Trying something a bit different in the Old World Style: Chronicles. The set is frames, drop caps and design elements to create decorative frames or pages. The outside of the frames snap to the grid, while the inside edge is more decorative and transparent to overlap imagery you want to put inside your frame. As you can see when viewing the individual tiles in the set, the frame pieces are approximately 1/2 to 3/4 of a square. I designed these to feel like you were matting a piece of art, hence the overlap and minor transparencies within the inside edge. I've included the scroll edge again, but also created some black and white frame pieces with some very subtle hints of color. Here is one of the examples I made in the Roll20 map editor, keeping things snapped to the grid: I found that the Contrail Font already available in the map editor works really well for the text. To me, this would be a fun and different way of introducing ideas into an adventure; but then, I am odd. In the picture above, the drop cap and text has been placed outside the scroll and image. I've included the base land tile/scroll base tile as well, so obviously you can make the scroll page much bigger or make the frame the size you wish relative to the page, and the writing can go on top of that scroll as well. Layering in the editor here is really easy. Another snapshot example from tile editor here just keeping on the grid, trying to keep that left hand away from the ctrl+alt function as you all know I love to do, and placing random elements along the frame. The elements can be rotated, like shown in this shot, flipped, shrunk... it's up to the creator of the picture frame. This time, I placed the drop cap on top of the frame, and a design element on top of that. I put the yellow inside the frame just because it was a white frame on white background. And, not only are there a lot of elements within the set, it can be used with elements from other sets. Here is another shapshot example, bringing in a graphic from my library to put behind a the white frame, and using house and cobblestone elements from set 2 in Old World Style - this time I used both snap to grid and the off-grid features - and yes, I realize the mini-writing is really bad, lol: This is a big leap in trying something new with the Old World Style that I think can add a great element for your players. Happy framing! Hope you enjoy! Here's the link to the set on Roll20 - <a href="https://marketplace.roll20.net/browse/set/450/old-" rel="nofollow">https://marketplace.roll20.net/browse/set/450/old-</a>...