Helping with Adventurer Party Management

Episode 324: Where's Someone Who Can Draw

The first picture shows the line running with gnegne and the balance between left and right is strange. I think I need it from where I get used to brushes first.

The second painting is a double triple of contour lines, which you can ask after struggling to paint the shape of the skull.

The third painting is not in the same shape as it is if you are trying to paint the painting that is in your head rather than staying watched.

"It's not that easy."

and take a look at the paintings painted by the craftsmen in a vicious struggle.

"That's right. I've never painted anything."

And Sarah, who made me tea, says.

"Instead, kids might paint better for less bad habits"

For artistic talent, age doesn't really matter.

If you want to give up short-term results, you may want to educate artisan children about painting as an investment in the future.

Now the protective shoes for adventurers sell only by emphasizing functionality, but in the future they will also add design and so on.

Although I personally like the story of T-shaped Ford, the first mass produced vehicle in automotive manufacturing, which stubbornly pierced black monochrome paint as an obstacle to mass production, it is desirable that color beliefs and the like increase after guaranteeing mass productivity.

Sarah also seems to like her own red shoes.

"Right. A lot of kids in and out seem smart, and I'm sure they'll be able to do it."

Sarah seems to have a favorite for kids who are here to help lately and is often adorable.

Do you recall the siblings you have left in the countryside of your hometown?

The system of artisan wives coming to help continues as guardian shoes continue to increase significantly.

It was the system provisionally adopted at the time of the production of the Cardinal's shoes, so I thought of stopping them in view of their burdens, but when I say that, I am greatly opposed to the craftsmen and wives who are the parties.

I don't think it's a great deal of money to pay.

"I always want to come because the rice is delicious"

And the children who come to help in the morning say,

I had a little resistance to having my children labor with the feeling of the original world, but since it was about two hours in the morning and nutrition would improve, I decided to continue thinking it was a feeding meal to the community.

I guess it's also gratifying for the artisans' families that they can save money on firewood in the morning.

There are too many sources of heat in Leather Street for processing and other business uses, and the fact that freshly made and warm rice can be eaten in the morning also means that hygiene problems such as food poisoning and the risk of cooking and injuring in the dark at hand can be avoided.

Besides, the rice eaten by a lot of people who work the same way is delicious indeed.

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After much thought, I decided to recruit an adventurer who could paint in the Adventurers Guild.

That said, I don't think I can suddenly draw a finished product.

It's like a little bounty contest, where you paste the Baron's painting as a sample, divide the periods, and pay the prize to the adventurer who could best model it.

Since the proxy was unacceptable, he decided to offer the prize of two large copper coins to those who were best at it in ten days, provided that the tools were lent but painted within the Adventurer's Guild.

When it comes to two big copper coins, it's a prize to beat a little goblin's nest.

A lot of adventurers pushed me to the guild reception to get a request, saying that there was no armor, no armor drain, and that I could only do it by myself, and that I could borrow my painting tools.

Especially many were rushing adventurers anxious to arm themselves, who seemed to want to offer a generous bounty to lead to the enrichment of weapons and protective equipment.

Days watching finished parchment while refilling frequently at the request of the Alliance to "please refill the tools".

The majority of paintings were eye-catching to several of the standards of admittedly hard work...