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Posted

map section Fliton's

Owner and employees

Note that the local militia and several city guards keeps a watch on this and other stores in the area. They may look like regular customers, particularly the Monks.

store owned by Fliton Cossal


Fliton Cossal Asst: Grace Fairgleam human female
Jeweler/Gemcutter male gnome jeweler/gemcutter

Jeweler: superior 30 percent increase Jeweler: 20 percent increase 60 percent chance likely 50 percent chance likely. +10 percent otherwise +10 percent otherwise

Gemcutter: good; Gemcutter: superb; 1d12 1-3 improves, 12 ruins 1d20, 1-5 improves, 20 ruins

Bill Heathertoes male halfling Fighter 3 works as sales clerk. Has a Dagger +3. He knows the skill levels of Fliton and Grace, but doesn’t tell customers.

Costs:

( with stone): stone worth plus gold 30 gp
silver 10 gp They wont make rings over a total value of 750 gp.

bracelet: gold 5 – 100 gp
silver 1 – 75 gp

necklace: 500 gp without cut stones ( minimum price)
700 gp with cut stones ( minimum price)

Appraisals: cost is 5 percent of appraised worth. Both jewelers are 95 percent accurate
in their appraisals, and 100 percent honest in the appraisal. If they feel
they cannot give an accurate appraisal due to a gem type they have no
knowledge of, they will tell the customer.

Gem cutting: 5 – 20 percent of cut gem[s] worth.
They will refuse to work with gems worth more than 20,000 gp.




Author
Categories Fondfield, Fliton's Jewelers

Posted

I have read on the Profantasy forums, a must read I must say, about lost work due to noticing an error that is too far back for undo to reach.

Here is how I get around that.

After settling on what template I am going to use, I do a ‘save as’ filename_00001 make a few changes to the map, and then save as to filename_00002 and so forth.

That way if I suddenly realize, and I did this to myself more than once prompting this idea, that I went wrong on my map, and I need to go back 40 or 50 versions. With all of them saved as multiple maps, I can go back. It also allows me the chance to branch off in another direction if I am not satisfied with the mapping direction I am going in.

Of course, when I upload the maps, pngs and web pages to this site, the number on the end is gone. That way even if I wind up drawing over 200 map versions, the viewers never see that number on my site.


Author
Categories General, map tutorials

Posted

This set of pages shows how I went from a large to a small map using Campaign Cartographer 2. A similar method should work for CC3/CC3+.

(There is another method in the CC2Pro manual. Allyn got me to try it, and it is easy. But I still use this one.)

I started with this large map, I wanted the lower right corner of the island.

Tantalow's Island


Author
Categories General, map tutorials

Posted

Zoom into the area you want on the new map.

Next outline with a hollow rectangle or square, the area you want in the new map.

Use Info->Distance to find the size of the area, place that on the map as a text label, as a reminder.

Do a ‘Save as’ to a different filename as a rectangular bmp.

The rectangular bmp should be the same size as the rectangle described above.

Tantalow's Island


Author
Categories General, map tutorials


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