
The second View is to show the slight angle at which Kevins Watch Leans away from the cliff. it leaves the platform of KW about 20 - 30 feet out from the cliffs edge.

Moderator: danlo
wayfriend wrote:That's very nice.
But no one seems to want to depict Kevin's Watch leaning outwards, for some reason.
Because the book says that it does.peter wrote:Is there any reason why they should? (I think there may be a 'leaning outward' version on the front cover of one of the editions of LFB in the cover art section - not one of my favorites it has to be said).wayfriend wrote:But no one seems to want to depict Kevin's Watch leaning outwards, for some reason.
In [u]Lord Foul's Bane[/u] was wrote:There he saw that he was on the tip of a slim splinter of stone - at least five hundred feet long - that pointed obliquely up from the base of the cliff like a rigid finger accusing the sky.
In [u]The Illearth War[/u] was wrote:This ledge took them to the base of the long, leaning, stone shaft of the Watch.
In [u]The Runes of the Earth[/u] was wrote:This stone circle with its parapet was Kevin's Watch, a platform carved into the pinnacle of a leaning stone spire high above the line of hills which divided the South Plains from the Plains of Ra.
Wayfriend.. only trying to use one terrain with the editor in Bryce and a few others...but you can easily make offsets with two separate landscapes to get a leaning effect and you can use other methods for terrain like a roof overhanging ledge or a cave cut into the side of a landscape.wayfriend wrote:Is there a problem such that the landscape software can't depict something which is undercut?
wayfriend wrote:Is there a problem such that the landscape software can't depict something which is undercut?
Because the book says that it does.peter wrote:Is there any reason why they should? (I think there may be a 'leaning outward' version on the front cover of one of the editions of LFB in the cover art section - not one of my favorites it has to be said).wayfriend wrote:But no one seems to want to depict Kevin's Watch leaning outwards, for some reason.
In [u]Lord Foul's Bane[/u] was wrote:There he saw that he was on the tip of a slim splinter of stone - at least five hundred feet long - that pointed obliquely up from the base of the cliff like a rigid finger accusing the sky.In [u]The Illearth War[/u] was wrote:This ledge took them to the base of the long, leaning, stone shaft of the Watch.In [u]The Runes of the Earth[/u] was wrote:This stone circle with its parapet was Kevin's Watch, a platform carved into the pinnacle of a leaning stone spire high above the line of hills which divided the South Plains from the Plains of Ra.
You just added a couple of new interpretations to the term "understatement."wayfriend wrote:That's very nice.
It would, however, make the concepts of ladder like stairs make more plausible.wayfriend wrote:But no one seems to want to depict Kevin's Watch leaning outwards, for some reason.