Call of the Wild reserve guide

Layton Lake District: keep the place with the trophy.

A reserve is part of the record. This guide explains how Layton Lake District harvest details carry through into a personalised Call of the Wild poster.

Layton Lake District topographic map
The Wild Register poster builder

What belongs on a reserve record

Whitetail deer, black bear, moose and Rocky Mountain elk are all natural poster stories for this reserve.

Keep the original reserve name in the editable details. It is used in the lower location line and informs the map texture behind the record, giving the finished print a clear connection to the hunt.

A better reserve-led poster

Map

Topographic material

A selected reserve gives the artwork a location-specific visual layer.

Logo

Reserve identity

The location mark is carried into the bottom section of the poster.

Editable

Final check

OCR starts the process. You confirm the reserve before the proof is saved.

Start with the full harvest screen

Keep the animal, reserve label and detail panels visible in the upload. A clean original screenshot gives the reader the best chance of matching the reserve on the first pass.

If the result is wrong, select the correct reserve in the form. The preview will update before you continue to the print options.

Common questions

Will a Layton Lake District poster use a map?

Yes. Once the reserve is selected, the poster uses its matching topographic material as part of the record design.

Can I correct the reserve after uploading?

Yes. The reserve field is editable before you select a finish or add the print to the basket.