There is something about stationary and art
supply stores that I just love. I mean,
really. I’m happier in a Staples
Business Depot than I am at Future Shop.
Something to do with all of the untapped potential lying in wait in all
that paper, I suppose. Also, I really
like a good pen, with a nice flow and even lines that don’t smudge.
Anyway, yesterday I picked up a Quattro 8 x
8 grid notebook, pictured below.
This notebook has a 2 x 3 inch grid, 1/8
divided, with 80 acid-free sheets. I’ve
included a scan of the interior, with a pencil beside it for size
comparison. The overall book is 3.4
inches x 5.5 inches. The grid is 32
squares by 24 squares. Assuming a scale
of 1 square = 10 feet, that allows each page to hold an area no more than 320
feet by 240 feet.
My plan for the Quattro dungeon is this –
each page holds a separate area, which links to at least one other page in the
notebook (and probably 2-4; sometimes more).
The entire dungeon uses all 80 pages, and no area is larger than can be
fit on a single page. Connections might
be long halls, stairs, chutes, chimneys, etc., but the areas must be clearly
divided. What I am imagining here is a
hive of relatively small interconnected spaces to explore, extending outward and
downward.
I might decide that some area needs a
larger scale map, and that some pages will break this down to smaller
scale. Conveniently, the Quattro
notebook breaks down 4 squares x 4 squares, and 8 squares x 8 squares, allowing
one to create 40-foot or 80-foot scale maps and then break them down with ease
(assuming no area uses more than 4 x 3 80-foot squares or 8 x 6 40-foot
squares). I have, in the past, found
this sort of scheme useful for creating cavern complexes connected by long
passages.
The result will be a potential 491,520,000
square feet of area to be mapped, and while each map will undoubtedly use less
than its full potential, this should allow for an area large enough to be
considered a megadungeon, mapped on a notepad small enough to conveniently fit
into a jacket pocket.
And the notebook cost me about $2.50
Canadian at the Curry’s Art Store near Yonge & College (north, on the west
side, across from Wendys). Nice pen and
coloured pencils are extra, of course!
Now, I’ll grant a priori that this may make me an über-nerd, but I find the very idea inspiring. Simple to carry maps, large area mapped, and
a cool format as well.
What’s not to like?
Thoughts? Opinions? Want to see some finished images when I map them?
I believe that stationery and art supply addiction goes hand-in-hand with old-school gaming. And manual typewriters.
ReplyDeleteI'm right - write? - there with you on cool stationery, and I hope you'll post the results in the future.
ReplyDeleteUpdates!! How is the Quattro Dungeon going?
ReplyDeleteSorry; I just assumed minimal interest and moved on to other things. Now that I see that isn't necessarily the case, I will have to try to revisit this.
ReplyDelete