Hi
Errispa V1.gif
A rotating globe like this one can be created surprisingly quickly by exporting the world of your choice from Fractal Terrains 3 as a Spin View Image Sequence, and then by using GIMP to compile the images as layers ready for export as an animated gif file.
I am not an FT expert, and know relatively little about how it works or what to do if things don't come out as you expect them to, but I found this tutorial (I suspect the tutorial is by Waldronate but can't find the original thread for it), extremely useful in generating believable and attractive land shapes. The only thing I did differently to the tutorial was that I set the size of the world to about 2x the size of the Earth.
PART I - Fractal Terrains Export
- Create your FT3 world, and when you are happy with it click File/Export World/Spin View Image Sequence
Save spin view sequence files.jpg
- Make sure the background colour is set to black, and that the 'Appear to be Shaded' box is ticked.
- Set the image size to 250, and the number of frames to 200. (Try to keep the size of the image down. The reason for this will become clear when you carry out the second part of the exercise in GIMP. The number of frames affects how smoothly the globe will rotate, but it can be adjusted up or down according to taste)
- Give the file a name and save the images in a folder of their own. (Using a separate folder makes the second bit of the process easier to manage, since there will be 200 small images produced when you click the save button)
- Save your FT3 world if you wish to keep it, and close FT3
PART II - GIMP
- Open GIMP
- Use the 'File/Open as layers...' menu and go to the folder where you just saved your Spin View Image Sequence.
- Select all 200 images by clicking the first one, then holding down SHIFT and clicking the last one.
- The images will now load themselves into GIMP in the correct sequence - one image per layer.
- Once the images have loaded you can either save your GIMP file, or not. The GIMP file is not the end product here, and can easily be recreated if necessary at any time.
- Click File/Export as... and opt for a gif export.
- Set up the following options (which appear the moment you click save)
Export image as gif.JPG
Hit 'Export', and that's all there is to it