I am getting ready for the Edmonton Comic Expo next weekend - and it is nice to have a little spending money (not much, but things are getting better). As such, I just came back from visiting a print shop where I've arranged to have the big map printed as a poster. I couldn't afford it's actual size: that would be 10 feet by 5 and a half feet, according to the printer, which would work out to about $500. I had to settle for 48 inches by 26.
Talking to the print guys was a lot of fun. These are people who deal with businesses all day and 99% of what they see is ordinary - nothing as intricate as the file I gave them. I got wide eyes and impressed questions, plus some great praise as I explained that it was created on Publisher one piece at a time. Since I am never ashamed about admitting that I play D&D or explaining what it is to total strangers, I was sure to tell them what the map was for. And as I have learned in the past, it doesn't matter that I'm talking about a game or something that many people seem to think is silly. The work is the work - it has the strength to startle anyone's preconception, if the merit is obvious.
Startling people is I wanted the map printed: to show people at the Comic Expo how much work I'm putting into my world, so that they'll make the connection to how much work I put into my books. A physical representation is more effective than a computer screen - not because it's real but because it is BIGGER. Even a really big computer screen just looks like the image has been blown up to size. A physical representation on paper can't be. I so wish I could have printed that 10 x 5 foot map; that would have stopped people at the Expo in their tracks, from fifty feet away.
Oh well. Someday.
Great map Alexis! What program did you use to draw the hexes?
ReplyDeleteI used Publisher, Johnn. It is part of the Microsoft Office suite.
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