Originally Posted by
Spiderheart
Firstly, I would say a display tablet is best for a beginner, because it feels more like a piece of paper, so the learning curve is smaller. I know they're more expensive, but XP Pen and Huion are brands that have been recommended to me by the animation professor at my school.
Secondly, the first thing to know is that mountains always follow the line of a tectonic plate. They never intersect or meet at angles, therefore (Tolkien's map always drove me bonkers because of this).
Rivers don't intersect either--when two rivers meet up, they join together. And I'm not from a place with rivers (I'm from the desert) so I had to have someone tell me that rivers also never split apart, they start in mountains all tiny and gradually join together into bigger and bigger rivers until they drain into the sea or a lake.
You've placed all your settlements wonderfully--people settle by rivers and other sources of water is a good rule of thumb, because you can move food around but you can't move the water around.
I'm not sure if I'm reading this right, but the orangey parts are deserts right? Deserts tend to develop on the 'rain shadow' side of a mountain range, and the other side of those mountains tends to be foresty. Wetland (also called: swamp, bog, fen, marsh, bayou--these all mean slightly different kinds of wetland) tends to show up in flat land at the end of a river, such as the Mississippi delta.
(If you're interested in more details on these different habitats let me know--I am a big ol' eco-system nerd I loooooove infodumping about that stuff!)
This is a great first map--you've paid attention to all the right elements and made sure they're all here, that's great! And they're all put together very thoughtfully too.