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Thread: Help required for my first map making project!

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    Help Help required for my first map making project!

    Hi everyone!

    This is the first map I ever made. It is the first region (of ~10) of a mega campaign I am creating on a Pathfinder forum role-play setting.

    I used a few tutorials to create it, as I have absolutely no past history with arts, especially map making. I wanted to post it here as I feel there's a LOT that should be improved with the map, and I am eager to have a few comments, as only my wife has seen it until now.

    Questions and comments I have for you guys :
    - Do you see the cities well enough? Should I make them more «special» ?
    - I feel the desert in the north is rather ugly, I tried to implement some vegetation, but I feel it doesn't quite fit. How should I improve it?
    - The names are all in french, but still, they are probably easy to guess for someone who only reads english... (Forêt = Forest, the name which is onto the forest-like spot...)
    - Should I be adding more rivers?
    - What can I put where there's nothing but land? Like... more forests? or... more mountains? more lakes? I don't really quite know how to «fill» empty spots.
    - Many cities and villages don't have names and boundaries, they will came later :-)

    LEANDRAS3.1.jpg

    Software used: Photoshop CS6.
    For the mountains, forests and cities, I used SR_Sketchy-Cartography_v2 from Deviant Art

    For the title, I used Celtic_Brushes_by_Lavica_Photoshop

    For the clouds, I used Clouds_Brushes_by_rubina119

  2. #2
    Software Dev/Rep Hai-Etlik's Avatar
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    Envelope deformation is not a good way to do curved labels. As it distorts the letters. You need to use a "text along path" tool. You should also generally increase the spacing of letters at least a bit for curved labels. Often it's a good idea to use spacing to stretch the label out to indicate the extent of the feature.

    Fancy, ornate fonts make for bad labels. Keep it simple and legible.

    Rivers don't generally behave the way yours do. The basic rule of rivers is that for any point, there is one route that's most downhill. So rivers merge together. There are exceptions in special situations, but most are quite small compared to the overall river system (anabranches and river deltas) and those that aren't are very unusual, geologically short lived, and require special situations. Artificial rivers (canals, magic, etc) may break these rules, but they require a reason and ongoing maintenance so you should be aware of when you are doing this.

    You seem to be trying to maintain a constant visual density across the map. This should be avoided. It makes for cluttered, hard to read, and unbelievable maps. The arrangement of interesting things in space is not usually uniform. Some areas have more stuff than others. You need to let the map have a background in order for the foreground to stand out. So moderate your use of textures and patterns, particularly if they aren't representing anything, avoid compressing all your colours into the mid tones, and accept that some areas need to be crowded while others need to be sparse in order for a map to look real.

    Try to think about climate, wet climates give you forests, where it's not wet enough for forests, you get grassland or scrubland, and where it's not wet enough for that you get desert. Human activity can remove forests, but this tends to be unstable (For instance, Europe would slowly revert to being largely forest if not for human activity)

    Wetlands are limited in how big they can be. Avoid really enormous swamps unless you have magic backing it up. They necessarily have to be flat and exactly aligned with the water table. They tend to be dense terrain so they don't need to be particularly large in order to be significant to the game/story.

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    Thank you for your quick answer Hai-Etlik! I was actually expecting these comments, but don't really know what to make of it really

    Quote Originally Posted by Hai-Etlik View Post
    Envelope deformation is not a good way to do curved labels. As it distorts the letters. You need to use a "text along path" tool. You should also generally increase the spacing of letters at least a bit for curved labels. Often it's a good idea to use spacing to stretch the label out to indicate the extent of the feature.

    Fancy, ornate fonts make for bad labels. Keep it simple and legible.
    So I should only use like, Times New Roman, or similar fonts, without texture and without «Outer Glow»?

    Quote Originally Posted by Hai-Etlik View Post
    Rivers don't generally behave the way yours do. The basic rule of rivers is that for any point, there is one route that's most downhill. So rivers merge together. There are exceptions in special situations, but most are quite small compared to the overall river system (anabranches and river deltas) and those that aren't are very unusual, geologically short lived, and require special situations. Artificial rivers (canals, magic, etc) may break these rules, but they require a reason and ongoing maintenance so you should be aware of when you are doing this.
    I think I understand what you are trying to say. I made a very long story for the region first, and tried to put everything that is in the story into an image. This is the result. The whole campaign setting can be found here (in french).

    To make a very quick english summary, this region has been slowly flooded twice. It is a very large magical swamp. The Maelstrom at the center is the desperate solution of an alliance of powerful mages to "suck up" the water of the land by constantly magically draining the water in the center (which is then directed back into the Gulf of Dewborn, named after the archdruid they made a pact with to create that delicate balance).

    However you are quite right, I don't really know how rivers should behave, I will try to rearrange them by looking at some other maps found here perhaps... My goal is to make the Maelstrom (in the middle of the map) the centerpiece of which everything "water" (rivers mostly) begins or ends. Also, I need a lot of "chaotic rivers" since there is a confederacy of river pirates (who also helped in the creation of the maelstrom, in their own way).

    Quote Originally Posted by Hai-Etlik View Post
    You seem to be trying to maintain a constant visual density across the map. This should be avoided. It makes for cluttered, hard to read, and unbelievable maps. The arrangement of interesting things in space is not usually uniform. Some areas have more stuff than others. You need to let the map have a background in order for the foreground to stand out. So moderate your use of textures and patterns, particularly if they aren't representing anything, avoid compressing all your colours into the mid tones, and accept that some areas need to be crowded while others need to be sparse in order for a map to look real.
    I think I understand what you're trying to say. However I have so many things to put inside that map. I suppose I could (or should) create more "little maps" instead of a giant one, to represent the first chapter of my campaign? This way, I would be able to put "less constant visual density".

