I always used some textures for the paper, some special typos, and a"gold" tone to all the map and colors.
I applied a hacthure photoshop filter to the seas near the coast to get that engarver mapwork.
Thank youGreat stuff, these are all really cool.
Bellisima! did you manually painted the topography? (mountains) what software did you use?
Very nice! The subtle drop-shadows beneath the route lines are unique and effective.
Very nice. Big fan of historic maps.
Excuse my ignorance -- first time poster new to cartography/GIS -- but what software was this map originally created in? Is it created in a GIS program then eventually transported into Photoshop? If so, are the paths/arrows GIS data or added afterward?
I like it!
This one, is about Americo Vespucio and his voyages. The classic appearance was achieved using a Robinson Projection.Today everyone sees elsewhere the Mercator one, so, just using a projection that looks spherical simplifies the problem to give that "anient" look.
This one, is about Americo Vespucio and his voyages. The classic appearance was achieved using a Robinson Projection.Today everyone sees elsewhere the Mercator one, so, just using a projection that looks spherical simplifies the problem to give that "anient" look.
This is one case where a Mercator might even be preferred. I would like to see the actual courses Vespucci sailed. On a Mercator one can easily see the course corrections against rhumbs. Of course I understand that we likely do not have enough information about those courses.
Any reasonable projection you might use would be an anachronism for Vespucci, of course. The Robinson is similar to the oval projection Ortelius popularized later in the 16th century, so I can see how its use might contribute to an antique feel.
Regards,
— daan Strebe
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