+Da Beast Posted October 19, 2009 Share Posted October 19, 2009 (edited) I was lookig on line for celtic compass runes eg North ewst south east and even NNE NNW ECT i know that for ruins the compass berings are Water Earth Fire and Ice, but the only ruins that i seen to be able to find are the letters. so i was wandering if you just spell out the words in the ruins or if there were ruins that were specific to earth fire and water Edited October 19, 2009 by TheBeast420 Quote Link to comment
+Minimike2 Posted October 19, 2009 Share Posted October 19, 2009 Ruins = runes? I think you are looking for 'symbols.' Sorry, I don't have any. Quote Link to comment
+bittsen Posted October 19, 2009 Share Posted October 19, 2009 (edited) Edited October 19, 2009 by bittsen Quote Link to comment
+larryc43230 Posted October 19, 2009 Share Posted October 19, 2009 (edited) If it hasn't been done already, someone needs to turn that into a geocoin! Edited to add: With the artist's permission, of course. --Larry Edited October 19, 2009 by larryc43230 Quote Link to comment
Tahosa and Sons Posted October 19, 2009 Share Posted October 19, 2009 (edited) Bittsen - That artwork is real cool, just what my Norwegian Wife likes. Especially since it its Viking Art. I've never seen anything about Celtic compasses and stuff like that will have to do some research. Maybe the OP could be more precise as to what the search is for. Just did a quick search on Google and this is what I found and there are more sites out there. Edited October 19, 2009 by Tahosa and Sons Quote Link to comment
+Da Beast Posted October 19, 2009 Author Share Posted October 19, 2009 Bittsen - That artwork is real cool, just what my Norwegian Wife likes. Especially since it its Viking Art. I've never seen anything about Celtic compasses and stuff like that will have to do some research. Maybe the OP could be more precise as to what the search is for. Just did a quick search on Google and this is what I found and there are more sites out there. i have a eight point Celtic not compass that i am going to make a coin out of, and am wanting to put the eight bearing points on and would like to put them on in Celtic rune form PS i have done a bit of searching so far and the best so far is that for the runes and the way that the old Celtics did it was to use elements roe them EG North=air West=water South=earth East=fire but was also wanting the NNW NNE SSE SSW positions to the only runes that i can find (with out looking at a million pages) are the alphabet i really like that disk pic dose anyone know if the art is original from the artist or if it is a representation of real viking runes Quote Link to comment
+bittsen Posted October 19, 2009 Share Posted October 19, 2009 Bittsen - That artwork is real cool, just what my Norwegian Wife likes. Especially since it its Viking Art. I've never seen anything about Celtic compasses and stuff like that will have to do some research. Maybe the OP could be more precise as to what the search is for. Just did a quick search on Google and this is what I found and there are more sites out there. i have a eight point Celtic not compass that i am going to make a coin out of, and am wanting to put the eight bearing points on and would like to put them on in Celtic rune form PS i have done a bit of searching so far and the best so far is that for the runes and the way that the old Celtics did it was to use elements roe them EG North=air West=water South=earth East=fire but was also wanting the NNW NNE SSE SSW positions to the only runes that i can find (with out looking at a million pages) are the alphabet i really like that disk pic dose anyone know if the art is original from the artist or if it is a representation of real viking runes From what I read while getting thos pictures, it is an accurate representation of an actual viking compase. The iolite in the top picture was to represent how the vikings added a real piece of iolite to their compass because it would somehow change colors depending on which way it was oriented. Quote Link to comment
+Da Beast Posted October 19, 2009 Author Share Posted October 19, 2009 From what I read while getting thos pictures, it is an accurate representation of an actual viking compase. The iolite in the top picture was to represent how the vikings added a real piece of iolite to their compass because it would somehow change colors depending on which way it was oriented. cool so i can use the design as long as i draw it out my self i just might use those bearing points but i still going to look for celtic points ( more because of my celtic roots) Quote Link to comment
+bittsen Posted October 19, 2009 Share Posted October 19, 2009 From what I read while getting thos pictures, it is an accurate representation of an actual viking compase. The iolite in the top picture was to represent how the vikings added a real piece of iolite to their compass because it would somehow change colors depending on which way it was oriented. cool so i can use the design as long as i draw it out my self i just might use those bearing points but i still going to look for celtic points ( more because of my celtic roots) As long as you are not profiting from it, yes there would be no reason why you couldn't draw it out yourself. You could probably even profit from it if it was your own work, even if it is a good copying job (as long as it was done with your own hand and not a machine) unless the design, itself, is copyrighted. Quote Link to comment
+Castle Mischief Posted October 19, 2009 Share Posted October 19, 2009 Judging by the copyright symbol on the images, I think it would be in anyone's best interest to at least contact the artist before using the design for a geocoin. But that is one really cool looking design. Quote Link to comment
+Da Beast Posted October 19, 2009 Author Share Posted October 19, 2009 That should not be a problem because I found a few designs almost exact as that, plus i would have to draw it out on my computer to fit the geocoin design. So i would not be copying that pic but getting the basic pattern for the bearing points. When i am done it should be a real cool coin . one side its going to be a eight point Celtic compass knot with a custom coat of arms and on the other side will be the full Celtic compass with the bearings and a real compass in the center colors will probably be antique copper silver and gold Quote Link to comment
