Imagemaker
Mojo's layout looks great to me. We could go crazy being accurate about plumbing structure, items used (no washcloth, no bathmat, no nailbrush yet), and how precisely the order of positions best fits the tub shape. (Having the drain halfway up the side is rather strange, but in my tub, the overflow drain is there, so it IS feasible.)
I'm all for the most practical combination of factors. I say keep the design focused on a balance between key points of the positions and imagery that makes sense. (See thread on spread design--discussion last week, I think).
And as always, any user should modify the spread to fit a specific need. If you want it to be a long leisurely bath with bubbles, a backscratcher, and handmaidens with champagne and grapes (beer and pizza?), go for it.
If the bath is a 5 min. quick reading for maximum efficiency (a shallow tubfill for water saving and quick washing), then the spread won't have bubbles or the ducky.
You know my philosophy--modify the tool to fit your needs and style.
I'm all for the most practical combination of factors. I say keep the design focused on a balance between key points of the positions and imagery that makes sense. (See thread on spread design--discussion last week, I think).
And as always, any user should modify the spread to fit a specific need. If you want it to be a long leisurely bath with bubbles, a backscratcher, and handmaidens with champagne and grapes (beer and pizza?), go for it.
If the bath is a 5 min. quick reading for maximum efficiency (a shallow tubfill for water saving and quick washing), then the spread won't have bubbles or the ducky.
You know my philosophy--modify the tool to fit your needs and style.