Fantasy Cartography with Adobe Photoshop 3


In this episode, we’ll begin adding a forest to our map by creating a custom pattern. For more information, visit www.zombienirvana.com

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| June 22nd, 2010 | Posted in adobe photoshop |

11 Responses to “Fantasy Cartography with Adobe Photoshop 3”

  1. ScriptFire Says:

    I might just buy a tablet :D

  2. ZombieNirvana Says:

    Well, using a Wacom tablet really helps! If you don’t have access to one, though, you might try drawing everything in first with the Pen tool and then Stroking the lines.

  3. ScriptFire Says:

    Great tutorial!
    My hand is really unsteady and i suck at drawing smooth stuffs, you have any tips? except for practice? :P

  4. sakugaaruto Says:

    dude these tutorials are great. are there any tutorials like these for gimp because im using gimp and it’s hard to create the same effects

  5. ZombieNirvana Says:

    I can’t say for sure, but you might check the blend mode for your pattern layer.

  6. BrotherGlenn Says:

    For some reason, when I paint in my tree pattern onto the aged paper, it comes in brown instead of black. It looks really good, actually, but I just don’t know why it’s different than yours because I think I’m following you step by step. When I paint in the trees, why would they be a different color than black? The opacity is at 100%, I worked in grayscale just like you did. I’m confused.

    Thanks a lot for making these videos, they’re great!

  7. PsycoCruser Says:

    Excellent tutorials dude, I’ve learned a lot with this!! It’s amazing how many things the Photoshop 7 can do… And I thought I have seen all with the Macromedia Fireworks…
    Anyway, I have a question: Would it be possible to make an already made map (I used Campaign Cartographer 2) look old, scratched, just like the one you created for this toturial??? You know, with all those cool features the old, fantasy Tolkien maps have…

  8. UndeadCheesecake Says:

    Very clever

  9. ZombieNirvana Says:

    I did mine at 600 DPI; the resolution you want to use for your own pattern will really depend on what resolution you’re making your map at. The maps I create for the podcast are only 150 DPI, since anything higher than that won’t really look any better on the video anyway! I usually make my patterns at a DPI 3 or 4 times that of my original document. Hope that helps!

  10. MacJone Says:

    thanks man, I always wondered how to do tiling :D

    now for some crazy ass sci-fantasy

  11. Sacmanis Says:

    Why is my resolution so poor on the pattern? When I produced the original pattern image, I used 1″ x 1″ with a 1000DPI resolution. I couldn’t see what you used and you didn’t say a number. When I put the pattern on the map document and scale it down, I zoom in and the resolution is extremely poor.