Since I realized while I was writing the tut that it could be used to create political maps (something I don't often draw), I decided to create one as an example.
Crystal tutorial political style.png
How'd you do the forests - some kind of Effects > Noise > Grain over your selection? I'm guessing the water was made by duplicating and then blurring the dark segments, yes? I like what you did there, and I'm curious about the forests.
I'm also curious what your starting grid looked like to end up with this result. There's nothing quite as much fun as watching this beautiful shape appear from a bunch of blobby rectangles, you know what I mean?
Since I realized while I was writing the tut that it could be used to create political maps (something I don't often draw), I decided to create one as an example.
Crystal tutorial political style.png
The forests were just a simple Effects/Noise/Add Noise with no colour saturation. As for the water, I just duplicated the whole layer, then blurred it and decreased opacity.
That political maps is looking really nice! How'd you do the borders? Stylize/Outline?
Oh, and here's my original.
One of those Alternate Earth History people.
Looking great - and good with a tut where you have sort of predefined the areas
have some rep with my +8 mace of nice repping
regs tilt
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Euio -
Yep - I used outline selection because for some reason outline opbject wasn't working for me - probably needs to be a single thing on a transparent background. And there's another plugin that has a bunch of text effects where you can write them on curves and whatnot.
I'm curious to see what would've happened on yours if you had just stuck to rectangles in the original - my first impression is that what you have here would have been too detailed. But obviously it worked out pretty well!
Tilt - Many thanks! Yep, the idea was to have something that would make me a map with a little more control over where things end up. The render-clouds options always look good, but they sort of dictate where your land and water will go, and if I have other ideas about what I want, this technique will let me use them.
I'm wondering if there's a way I can use this to build river systems, too. Those outlines just look *right*, you know?