I used virtually this same technique to make the small buildings for this map. It's a great way to lay them down quickly, but I think I went back and hand edited a few of them just to give some extra variety.
This was done in Adobe Illustrator.
I wanted to be able to put down drawings in a quick but realistic fashion.
To this end, I created a animated brush. This brush will "paint" buildings along a path. I set it up to follow the curve with 18 degree image rotations, and it randomly chooses one of four building shapes.
Attached are:
- a sample showing how it strokes along a path (dashed red line)
- sample map using this technique. I made the roads quickly using paths, stoked them with a wide brush in the road color. I then selected the road. enlarged the selection by 10 px, then converted the selection to a new path then stroked that with the paintbrush, using the building brush. A few pretty-ups (buildings were embossed and given drop shadow) and the road was given a gradient overlay to give the illusion of wear (and stroked)
- the gimp brush (if it is allowed by the system).
-Rob A>
Last edited by RobA; 03-22-2010 at 02:32 PM.
I used virtually this same technique to make the small buildings for this map. It's a great way to lay them down quickly, but I think I went back and hand edited a few of them just to give some extra variety.
This was done in Adobe Illustrator.
Wow--that is the most clever technique I've seen in a long, long time! Awesome! Thank you so much, Rob; what a huge help this is, especially for village/town maps!
Don
My gallery is here
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"Keep your mind in hell, but despair not." --Saint Silouan [1866-1938]
I'm guessing that the fill technique that Keith mentioned is what would be used to fill in an area with buildings as well? This is a good technique for a more 'modern' town, but early medieval and most fantasy wouldn't be as structured, or am I wrong about that?
I thought that exact same thing the first time I saw this type of town drawing, but in fact the lining of the road method appears to have been typical in the medieval towns of England, at least. Look at John Speed's set of early 1600s maps for examples:
http://faculty.oxy.edu/horowitz/home...ed/Cities1.htm
From Speed's depictions we can see that "road lining" was true of even large towns/small cities such as York, but not of large cities such as London wherein buildings are crowded together into true city blocks.
Don
My gallery is here
__________________________________________________ _______
"Keep your mind in hell, but despair not." --Saint Silouan [1866-1938]
@ RobA
hey, you are the bomb!! this brush is 100%. and the maps you've made are great. so all is done with the Gimp?
BTW i pm'd you.
I pm'd back.Originally Posted by Istarlome
Yep, that was all in the Gimp. I can zip up the xcf's of the image and the brush tomorrow (it's on a different computer).
-Rob A>
Yeah, this is very common. The inner areas were frequently used for plating, livestock, storage, gardens, what-have-you. I just finished a map of 17th Century New Amsterdam (New York), which was a prime example of this pattern.Originally Posted by pyrandon
If anything, the "blocks" of buildings I did on my Tharad map are more unrealistic, being the sort of structure you would only find in much larger and more established cities, once with much more of an outlying support structure.
Very interesting! You are absolutely right.
Here is another example of this, a 1581 map of Cheshire:
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb....h_chester.html
Same pattern of houses lining the roads and fields, etc in the spaces between.
-Rob A>