Well, I finally have access to a tablet. My wife thinks it was a birthday present. hee hee.
Anyway, I gave the tutorial a go, and I think I was quite successful. Here's my little sketch.
Well, I finally have access to a tablet. My wife thinks it was a birthday present. hee hee.
Anyway, I gave the tutorial a go, and I think I was quite successful. Here's my little sketch.
Bryan Ray, visual effects artist
http://www.bryanray.name
I've used your mountain techniques with some good results. Right now, it's all B/w, I'll be adding paper background and color later. I'm just wishing I'd be as satisfied with my forests as I am with the mountains. Thanks for the tutorial!
Regards,
Neurowiz
Here's Daddy Paddle's try at hand drawn mapping. There's a reason why a like the Bryce stuff.
Astrographer - My blog.
Klarr
-How to Fit a Map to a Globe
-Regina, Jewel of the Spinward Main(uvmapping to apply icosahedral projection worldmaps to 3d globes)
-Building a Ridge Heightmap in PS
-Faking Morphological Dilate and Contract with PS
-Editing Noise Into Terrain the Burpwallow Way
-Wilbur is Waldronate's. I'm just a fan.
Thanks for a great tutorial. It really helped me a lot. I'm posting a small picture of mountains from my Etrakien map that I'm working on. Keep the tutorials coming :-)
You can see the full map on the following link
Cheers
Beautiful Clercon! Getting forests to work with mountains is one of the hardest tricks to pull of, imo.
I haven't seen Happimess post for awhile, I hope he comes back and sees us soon.
Just browsing tutorials and I love this. I'd definately like to see the artist do more that explore this map style further. I think I like it so much because it looks a lot like the mountains I draw when I do hand drawn maps, only a little more polished. I'll definately be adding this tutorial to my list to practice.
Finally got around to watching the video. It's a nice and easy way to get a mountain range, thanks for sharing the technique! Guess I'd have to give it a go soon =)
Also, Clercon, those are some nice mountains, well done