    And when you say I should moderate my use of textures and patterns, are you talking about the water and the land? Should I just put them "clear blue" and "clear tan" without any textures?

    I might be having a hard time still trying to translate my ideas into an image. Guess I still have a long haul to go.

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    Software Dev/Rep Hai-Etlik's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Philtros View Post
    So I should only use like, Times New Roman, or similar fonts, without texture and without «Outer Glow»?
    You don't have to be too austere, but you should think about legibility first. A typeface can have character without being ornate and hard to read. Text halos are a viable technique but you should be careful as they have a very definite "done with a computer" look about them, and you should try to keep them as subtle as possible. It's also a good idea to be austere about colour use in labels. Plain black is usually best. Size, capitalization, slant, italics, and underlining are more commonly used for distinguishing labels.

    I can't recommend Positioning Names on Maps enough in terms of advice on labelling.


    Quote Originally Posted by Philtros View Post
    I think I understand what you are trying to say. I made a very long story for the region first, and tried to put everything that is in the story into an image. This is the result. The whole campaign setting can be found here (in french).

    To make a very quick english summary, this region has been slowly flooded twice. It is a very large magical swamp. The Maelstrom at the center is the desperate solution of an alliance of powerful mages to "suck up" the water of the land by constantly magically draining the water in the center (which is then directed back into the Gulf of Dewborn, named after the archdruid they made a pact with to create that delicate balance).

    However you are quite right, I don't really know how rivers should behave, I will try to rearrange them by looking at some other maps found here perhaps... My goal is to make the Maelstrom (in the middle of the map) the centerpiece of which everything "water" (rivers mostly) begins or ends. Also, I need a lot of "chaotic rivers" since there is a confederacy of river pirates (who also helped in the creation of the maelstrom, in their own way).
    OK so think about how that magic works. I imagine its sort of like changing the gravity so the centre of the map is the bottom of a bowl (even if it's really the top of a mountain), or with that outlet, it might be sort of a half funnel shape. All the water then flows "down" through the system the same way it would otherwise, except that 'downhill' is different. This might be a general change to gravity (not that a fantasy setting would necessarily call it that), but if it affects just water ("down" for water is different from "down" for everything else) you would get some strange effects like the weight of a boat on it is pulling it "upstream" or a pendulum full of water pulling to the side (this might be used as a navigational tool, much like a compass) The "only water" version also raises the question of what water counts (most of the mass of a person is water)

    It is really massive magic so it can explain all kinds of oddities. It is worth thinking about those oddities though.


    Quote Originally Posted by Philtros View Post
    I think I understand what you're trying to say. However I have so many things to put inside that map. I suppose I could (or should) create more "little maps" instead of a giant one, to represent the first chapter of my campaign? This way, I would be able to put "less constant visual density".

    And when you say I should moderate my use of textures and patterns, are you talking about the water and the land? Should I just put them "clear blue" and "clear tan" without any textures?
    If the map is meant to look like something created IN the setting then elves and dwarves don't generally have Adobe Photoshop. Texture is going to be an unwanted byproduct of the medium (Paper, parchment, cloth, ink, paint, etc) You need to have an idea of the media, and select textures that match. You'll probably have one general texture from the substrate, which will probably be as minimally textured and as white as the in character cartographer can acquire. You've got wildly different textures all over the place and in many places it's quite harsh like the ocean. Using up a lot of contrast between light and dark inside a texture leaves you a lot less for things like making labels on top of that texture clearly legible. Having your background colours solidly in the middle in terms of brightness also leaves you a lot less room to build contrast. Natural media like inks and paints can give some texture as well, but again, it's going to be something the cartographer would be trying to control.

    You've also got forest just sort of sprinkled all over. Forests grow where there's enough water for trees and it isn't too cold. If you have that, you should pretty much have forest of some sort or another unless the forest has been removed and prevented from regrowing (such as human activity) That means that if there aren't humans (or whatever) near bay, and it isn't too cold or too dry, you should probably have forest. Where there are people who have figured out agriculture or herding, they generally clear all nearby forest if given the chance. It isn't a simple matter of either trees or people, but your forests would be more believable if they looked like they had some relation to the climate (trees give way to grassland near the desert) and population (dense forests where there are no cities, gaps near cities, and just a few minor woods in areas with significant populations). If you need a gap, you can put a gap somewhere, and if you need a forest, you can put one, but overall, its good to think about the overall distribution.

    I'm not personally familiar with Pathfinder but it's my understanding it's pretty much the same kind of dungeon crawling, orc slaying, gonzo adventure game as D&D. As such you can wave your hands and toss in whatever craziness you want and it will "make sense" in the context of the game. Looping rivers and evenly distributed splotches of forest could work just fine.

    PS:

    I thought maybe an explanation for your complex, looping array of rivers might be that they are magically maintained canals. If the magic is manipulating how water flows that could massively reduce the costs of maintaining navigational canals (locks, dredging, maintaining water levels, etc) Piracy still seems impractical but if some canals were abandoned, but still maintained by the magic, they might explain how the pirates could hide.

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