his rifle/crossbow
* Pulling the boots off a corpse
One thing to keep in mind is representation. Equal representation of the sexes and various skin colors across all character types is becoming more usual in RPGs these days.
Two people:
* Arguing and shouting at eachother
* Shaking hands, one with a dagger held behind his back
* Haggling or bartering
* Discretely passing a package under a table
* Looking for something in the woods by lantern light
* In a bar fight
* Dancing merrily
* Hunting on horses, with dogs
* One pointing and laughing, the other crying
* Celebrating
* A scoundrel helping a wounded knight
Someone:
* Lying face down and fully clothed on the sea shore
* Hanging off a cliff by their finger tips
* Riding a horse through a royal chamber
* Running from a guard
* Lying wounded in the street
* Leaping from a roof
* On their knees, pleading for their life
* Being led to a noose
* Finding great treasure
* Holding many enemies at bay
* Aiming down his rifle/crossbow
* Pulling the boots off a corpse
One thing to keep in mind is representation. Equal representation of the sexes and various skin colors across all character types is becoming more usual in RPGs these days.
"O happy dagger!
This is thy sheath; there rust, and let me die."
- Juliet Capulet
This is thy sheath; there rust, and let me die."
- Juliet Capulet
- Benedict
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Re: RPG Art
Totally agree on that one.Agamemnon wrote:One of the problems I found in a lot of RPG books is that the art is too often impressive looking people standing impressively. It gets too easy for the artwork to devolve into a gallery of "THIS COULD BE YOUR CHARACTER" art, with the notion that if those people look cool/sexy/powerful, you'll find the game to be cool, sexy, and powerful. Or something. I find that I am personally way more drawn into scenes. Little glimpses of a story.
Exhibit A (Things that would be cool): Duels, Boarding a ship, Chase scene along rooftops, Assassination at court ball, Tavern brawl, At siege, Horse archery, Picking pockets, Sneak past guards, Heated debate, Mercenary bands roaming the countryside, High priest at Mass, Breaking and entering, Cannon fire, Alchemist lab, etc.
Exhibit B (Things that would be cooler): Exhibit A, but we get to see recurring characters between these scenes.
Exhibit C (Things that would be coolest): Exhibit B, plus there are some short fiction passages related to artwork.
"The fool doth think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool."
― Touchstone
― Touchstone
- nemedeus
- Scholar
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Re: RPG Art
Good that you mention. While impressive looking people are okay, possibly THE one thing i've been struggling with in the last few years or so in my own art is drawing people in situations where they are doing stuff rather than just posing -- particularly fighting, of course.Agamemnon wrote: One of the problems I found in a lot of RPG books is that the art is too often impressive looking people standing impressively.
And that's taking it one step further.Agamemnon wrote:It gets too easy for the artwork to devolve into a gallery of "THIS COULD BE YOUR CHARACTER" art, with the notion that if those people look cool/sexy/powerful, you'll find the game to be cool, sexy, and powerful. Or something. I find that I am personally way more drawn into scenes. Little glimpses of a story.
Gah, i need to get back into drawing. You know that thing where you don't pick up a pencil for months at a time? That's me almost all the time.
Here's some more ideas:
bandit/border patrol/etc. standoff in a rainy night
snapshot in a 2-v-1 situation
huddling around a campfire
a wedding ceremony being interrupted violently
murderer after the deed (victim sprawled on the floor)
performing field surgery
"First Rule of War Club: Don't fight in the War Room" - Clint Eastwood, 1920
- thirtythr33
- Editorial Inquisition
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Re: RPG Art
Another idea is to just rip scenes out of the games we are playing on the forums. It's got a few advantages to it:
- You already have some portraits and descriptions for the characters
- Already have nicely written prose describing the scene the way it would be done in a game (either for the artist to work from, or a caption of some kind).
- Scenes actually reflect gameplay that S&S is supposed to emulate
- Gives a nod to the community here
"O happy dagger!
This is thy sheath; there rust, and let me die."
- Juliet Capulet
This is thy sheath; there rust, and let me die."
- Juliet Capulet
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- Recruit
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Re: RPG Art
For escalating to violence:
- Two people in fashionable clothing, one holding a weapon to the other, the latter shocked and with hands in the air.
- Two people in expensive clothing, one grappling the other. Bonus points for bystanders.
- Side shot of two characters staring down each other, in combat poses.