Hi Auscarbone, good to see you around again!
First project app in the Southron realms woo!
I'm very much liking how you plan to continue the style set at Boggs, Dyreden and look forwards to seeing Cracklaw even further towards completion. It'd be amazing if we could have a finished corridor from KL to Wickenden.
Regarding your plans though, I've got some questions and notes.
- I think that your castle could be better placed inland of the road, rather than next to the sea. This'll allow you more freedom to make the castle mount/rocky plug without worrying about coastal erosion. Also it'll seem more like the castle just emerges from the forest, while if it was on the coast it would be much more visible earlier on. I'd place it closer to 8 or north of the current location.
- Considering the sparseness of the population, a simpler roof material than the brown tiles would work better. Dark woods, black stone like Boggs and Dyreden might work better though I know they're further from Poenari's look. Also, do you plan on just having the tower alone, or will there be some other walls/buildings around it?
- I'm not a huge fan of the stone footing on Style B houses. Proper fireplaces with some chimneys are a good idea occasionally too, but sticking more with the all wood look of Boggs might look better on the southern coast. A stoney northern coast and a woody southern coast is a kinda cool difference that sets those regions apart on Cracklaw and gets into the tribalism of the area a bit.
- In regards to smoke holes, you don't need them in every house that has a fire. Thatch is brilliant because its porous enough for the hot smoke to filter out through the roof material. iirc the carbon from the smoke actually helps waterproof the thatch too. So don't go overboard with smoke holes, you don't need them in every single house, though ofc sometimes they look really cool. Again, Boggs is a good example of this. Same goes for simple ovens and furnaces. You don't need to have a chimney in every building with a stone furnace. Neither do you need a chimney on every bread oven. Its also great for making a project look a bit more primitive/underdeveloped and backwatery to not have many chimneys.
- In the no 5 inspiration pics, you've got a double groyne that holds in sand. What are your plans for the flat sandy beach that would be produced by this? Any boat building, repairs etc?
- Karst terrain will be present through the whole project, right? And 8 is the karst window/brown hollow?
Also some things about the terra that'll probably help a little bit is that the "longshore drift", the way sand will be moved along the coast, is probably going eastwards. Slowly along the coast sand will be shifting towards Claw Isle and Dragonstone and that'll only really affect you in that there should be more sand on the eastern side of a bay where it'd get caught and pile up with this slow shift. Remember that a wider beach protects cliffs too, so bigger beach = less ongoing erosion