Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 11 to 20 of 20

Thread: The known lands of Eoberath

  1. #11
    Administrator ChickPea's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2015
    Location
    Sunny Scotland
    Posts
    6,884

    Default

    This is a very attractive piece, though I'm thinking you must have had sore hands from drawing at the end of it!!

    I love that big compass. It really draws the eye and is a great focus of attention. The hatching on the border & title is absolutely gorgeous. I love it! On the labelling, I don't find the labels hard to read, but they don't really stand out when you're zoomed out. Normally that would be something I might comment on, but hey, if that's what the client wants, then you've done a good job!
    "We are the music makers, and we are the dreamers of dreams"

  2. #12
    Professional Artist ThomasR's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2015
    Location
    Angers, France
    Posts
    4,199

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ChickPea View Post
    This is a very attractive piece, though I'm thinking you must have had sore hands from drawing at the end of it!!

    I love that big compass. It really draws the eye and is a great focus of attention. The hatching on the border & title is absolutely gorgeous. I love it! On the labelling, I don't find the labels hard to read, but they don't really stand out when you're zoomed out. Normally that would be something I might comment on, but hey, if that's what the client wants, then you've done a good job!
    Thanks Ruby I have to learn how to do the same job with less details. I'm glad you like the decorative elements, I like them too I'll try to make the labels stand out more in the color version, thanks for the advice.

  3. #13
    Guild Master Facebook Connected - JO -'s Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2016
    Location
    Geneva, Switzerland
    Posts
    2,880

    Default

    As I said : a very good job with the scale and size. At the first glance, everyone can see it's a world map !

  4. #14
    Guild Journeyer Guild Supporter onez's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2015
    Location
    Stockholm, Sweden
    Posts
    182

    Default

    Looks great!
    Can't rep you right now but I will be back.

  5. #15
    Professional Artist mat_r's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2016
    Location
    Germany
    Posts
    127

    Default

    Very nice map, I like it a lot!

    What I found helps a lot mith making small lables stand out/legible (next to choosing an appropriate font) is mainly two things:

    1. paying attention to contrast between background and font color
    2. Avoiding any small high contrast detail (such as line drawing, certain textures, etc.) behind or even near text - if at all possible. Fonts themselves are essentially just an arangement of small high contrast lines. Any detail that fights with that, will just result in a loss of clarity, because the eyes and brain will have a hard time telling the two apart. So for me it is usually a good idea to keep the areas around labels as clean as possible.
    Cartography by Matthias Rothenaicher. Portfolio: Website | DeviantArt

  6. #16

    Default

    Superb. I love the size and shape. The Serpent's Bridge is my favourite story hook. Nicely done.

  7. #17
    Professional Artist ThomasR's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2015
    Location
    Angers, France
    Posts
    4,199

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by - JO - View Post
    As I said : a very good job with the scale and size. At the first glance, everyone can see it's a world map !
    Merci beaucoup Joël

    Quote Originally Posted by onez View Post
    Looks great!
    Can't rep you right now but I will be back.
    Grazie mille Filippo

    Quote Originally Posted by mat_r View Post
    Very nice map, I like it a lot!

    What I found helps a lot mith making small lables stand out/legible (next to choosing an appropriate font) is mainly two things:

    1. paying attention to contrast between background and font color
    2. Avoiding any small high contrast detail (such as line drawing, certain textures, etc.) behind or even near text - if at all possible. Fonts themselves are essentially just an arangement of small high contrast lines. Any detail that fights with that, will just result in a loss of clarity, because the eyes and brain will have a hard time telling the two apart. So for me it is usually a good idea to keep the areas around labels as clean as possible.
    Vielen Dank Matthias and especially for your labeling advice, they'll be put to use, be sure of that I gotta learn to anticipate the labelling issues. It was not possible here as the client sent me the names after the map was done but I guess slightly erasing or hiding some linework details might work.

    Quote Originally Posted by tgraybam View Post
    Superb. I love the size and shape. The Serpent's Bridge is my favourite story hook. Nicely done.
    Thanks a lot tgraybam

  8. #18
    Guild Expert DanielHasenbos's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2015
    Location
    The Netherlands
    Posts
    1,623

    Default

    Finally getting a chance to take a proper look at this map. You've done an outstanding job again, Thomas! The curved hatching looks great, and I love how it comes back in the border, compass and title. And you've done a great job on the labels! I can imagine that being a pain in the @$$, but you've nailed it. The only comment I have is that in the top-left a forest and country label overlap each other..

  9. #19
    Professional Artist Facebook Connected Blaidd Drwg's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Location
    Weert, Netherlands
    Posts
    502

    Default

    Great job, Thomas. Like others have said: that hatch pattern is really gorgeous. I do hope you used a custom pattern for that to avoid repetitive strain injury

    With regards to the labels: I can see how they would be a nightmare. I'm a HUGE fan of putting off doing them, myself In addition to Matthias' labelling advice, I would like to add that a clearer hierarchy between the different types of labels could also help. I sometimes had some trouble distinguishing between the grey labels for the whole region (higher level), and the back ones for areas within that region (lower level), because they are roughly the same size, but the lower level ones (black) stand out more against the high level ones (grey). I don't have a ready-made solution, I'm afraid, but I would try switching the black/grey colours around, or decrease the size of the sub-regions' labels a bit.

  10. #20
    Professional Artist ThomasR's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2015
    Location
    Angers, France
    Posts
    4,199

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by DanielHasenbos View Post
    Finally getting a chance to take a proper look at this map. You've done an outstanding job again, Thomas! The curved hatching looks great, and I love how it comes back in the border, compass and title. And you've done a great job on the labels! I can imagine that being a pain in the @$$, but you've nailed it. The only comment I have is that in the top-left a forest and country label overlap each other..
    Thanks a lot Daniel I had to break the labels into two maps and it wasn't even easy. I see what you mean about the overlapping, they're very (too) close.

    Quote Originally Posted by Blaidd Drwg View Post
    Great job, Thomas. Like others have said: that hatch pattern is really gorgeous. I do hope you used a custom pattern for that to avoid repetitive strain injury

    With regards to the labels: I can see how they would be a nightmare. I'm a HUGE fan of putting off doing them, myself In addition to Matthias' labelling advice, I would like to add that a clearer hierarchy between the different types of labels could also help. I sometimes had some trouble distinguishing between the grey labels for the whole region (higher level), and the back ones for areas within that region (lower level), because they are roughly the same size, but the lower level ones (black) stand out more against the high level ones (grey). I don't have a ready-made solution, I'm afraid, but I would try switching the black/grey colours around, or decrease the size of the sub-regions' labels a bit.
    Thanks Brian I only drew one quarter of the border and used it to get some symmetry. All the other hatched parts are unique It was quite a soothing meditation and not that long once you get the hang of it.
    I see what you mean about the labels. I tried to reverse the grey scale but oceans popped too much and land labels were hard to read. I'm glad the client plans to ask for color, that'll give me more liberty to make them readable.

Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •