• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Photoshop or Illustrator map-making tutorial?

What's his face

Rear Admiral
Rear Admiral
Hi everyone.

About a month ago I posted a thread showing a world map I had drawn using Paint. Having just seen the premiere of Caprica, I've been inspired to get back to work on it.

I am looking for a tutorial for Illustrator or Photoshop to draw maps. Particularly, I am looking for tutorials on how to draw things like terrain, mountains, water, etc from a top-down perspective like that seen on a map.

Thanks in advance.
 
Good thing I wandered into this thread. :)

I do this for a living - making maps. I've used Illustrator and Photoshop for map production for years.

A couple of good resources for you to look at first:

Cartotalk - www.cartotalk.com
Cartographers' Guild - www.cartographersguild.com/

Cartotalk has a lot of professionals on there. Cartographers' Guide is made up of a lot of very talented 'fantasy' cartographers. People that are making maps of 'not real' places.

Take a look at both sites, but especially Cartographers' Guide, to get a lot of tutorials and help.

Good luck, and enjoy!
 
I've done some mapping in GIMP, myself... most notably for this fictional subway map I put together back when I used to do a SimCity 4 City Journal. I also made a town plan for another I did, but that was using a GIS program. Bottom line is I'd be interested in helping out, since I find your project interesting, though I can't promise I'd be terribly useful. ;)
 
I had a six-hour long drive today (I went from Sault Ste. Marie to Bracebridge) so I had a good long time to think about what I wanted to do with all of this.

I've always been a very creative guy and a good writer. I want to write some short stories about the people in this fictional world. The series of stories would be set in different periods of time, starting in the late neolithic to early early bronze age (think Sumer or Catal Huyuk) and eventually to a period equivalent to around 100 years in the future. (I decided the world will end in some horrible cataclysm. ;) )

The stories will be take place in the point of view of an ordinary person, who witnesses world-changing events. That way we see these events from their own eyes.

Here's some of the basic ideas I figured out:

The Merchant: A late neolithic/early bronze age city - the only city in the world, as far as its inhabitants are aware - has thrived on the banks of a river for centuries. But their Sun God is angry (not really, but they think it is) and a heat wave leads to a drought, which gradually dries up the river. Crops are failing due to increased desertification. An old merchant/trader sees how this is causing the end of their way of life. His large family (families were large back then as children were produced as a source of labour) is split on what to do. Some want to stay, some want to leave and start again. There are two groups of people who are leaving, heading in opposite directions. The merchant, being too old to join either exodus, stays in the dying city.

The Priest: Set about 400 years after the exodus. Both groups of people have settles down and built new cities. One found a nice, fertile land while the other was less fortunate, finding land that was less plentiful. Neither has heard from the other since they originally split. The story of the angry Sun God and the two exoduses from the dying city has entered into mythology and oral tradition. There's a priest from the more successful city who preaches about making sure the Sun God is happy or it will once again destroy their way of life. Eventually, they make contact with each other. The lesser city becomes jealous of the better city’s success, and there’s a war. I haven’t decided who will win yet.

The next story will talk about how the victorious city-state has conquered the other, and formed the first nation-state (think Mesopotamia).

The Fisherman: Seen from the p.o.v. of a fisherman on a large fishing boat. Set around 1200-1400 AD equivalent. Is fishing off the coast of the northern continent (I'll upload a pic in a second) but gets lost in a storm. They end up lost and starving (there are many deaths of the crew) but eventually they discover the New World. (I'm going to make this one different than what happened on Earth. There will actually be a civilization of equivalent technology in the New World.

The Doctor: Set equivalent to around 1800-1900. The southernmost continent (see the pic I’ll upload in a sec) is populated by primitive people. They reject the rapid industrialization that we see on the other continents. They’re that way because of their conservative culture. They think that modernizing will destroy their way of life. These people are also very environmentalist: they don’t pollute, they re-use old things and they do their best to minimize waste. The continent’s 61 tribes are unified under a “Tribal Federation”. All of a sudden there’s an epidemic. The doctors of this federation are helpless to stop the spread of the disease. There’s a big debate on whether to allow foreign doctors, with their corrupt ways, to enter the country, but they do allow one in (Think Norman Bethune visiting China). He begins a vaccination campaign and eventually stops the spread of the disease. The good that the doctor does convinces the leaders of the tribal federation that perhaps modernization isn’t entirely bad, after all.

Epilogue: A few hundred years later (around 2100 equivalent) there’s a nuclear war that kills everyone except those on this southern continent. In the meantime, they’ve embraced modernization and technology while sticking to their pacifist, environmentally-friendly culture.

Here is the map so far:

http://i113.photobucket.com/albums/n227/emistal/mapjpeg.jpghttp://i113.photobucket.com/albums/n227/emistal/mapjpeg-1.jpg
I want to make physical and political maps of this world.

Thanks for the help and input!
 
Last edited:
I like your ideas; the whole thing is somewhat reminiscent of Harlan Ellison's anthology Medea. Have you given any thought to what the flora and fauna of this world will be like?
 
Probably very similar to own world. Maybe there will be a few plants or animals that will be different.

I played with the idea of having elephants being hunted to extinction early on and the only surviving ones are wooly mammoths located on the northern continent.

I had the idea of a story showing the decline of country/empire (no idea of the era, certainly no later than the middle ages) by using the elephant as an example. The country's national symbol would be the elephant, and people would notice that elephants around the world are slowly dying off (hunted? an elephant disease? dunno yet) but the idea is that the dying off of the elephant would compare with the decline of that country.
 
I wiki'd up Medea and I noticed the article is more focused on the physcial aspects of the planet: geology, biology, etc. The idea I'm going with is having it be very similar to our own, with nearly identical biology and geology, etc.

There may be some differences (ie: the elephants i mentioned earlier) but for the most part that kind of stuff will be the same. Things that will be different are the geography, the names of the various places, the culture of the people who live there (they are humans, much like us) and the history, religion, politics, mathematics and technology of said people. My idea is to focus on the human element of this planet rather than take the approach Ellison has taken. (although it looks quite interesting)

Also, there will be no aliens, magic or interaction with Earth.

Alpinemaps, thanks for the links. I'm sure they will be helpful.
 
No problem. Wish I had more time to make maps these days, but alas, I'm in management now.

Definitely check out Cartographers Guide. From your outline, I think you'll find some kindred spirits there who can offer a lot of help and advice.
 
There may be some differences (ie: the elephants i mentioned earlier) but for the most part that kind of stuff will be the same. Things that will be different are the geography, the names of the various places, the culture of the people who live there (they are humans, much like us) and the history, religion, politics, mathematics and technology of said people.
So basically an alternate universe showing how a different geography would have affected Human history. Gotcha. :bolian:
 
New update: I'm starting on an elevation map. It's very early (and I'm finding lots of help on that cartographer site) but it's slowly coming together.

Here's where I am now:
Click here for a larger version.
mapelevshow2-1.jpg
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top