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Thread: Rheia: one final try at ground-up worldbuilding

  1. #11
    Guild Journeyer Tiluchi's Avatar
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    Just a quick update since it's been a while- finished rough elevation for almost all major landmasses! Starting to finally feel more like a proper planet. Just missing the small continent in the far south (which I'm not looking forward to), and the islands (which should be much more fun). Also planning to do a major touch-up of all areas I've finished so far to try and fix some bits where the topography doesn't look right, or doesn't quite fit with the tectonics. But first want to have a rough draft of worldwide topography.

    Rheia.png

  2. #12

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    I absolutely love the detail you have with these, could totally believe that these were maps of real places. Can't wait to see the finished product

  3. #13
    Guild Adept Harrg's Avatar
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    I am very happy to see your progress. I fully support your idea that we need a separate section for nerds who make their own worlds, because. they are often lost in the stream.
    I'm very interested in a technical point, how do you draw the polar regions? I understand you are using vector graphics. Save the process, reproject, and then when you're done and you've inverted the map back, do you draw again with a distorted pencil? Is there a quick way to convert polar caps back and forth while still being able to edit layers in Photoshop or Illustrator?

  4. #14

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    Brilliant, I like seeing the different ways people interpret tectonic environments when they turn them into actual landforms. Especially the way these orogenies seem to flow and meld together like you're pushing a pile of sand. One of my lecturers said that's actually the most realistic way of thinking about it (particularly for continental collision zones)

    Are you thinking of doing bathymetry too? It ended up being an absolute nightmare for me which I'm still not really happy with but maybe someone's found a better way of doing it.

    @Harrg 's point about working on the poles is very valid. Its really hard to get even basic shapes looking right without all the effort of projecting, revectorising, editing, reprojecting and so on. Not sure how a distorted pencil would work.

  5. #15
    Guild Journeyer Tiluchi's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Harrg View Post
    I am very happy to see your progress. I fully support your idea that we need a separate section for nerds who make their own worlds, because. they are often lost in the stream.
    I'm very interested in a technical point, how do you draw the polar regions? I understand you are using vector graphics. Save the process, reproject, and then when you're done and you've inverted the map back, do you draw again with a distorted pencil? Is there a quick way to convert polar caps back and forth while still being able to edit layers in Photoshop or Illustrator?
    Thanks Harrg! Someone with more technological know-how than me should consider setting up a Discord channel for this sort of thing (or maybe just a CG Discord sub-channel?).

    I'm afraid my answer to how polar regions work is rather boring and unsatisfying: I basically just eyeball a topographic map of Earth in an equirectangular projection (I prefer this one from Japan) to get an idea of distortion at the latitudes I'm working at, and then draw my coastlines and topography to reflect the distortion. Once I've made enough progress I upload the map into GPlates for an idea of what it looks like on a sphere, and then adjust the shapes accordingly back in Illustrator. It's definitely an imperfect method and I'm not entirely pleased with how some of my coastlines look near the poles, but I'm not sure what other options there are for vector-based maps. I suppose I could reproject a raster of the map in GProjector, draw the polar areas, re-reproject it, and then trace it in Lightroom, but GProjector only works at up to 7500 x 3750 pixels, while I'm working on a 16000 x 8000 map in Illustrator. At the level of detail I'm working with, that amount of tracing honestly just seems torturous. So for now I'm just doing everything manually, unless anyone has some brilliant technological suggestions.

    Quote Originally Posted by L1qu1dN1trog3n View Post
    Brilliant, I like seeing the different ways people interpret tectonic environments when they turn them into actual landforms. Especially the way these orogenies seem to flow and meld together like you're pushing a pile of sand. One of my lecturers said that's actually the most realistic way of thinking about it (particularly for continental collision zones)

    Are you thinking of doing bathymetry too? It ended up being an absolute nightmare for me which I'm still not really happy with but maybe someone's found a better way of doing it.

    @Harrg 's point about working on the poles is very valid. Its really hard to get even basic shapes looking right without all the effort of projecting, revectorising, editing, reprojecting and so on. Not sure how a distorted pencil would work.
    Thanks Nitro! The "pile of sand" analogy is a good one, and one I'll be thinking about as I refine my topography. I don't love some of my zones where different orogenies meet, but that's a good heuristic to keep in mind, especially when there's no direct Earth analogue I can mimic.

