Very useful and much appreciated tutorial: relied on it almost exclusively to produce this.
Credit for the brushes to StarRaven of deviantart
It's still pretty rough... I haven't really worked the borders into the natural geography well (and the less said about some aspects of where I placed the geography the better...), but I'd still say it's by far the best large map I've ever done. I'll almost certainly be using the techniques this tutorial demonstrates in any large-scale map going forward.
Step 6 on post #5 tells to change the fill to 0% on the layer palette and then add the stroke.
When I do this on P-CS6, the stroke doesn't show (since the fill is 0%, it seems). I've kept the fill to 100% and deleted the color and then stroked, but this let the in-between circles white...
Anyone can help me with this step?
It may be a problem with your stroke (color, thickness, spacing?). Also, make sure you are setting Fill and not Opacity to 0%. When Opacity is 0%, the Blending Options (such as Stroke, Glow, etc) are also 0. When the Fill is 0%, the Blending Options still show normally.
I believe I found what I was doing... there's Edit>Stroke and Layer Style>Stroke, right? I used the Edit>Stroke and ss I understand it, they are different "types" of stroke...first should stroke the selection (and when I get Fill to 0% doesn't show) while the other supposedly should be the layer mask or something like that?
Edit>Stroke will stroke the line you have selected and nothing else. It makes a line that is just a line thereafter, so if you set Fill or Opacity to zero, it will not show.
Layer Style>Stroke will make a permanent border on the non-transparent part of the layer. If you modify the layer, the stroke automatically modifies with it. For that, setting the layer content to Fill=0 will still show the stroke, but setting it to Opacity=0 will hide the stroke as well.
Ah, yeah...that's what I was wondering. Thanks for claryfying it. Too bad I can't Rep you yet QQ
Here's how the test ended...
http://www.cartographersguild.com/sh...295#post266295
This guide would work for a map with more intense colours? It looks awesome in this pastel painting but how would it be in a vivid colour map?