Originally Posted by
Yrda
And now I'm wondering if there are standard color palettes with precise color values you should use if you want to draw a realistic map.
Probably! There are probably recommendations as well, but I like to do things my own way. Also, I'm pretty bad with colors (although you're not the first person who praises my color palette for this map, so it's pretty confusing for me!) and I like to start from scratch as training. Long story short: I spent a long time adjusting colors back and forth, imitating what I'd been seeing for actual maps. I also took inspiration from another map I made in August 2018 whose color palette I improved.
Originally Posted by
Yrda
Then I'm wondering - where is this place you've mapped here? As a roleplayer and consumer of fantasy literature, I thought maybe this is a map of an area in a fictional world. But then I saw the svg is hosted on wikimedia commons. You find me irritated. :)
It is a fictional world. ^^ It's mostly bits of ideas for my conworld that I put together on that map; it won't be part of anything bigger but maybe this forum will give me the incentive to finish up the actual full map of my conworld. :D It's hosted in Commons because it's the safest-looking SVG-compatible file host that I know of. It shouldn't be used for personal artworks but I'm a Wikipedia admin so people don't tell me off, but shhh.
Originally Posted by
Yrda
Which software did you use for drawing your map?
I'm an Inkscape aficionada. ^^
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Thanks Kelle! I honestly believe I have a lot of progress to make with colors, but Hell, I gotta find my own style too. :D
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Originally Posted by
Tiana
I'd consider learning more about GIS
I'll certainly keep that in mind!
Originally Posted by
Tiana
I assume you had prior experience doing vector art before trying a map out though!
I always was a fan of the realistic map style. I think it's quite different from fantasy-looking archaic styled maps in the creative process it involves because I'm quite unable to make a map in these styles. And I literally can't draw anything else than maps (that's why the verb “to draw” doesn't fit me in my opinion).
This is like my 6th or 7th “serious” mapmaking project. I've been messing up with Inkscape a lot for 4~5 years, mostly to design banners and logos for my own use, but I wouldn't dare to call it “creation” and I acquired most of my experience with the software over the last 2 years.
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About my conlang. I'm well-known (relatively speaking) in the conlangsphere for my awful romanizations and etymological spellings. :D Strangely enough, it weighs more when someone tells you elsewhere that it should be improved. Ironically, this was already a simplified orthography, with fewer non-English characters and etymological traces. By the way, everything is justified etymologically. The ‹ł› represents a /x/ sound (the spanish jota) with a [ç] allophone (German “ich”) which comes from an etymological /ʁ/ (the French and German R sound) which in turn comes from an etymological /ɫ/ (English dark L). ‹ł› for /ɫ/ is what conservative Polish dialects (that haven't turned it into a /w/ sound) still use. It's also inspired from the Armenian romanization which has ‹ł› for /ʁ/ to this day. My conlang has much worse though: what about ‹bl› for /ɫ/? :D
Okay, I'm driveling. I will definitely make the romanization more English-compatible and I'll get back to you in a couple d---
Oh, look, I've made it already.
Code:
aië/ai
oië/oi
td/t
kg/k
pb/p
cc/c
c/th
ë/i
ii/í
ö/y
yy/ý
ä/a
oh/ó
ah/á
eh/é
ih/í
yh/ý
uh/ú
w/v
ł/h
pl/ł
bl/ł
sz/sh
ś/sh
z/ch
This should change the fully etymological spelling (which, so far, your eyes have been kept safe from) into a reasonable romanization. This should be visible in my signature from now on – only one change made, but it's a final Easter egg because ‹ś› (now ‹sh›) stands for… a regular /s/ sound. ‹s› is /ɕ/. I'm sorry. :( It's etymological. :(
Darn, I hardly know you and you've just changed the æsþetic of a two-year long project in just one message. :D And I'm happy you did!
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Originally Posted by
Tiana
There are a couple of places where the dark lines underneath the text chew it up a bit.
I have to say I have no idea what you're referring to. :o
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Thank you for the tremendous amount of time you put in your feedback!
› Wyn