    At some point in the future I might try and do detailed bathymetry (as geology, including geology of the ocean floor is rather important for my overall worldbuilding concept), but I'll be honest it sounds nightmarish to me too- drawing mid-ocean ridges is way less intuitive for me than drawing mountain belts. I'll probably just do a basic sketch once I'm happy with my land topography, as that will be a useful guide for determining ocean currents and human settlement patterns, among other things.

  6. #16
    Guild Journeyer Tiluchi's Avatar
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    Posting an update on my map as I've finally got a first draft of the whole world map! Very happy with how this looks so far, which is good since I've spent probably hundreds of hours over the better part of a year working on this, with almost 32,000 separate paths and almost 700,000 points in Illustrator. I'm honestly surprised my computer was able to handle it without totally crashing.

    Rheia.png

    Now that I have a first draft I plan to go through every continent and make some small-to-medium adjustments to the coastlines and topography based on some issues I've noticed as I work on it. In particular I'm not entirely satisfied with the northeastern continent- the subcontinent recently rifted off to the north looks awkwardly rectangular, and the peninsula to the northeast looks kind of weird too. I'm also weighing whether I should have a back-arc basin on the east coast rather than a high Andes-ish plateau; Nitro pointed out in a different thread that back-arc basins tend to form on the west-dipping subduction zones, and that would be a little more fun from a worldbuilding standpoint as well. On the other hand the oceanic crust subducting there is quite young as the mid-ocean ridge is approaching the subduction zone, and my understanding is that back-arc basins usually form when old, cold crust is being subducted. Not sure if any geology knowers here have thoughts on that.

    Also any other comments, critiques and suggestions on topography and plate tectonics are welcome! Hoping to have this completely finalized before I move on to climates as going back and fixing things after will be a huge pain.

  7. #17
    Professional Artist Naima's Avatar
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    I think it looks absolutely good, the good thing of the approach you took is that by starting with a pregeological position and analying the evolution of continent shapes and positions you could also create , if you have ofc will and time, the intermediate or previous map of the world to identify more precisely the source of possible future ores, the resources like coal , gold, oil and so on ...
    I usually do not make that in my approach but I am planning to study a sysem too for getting that interesting feature work as part of a workflow.
    Btw for drawing the orography of the continents what approach you did use?

  8. #18
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    Your map looks great, I love it, the mountains, the coasts, the colors.

  9. #19
    Guild Journeyer Tiluchi's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Naima View Post
    I think it looks absolutely good, the good thing of the approach you took is that by starting with a pregeological position and analying the evolution of continent shapes and positions you could also create , if you have ofc will and time, the intermediate or previous map of the world to identify more precisely the source of possible future ores, the resources like coal , gold, oil and so on ...
    I usually do not make that in my approach but I am planning to study a sysem too for getting that interesting feature work as part of a workflow.
    Btw for drawing the orography of the continents what approach you did use?
    Thanks Naima! Much appreciated. By orography did you mean figuring out drainage channels and the like? For the most part that was using Earth as a model, and using my general knowledge of which climates tend to go where to guess which areas would have higher precipitation and thus more rivers, estuaries, etc. But I may well change things a little bit and add/remove some rivers once I've finished with climates.

    Quote Originally Posted by dirt View Post
    Your map looks great, I love it, the mountains, the coasts, the colors.
    Thanks dirt!

    Adding another update now, as I've gone through and fixed some things that were bugging me with the topography and overall geography. Also took a stab at some (very) rough bathymetry, which was fun but I don't think I have the patience to fully go for realistic ocean floor topography, at least not at this point. Drawing realistic mid-ocean ridges plus about two thousand seamounts doesn't seem like the best use of my time... Anyway, I'm thrilled to have gotten this far, and it's really starting to look like a real world when I convert it to a globe.

    As always, C&C is welcome, particularly for areas that seem geologicallly dubious! Think this is more than enough for me to start working through climates, but I expect I'll continue to do some minor edits to topography as well.

    Rheia.png

  10. #20
    Professional Artist Naima's Avatar
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    By orography I mean the general mountains shape, generation distribution and overall how the heightmap is done.

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