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The filler spot "steps down" is a great example of why Dean's art is so popular because you can just have filler art for stairs or a corridor, but the shadows give dynamism and draw you into the space.
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This was a great buy that I enjoyed a lot. We created a new book, "Nine Dragons", and had a dracolich chapter in it just because of this drawing.
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It's very useful to have D&D game dice filler art for whatever reason
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Do you need a quaint village? If you do, you can get it here. It's very nice but the borders aren't white, which is a problem with filler art.
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I bought the drawing for our new Dragons book but after buying it, the way the details merge into each other, the fact the drawing is so vague, made it unusuable.
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Very useful cheap filler art, though it's specific to instance where you have a chest with something glowing in it. But also, why don't you?
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Very useful to have such cheap general fillers, a treasure map is something you can put with almost any adventure text, not just a text that has a map in it.
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Just a great filler art that I like a lot. Dean is always a win.
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Used it as an illustration for our bullette monster in our S&W magazine.
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Simple and straight forward, served as illustration for our werewolf hunter class.
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Greay dynamic composition, I love the shot, I used it as a cover for the June issue of our magazine, and it served as an illustration for the bahir monster inside as well.
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Unusual piece, and cool choice to have the metal golem be broken. I used it to draw a non broken statue, but that's OK.
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Cover of our December issue of "Cantrip and Dagger" swords and wizardry magazine. The picture is so pretty I also have to add a character type to go with it!
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I love the action and the motion. We used it for our Red Rager chapter in our "Nine Dragons" book. Not the best depiction of that dragon, but you go with what you got.
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Great little piece, which we used for the Red Rager chapter in our "Nine Dragons" book.
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