This is Oghura, the desert realm of a lizardlike people known as the suhurrak. The map was for the February 2021 Guild Challenge.
Oghura_210226.jpg
In this world, magic is present primarily by means of enchanting objects to change or enhance physical properties. A water flask will carry more than it should, a wheel will keep rolling long after it's been pushed, an airship will lift more weight than expected -- the Oghurans even sometimes carry enchanted "rifles" that accelerate projectiles. Oghuran caravans traverse the desert seasonally, and their wardens travel on winged mounts to safeguard the people. The desert was once a lush forest; an extension of the jungle empire of Kalatchal, which is ruled by capricious avian creatures with a penchant for enchanting their own bodies (a practice considered repulsive by other peoples). As the climate of this world shifted, the lands west of the Red Mountains fell into a rain shadow and the forests died out, leaving only barren desert with the occasional oasis. The Kalatchalis retreated east of the mountains, leaving the desert for the nomadic suhurrak to move into from the north. Because of this history, the Kalatchali despise Oghurans and sometimes launch attacks. To the south are human realms, with which the Oghurans maintain trade relationships -- despite the continued encroachment of the desert claiming the city of Biran Tol.
All the linework here is hand-drawn with Copic Multiliners, then I photographed it and colored in Photoshop. I was trying to mimic some of the style from Marc Moreau's Southern Wild Lands, especially with way hatching defines the shape of some of the landscape. Of course, I realized later that I should have been looking at his map more often during my process, because afterward when I look back I see that I missed a number of features from that map. I'm still very happy with the way the hatching came out, the desert textures, and the color palette. If I could go back and change things, I would entirely redo the mountains bordering Oghura on the west to have more varied shapes and see more of the ridgelines; I'd also either delete the statues (or, maybe, try them more carefully...) and work more consistently on the lettering.