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Thread: Cartography Help

  1. #1

    Default Cartography Help

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    Hey Folks,

    I have been a member of this site for some time and a cartography enthusiast for a very long time.

    A while back, a friend asked me to give him a hand drawing some maps for his Pathfinder campaign. I was more than happy to help him out and created some maps for him to his specifications.

    The maps were a big hit and my friend decided to submit the adventure, including the maps, to an on-line publisher. For the record, he did ask my permission first and I agreed. Well, the submission was well received and the adventure was actually featured at this year’s PiazoCon in Seattle. In addition, the on-line publisher wants to publish the module as a PDF for sale on their website.
    This is where my problems started: My original maps were printed to a PDF for my friends use, but the publisher needed them in jpg format. No problem, I sent the jpegs that I had from my original work. Well, those weren’t of a high enough DPI and they need me to resend them at a higher dpi. I started looking for a way to increase the dpi of my original drawings, but before I could, I was told that they also needed the jpegs to be layered.

    I am a drafter by trade and I created my original maps in Google SketchUp, took them into a simple paint program and added backgrounds and text. I have no idea about how to get these guys what they are asking for. I am a wiz at AutoCAD and I am good with SketchUp, but I am not real savy about Gimp or Photo Shop.

    Can anyone help?
    Last edited by Jake Raven; 10-18-2012 at 04:10 PM.

  2. #2

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jake Raven View Post
    Well, those weren’t of a high enough DPI and they need me to resend them at a higher dpi. I started looking for a way to increase the dpi of my original drawings, but before I could, I was told that they also needed the jpegs to be layered.
    You've bumped into the greatest problem with raster graphics. It's certainly possible to increase your DPI (I would use Gimp but most image editors will work, open the existing image, then resize it, change the DPI setting to 300 or 600) - the problem is that your image will likely be resized to appear much smaller - roughly 1/3 to 1/6 of the original size (assuming you started with web-standard 72ppi). It's basic math - you increase the pixels per inch while holding the pixel count constant, you decrease the number of inches.

    You can resize the image to keep the inches the same, but doing so requires "filling in the gaps" between pixels with some sort of function, which will probably reduce your image quality. That's why most artists start with as high a resolution as they can, and only resize smaller - it's easier for the resize function to throw away information it doesn't need than fill in information it doesn't have.

    Depending on how extensive your workflow is, you could start with your original Sketchup export, start with a higher resolution, and retrace all your painting steps. You could also try a different workflow with vector graphics (Illustrator/Inkscape) - because vector graphics can be resized arbitrarily without loss of resolution.

    As for a "layered jpeg" - I'm not really sure what the print shop is asking for. JPEG is a lossy compression algorithm that (afaik) doesn't support layering. Photoshop and Gimp native formats do support layering, and that may be what they're after. Hard to say for certain.

    Hope that helps a bit.

  3. #3

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    Thanks, That does help me out a little.

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