+Castle Mischief Posted October 19, 2009 Share Posted October 19, 2009 That should not be a problem because I found a few designs almost exact as that, plus i would have to draw it out on my computer to fit the geocoin design. So i would not be copying that pic but getting the basic pattern for the bearing points. When i am done it should be a real cool coin . one side its going to be a eight point Celtic compass knot with a custom coat of arms and on the other side will be the full Celtic compass with the bearings and a real compass in the center colors will probably be antique copper silver and gold I searched around on the interweb and found a very basic "Viking compass" which appears to be the basis for the artwork by Mr. Berry. That seems to be a pretty public domain design and it looks like it gets alot of usage in tattoo art as well. Now if you incorporated the other elements that he added- the border on the one image, the twisting vines on the other, you might run into problems. Quote Link to comment
+bittsen Posted October 19, 2009 Share Posted October 19, 2009 If you are worried about possible copyright, use this image as your idea template. It's my creation. You are free to use it. Quote Link to comment
+Renegade Knight Posted October 19, 2009 Share Posted October 19, 2009 Duplicating a symbol that predates copyright should not be a problem. Art depecting the symbol would be copyrighted but not the subject matter of the art. More than a few geocoins employ this concept to great effect. Quote Link to comment
Clan Riffster Posted October 19, 2009 Share Posted October 19, 2009 No wonder them wacky Vikings kept getting lost. North and Southeast both use the same symbol! Quote Link to comment
+bittsen Posted October 19, 2009 Share Posted October 19, 2009 No wonder them wacky Vikings kept getting lost. North and Southeast both use the same symbol! How random is that?! I hadn't even noticed. Quote Link to comment
+Da Beast Posted October 20, 2009 Author Share Posted October 20, 2009 thats funny cause i just noticed the same thing as i was drawing it up Quote Link to comment
Keystone Posted October 20, 2009 Share Posted October 20, 2009 I am moving this thread from the Geocaching Topics forum to the Geocoin Discussions forum. Quote Link to comment
+Chrysalides Posted October 20, 2009 Share Posted October 20, 2009 No wonder them wacky Vikings kept getting lost. North and Southeast both use the same symbol! Maybe that's why they managed to sail to America. As I recall, the next European to sail to America also got lost. Quote Link to comment
+Droo Posted October 20, 2009 Share Posted October 20, 2009 If it hasn't been done already, someone needs to turn that into a geocoin! Edited to add: With the artist's permission, of course. --Larry I LOVE THIS COIN..... even if it's not a real geocoin but some facsimile thereof. Quote Link to comment
+Da Beast Posted October 20, 2009 Author Share Posted October 20, 2009 (edited) so this is what i have so far its going to be the back. I am going to put a real compass in the middle this is not for public use at all Edited October 20, 2009 by TheBeast420 Quote Link to comment
+fuzziebear3 Posted October 20, 2009 Share Posted October 20, 2009 That is way cool. I would like it like that as a shaped coin with cutouts! Quote Link to comment
+Minimike2 Posted October 20, 2009 Share Posted October 20, 2009 I would assume each of the symbols would represent something, tangible or not. Perhaps star clusters or peoples. N could be where Odin lives, for example. Quote Link to comment
+Da Beast Posted October 20, 2009 Author Share Posted October 20, 2009 So i was reading some rune forums and as it turns out there seems to be no set runes for the bearing points because there are multipale runes for the elements. what they did was pick runes that sutied the person but they still used the four elements North=Earth West=Water South=Fire East=Air, aparantly there are also astrological signs to North=Agarius West=scorpio South=Leo East=Taurus. And i am planning on having the coin as a star shape the front will have the rune berings with a costom made crest shied in the middle Thanks for all the help form everyone Quote Link to comment
+Da Beast Posted October 20, 2009 Author Share Posted October 20, 2009 I would assume each of the symbols would represent something, tangible or not. Perhaps star clusters or peoples. N could be where Odin lives, for example. ya i imagine they do i am planning on doing some more research on that side i just want to get the coin designed Quote Link to comment
+Castle Mischief Posted October 20, 2009 Share Posted October 20, 2009 If you are worried about possible copyright, use this image as your idea template. It's my creation. You are free to use it. Did you freehand that? That's rather spiffy. Quote Link to comment
+agentmancuso Posted October 20, 2009 Share Posted October 20, 2009 I was lookig on line for celtic compass runes eg North ewst south east and even NNE NNW ECT i know that for ruins the compass berings are Water Earth Fire and Ice, but the only ruins that i seen to be able to find are the letters. so i was wandering if you just spell out the words in the ruins or if there were ruins that were specific to earth fire and water The designs above all look great, but the basic idea is a bit wonky; there's no such thing as Celtic 'runes'. Runes are a Norse form of writing (i.e. from Scandinavia) for carving into wood or stone. The comparable Celtic script for carving was called Ogham, and is completely unrelated. Quote Link to comment
+Minimike2 Posted October 20, 2009 Share Posted October 20, 2009 BTW N and SE are not the same. Look at the crossmarks, they are different thicknesses. Navigators, like any tradesman, develop their own jargon. This is to disquise the arcane secrets of thier trade. If they used common language/symbols, anyone else could do the job and the navigator wouldn't make any money. Quote Link to comment
+bittsen Posted October 21, 2009 Share Posted October 21, 2009 Did you freehand that? That's rather spiffy. Nah, the compass is a scanned drawing. The border was from a free art site that I modified to make the Celtic rope border. Quote Link to comment
+Altix Posted October 21, 2009 Share Posted October 21, 2009 There is already a coin showing exactly the same symbols on one side: 1. Geocaching Proving Trail Michael Quote Link to comment
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