I might be giving away the farm on this one, since I consider this to be my best style, but since I like to teach and make a tut for just about everything -- I present to you my atlas style. It's not meant to be the end-all be-all but rather an introductory course...where you can take it and adapt and change things as you see fit. I know my tuts tend to be lengthy and sometimes difficult so I'll do my best to help you out with any questions/problems you might have.
Thank you. I feel guilty for downloading this tutorial. It's so great. There are milestones I have overcome in photoshop by reading this. I hope to follow in your foot steps in sharing my best with the guild.
Didn't even know I had an article. Don't feel guilty, man. It's there for you to learn from and maybe one day teach me a thing or two...so have fun with it.
Thanks a lot for your tutorial! There are a couple of things you could do simpler (you don't have to link layers before merging them, for example), but even I learned something new - and I actually teach Photoshop classes... I created a short version of your tutorial for a Digital Painting Class (in German, though) based on your work, so thanks a lot!
I'm a photoshp newbie and I managed to figure it all out and make a very decent map (IMHO).
I even made one change on my own - I moved and copied the mountains sections before applying the lighting and bevel. This seemed to work better as I couldn't figure out how to copy mountains after the lighting+bevel had been applied.
Again - truly impressive stuff. Can't give enough thanks.
Wow. I'm a brand new cartographer and I have so many ideas but am still playing with the building blocks of it all and this tutorial is a dream come true! Thank you so much for sharing it!
Ainsi que je l'ai indiqué à l'auteur de ce tuto sur son profil, j'ai beaucoup apprécié son travail fantastique. Cependant, si vous avez comme moi une version en Français de Photoshop vous allez rapidement vous faire des nœuds au cerveau pour trouver à quoi correspondent les termes utilisés, vu que les traducteurs d'Adobe n'ont pas forcément utilisé les termes les plus pertinents pour nous. Je vous propose donc une traduction de ce tuto. J'ai pris le temps de vérifier chaque terme pour éviter toute erreur. Si cette traduction plaît (n'hésitez pas à me le faire savoir en m'envoyant un message), je pourrais vous en proposer d'autres ultérieurement. Amusez-vous bien !
IN ENGLISH !
Hi to francophone people !
As I wrote to this tutos' author on his profile, I really appreciate his fantastic job. But, if you are using the french version of Photoshop as I do, you'll quicky become nuts on trying to find what matches with the used tems, because of their low pertinence choosed by the adobe's translaters . So I'd like to submitt a translation to you. I took my time to verify each term to find out any mistake. If you like this translation (do not hesitate to send me a message), I will be able to submitt some others, later. Have fun !
This tutorial is fantastic! Thank you very much for sharing your technique in such a clear manner. This is my first attempt at mapmaking and you have made the task much easier
looks great. now i just have to learn photoshop i dont understand how you got the black and white areas for step 7/8. i am using photoshop CS3 and i dont know what tool to use. sorry if its a stupid question but i have never used photoshop before
i just cant figure out step 7/8 . im using photoshop CS3 and i dont really know what tool to use to get that effect. i dont really understand photoshop so any pointers would be appreaciated.
I think it's explained pretty well...click on Edit then choose fill, then scroll down to 50% gray, then set the blend mode of the layer to hard mix - voila, cow spots. Duplicate the ocean layer and then airbrush black or white (on this newly created ocean copy layer) to define the landmasses and oceans. If you still can't get it then post up a screenshot showing layer stack and map.
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