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Project Qardence: A Guide to Harmonic Construction

Welcome to Qardence, a system using MangoTrain's Quards system for translating visual geometry into sonic identity. These tiles are printed on premium qardstock, ensuring that your compositions have both physical and musical weight.

By arranging these hexagonal units, you aren't just playing a game; you are practicing Qardination – the art of mapping “hexture” and flow through symbolic alignment.

The Qardstock Anatomy

Before you begin your first “Compositional Cast,” familiarize yourself with the structural “hexture” of your deck:

  • The Ornate (Flow-Glyphs): These represent Legato movements. Their curvy nature suggests a “winding” melody.
  • The Geometric (Point-Glyphs): These represent Staccato movements. Sharp lines and dots suggest rhythmic “stabs.”
  • The Void (Low-Density): Qards with 1 or 0 glyphs represent Roots or Rests.

Degree & Quality Logic

The number of glyphs on a qard determines its Scale Degree, while the color temperature determines the Chord Quality:

Glyph Count Scale Degree Description
1 Tonic (I) The Root / Starting Point
2 Supertonic (ii) The “Passing” tone
3 Mediant (iii) The “Character” (determines Major/Minor)
4 Subdominant (IV) The Bridge
5+ Dominant (V) The Tension
Color Temp Quality Result
Warm (Red/Orange/Yellow) Major Happy / Bright / Dominant
Cool (Blue/Green/Purple) Minor Sad / Dark / Melancholy
Neutral (White/Tan/Grey) Power/Sus Open / Ambiguous / Drone

Method 1: The Hexture Map (Structured)

1. The Tonic Root

Place a single 1-Glyph Qard in the center to set your key. Cool for Minor, Warm for Major.

2. Edge-Matching Resonance

  • Flat-to-Flat: A flush connection indicates a Consonant interval (a 3rd or a 5th).
  • Point-to-Point: Touching only at the vertex indicates a Dissonant interval (a 2nd or 7th).
   Flat-to-Flat (Consonant)       Point-to-Point (Dissonant)
        ___   ___   ___                ___
       / 1 \ / 3 \ / 5 \              / 2 \
       \___/ \___/ \___/              \___/
                                           \
                                            \___   ___
                                            / 1 \ / 7 \
                                            \___/ \___/

Consonant Path (Flat-to-Flat): Dissonant Path (Point-to-Point):

3. Color Theory Chordal Shift

  • Monochromatic Layers: Stacking same-colored qards creates an inversion or harmonic depth within the same chord.
  • Chromatic Clashes: Placing opposing colors (e.g., Red vs. Blue) signals a modulation.
   Monochromatic (Layered)        Chromatic Clash (Modulation)
          ___                               ___         ___
         / 3 \                             / 1 \       / 1 \
         \___/                             \___/       \___/
           |                               (Red)  >>   (Blu)
          ___                                C           Eb
         / 1 \                             Major        Minor
         \___/

Monochromatic Layering: Chromatic Clash (Modulation):

Example Constraints (Gamified Qardination)

  • The Hive Mind: Build a progression where every qard touches at least three others. This forces a “Choral” sound where notes must overlap and sustain.
         ___
     ___/ Q \___
    / Q \___/ Q \
    \___/ Q \___/
    / Q \___/ Q \
    \___/ Q \___/
        \___/
  • The Spectrum Run: Start with the darkest qard in your hand and end with the lightest. You must bridge the tonal gap using only 5 qards.
  [Black] -- [Deep Blue] -- [Grey] -- [Tan] -- [White]
  • The Symmetrical Butterfly: Build a visually mirrored “winged” pattern. Play the left wing, the body (rest), then the right wing (the reverse).
      (LEFT WING)     (BODY)     (RIGHT WING)
       ___   ___        ___        ___   ___
      / 5 \ / 3 \      / 1 \      / 3 \ / 5 \
      \___/ \___/      \___/      \___/ \___/
          \ /            |            \ /
         ( 2 )         (REST)        ( 2 )
          / \            |            / \
    Legato Flight      Chord     Staccato Flutter

Symmetrical Butterfly (Gamified): v


Method 2: Aleatoric Qardination (The Random Cast)

1. The Gravity Drop

Hold a handful of qards 12 inches above the table and release them simultaneously. Do not adjust them; the resulting “hexture” on the wood grain is your musical score.

2. Reading the Spatial Score

  • The Pile-Up: Overlapping qards are played as a Cluster Chord.
  • The Loners: A qard that flew far away from the group is a Solo Outlier (play at a high or low octave).
  • The Orientation: If a glyph is upside down relative to your position, play that degree as a Flat or Minor. If right-side up, play it Major.

3. Bridging the Gaps

Look at the empty spaces between the qardstock. These are your Rests. A wide gap means a long silence; a narrow gap means a breathy pause.

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