Brick Floor - View 1
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Starter Dungeon Kit

Brick Floor

Clean, stacked brickwork texture for manors, city basements, guild halls, and well-built stone structures. Perfect for polished interiors, engineered corridors, and places that feel maintained—not forgotten.

Brick floor gives your maps a deliberate, built-by-hands look—more “engineered” than rough caverns or ancient rubble. Use it for civilized stonework: institutions, estates, and underground spaces that are still in use.

Usage Tips

  • Use it to signal safety (or authority): clean brickwork reads as maintained, patrolled, and possibly trapped.
  • Pair with tile floors for upscale interiors, or mix with stone floor for utilitarian corridors.
  • Frame key thresholds with a large door to emphasize guarded entrances, vaults, or secure rooms.
  • Add interaction points like a lever to hint at mechanisms, gated passages, or hidden control rooms.

Great for: guild halls, city basements, sewer junction rooms, vault antechambers, and manor underlevels.

Perfect For:

  • Map making and dungeon design
  • Campaign planning and world building
  • Creative journaling and art projects
  • floor
  • brick
  • structure
  • interior
  • city
  • texture

Mix & Match Tips

Unlock the full potential of your stamps by combining them creatively

1

Layering & Detail Passes

Sketch your big shapes first (rooms, walls, terrain), then do a second pass for details like doors, props, and hazards. Light pencil lines under the stencil help keep everything aligned.

2

Rotate & Mirror

Rotate stencils to vary textures and break repetition—great for stone, wood, and rubble. Flipping the stencil (when possible) can create fresh angles for corridors, debris, and scatter.

3

Line Weight & Shading

Use a fine liner for clean edges, then add heavier outlines or quick hatching for emphasis. A soft pencil or gray marker through the stencil can suggest shadow, difficult terrain, or elevation.

4

Tileable Patterns

Repeat floor and wall segments to quickly fill larger areas. Work in a grid, keep consistent spacing, and periodically swap orientation so big rooms feel hand-drawn, not copy-pasted.

Related Stencils

Complete your collection with these complementary designs