
I'm bumping this hoping that someone has something they need sketched? I don't know, I'll take whatever's thrown at me really if it's an animal/plant.
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I can definitely do that. Maybe the more complex art should be used in the Morrowind books, while the Imperial book art is simpler and better for quick identification.klep wrote:I had the idea to have separate books concerning flora and/or fauna for different regions written by Dunmer authors, and a general Morrowind flora and fauna book (or one for each topic) written commissioned by the Empire, which would contain the most common species in the province.
Just now during lunch I was thinking about these books. Maybe the books about the flora and fauna in the different regions are written by different authors, as someone from the region would probably know most about the regional stuff. If this would be the case, they'd probably have different drawing styles. I don't know if this proposition if possible and if it's a pain in the ass for the one actually drawing the art, but I think it would be cool.
That makes sense too. I can definitely see arguments for both sides but whatever fits best in-game is the better choice. I can do thick-lined un-detailed for the dunmeri versions. Fortunately that will take much less time than the minimum of an hour of constant work on one small picture.EJRS wrote:I would argue that the Imperial books would contain the more naturalistic art style. Dunmer art, at least as depticted in the game, is almost always, if not always, stylized.
Also, the dunmer don't seem all that interested in what we know as the natural sciences, and thus likely wouldn't care much for having exact or detailed drawings.
Perhaps the dunmer books could have a small fable attached to each creature, explaining the particularities of the species in more poetic terms, while the Imperial book would have more of an Age of Enlightenment-approach? I think this would better further the identities of the two respective cultures.
Edit: I took a look at the page you linked in your original post, Crucifigo. Your writing really stands out. I like the style of your fauna-entries. In my mind, they'd be perfect for the Imperial fauna-book.
Gnomey wrote:I'd avoid conflating Imperial with real-world western
Gnomeys point is one I very much agree with, but from playing TR as well as looking at planning discussions over the past couple of years, I get the impression that, whether implicit or explicit, the modus operandi of TR is that Imperial=RL western. Has there been any discussion on "weirding Imperial"?Tondollari wrote:I wonder if "naturalistic" study exists in the TES universe?
I agree that TR has not paid much attention to either aspect in the past. I think this was largely due to lack of planning; we didn't have the right framework set up, and as such simply didn't consider a lot of such characterization: House Indoril were religious fundamentalist conservatives, with pretty gardens and gated communities, Imperials were Europe with our modern values, Bretons were Europe with our modern values, Nords were northern Europe with our modern values...EJRS wrote:Taking things further off topic, but two points I feel are of importance came up: