What colours are you using ?View attachment 903708
hello hello hello, this cover isn't dead!
i wanted to post with more things, but i also wanted to share this so yeah
next patch will add the rest of the americas
Wdym? If you are asking about the color scheme, then I am coloring it as I please, based on flags or coats of countries, though I have reserved myself a few exceptions to not make the map look weird.What colours are you using ?
Thank you. Most of eastern China's prefecture-level subdivisions are right at that spot where they're large enough to be shown, and small enough to not require stuff like QGIS to do location referencing.looks grand
This is my sentiment as well.Why should it be shown as a part of India when it was independent???
I don't want layers or aliased pixels or whatever. I'm not a graphic artist, I just like making simple maps as a form of meditation and creative outlet. I use MS Paint because every other program is over designed and not even slightly user friendly (like Gimp or Paint.net).(it's the most simple image editor where you can have layers, aliased pixels, etc
I'm so confused.
I've been messing with maps lately, never finishing anything but starting a buch, and I most often start with the 1914 basemap (easiest borders to adjust IMO). Even earlier today I started a map on that basemap, and everything was going fine.
Tonight though, I'm getting this weird situation:
View attachment 904546
For some reason, when I paste the 1914 base map into MS Paint, I'm getting artefacts. The RGB numbers are slightly off for these bordering pixels. It's the same all over the map. I don't understand why. Nothing has changed between this afternoon and tonight.
No, this is a direct copy-paste from the first page of this thread into MS Paint. And paint-bucketing the background colour is how I ended up with the picture I shared.Did you maybe accidentally save it as a jpeg at some point?
Also, try filling the area with the color whatever th background color lot use I sometimes get the weird situation where it decides part of an area isn't quite the same and just paint bucketing the color fixes it.
Well, as you wishI don't want layers or aliased pixels or whatever. I'm not a graphic artist, I just like making simple maps as a form of meditation and creative outlet. I use MS Paint because every other program is over designed and not even slightly user friendly (like Gimp or Paint.net).
I've been here since 2009. I've used basemaps that would make your eyeballs bleed. I was here when the very first UCS was being developed and Cuba was so bent out of shape it was almost just a black blob in the Caribbean.Do note that a good number of older basemaps are wildly inaccurate because they were made with eyeballing without using any kind of direct references, though.
MS Paint is easily the best choice when it works (which it has done, consistently, for many years; the issue I am facing now is the first actual hindrance I've ever faced with this programme). Paint.net is probably the worst programme I've attempted to use. The pencil tool is hidden beneath like two other menus. Plus it doesn't have the convenient 'right click and drag to swap colours' feature that MS Paint has.Also I hate it when people use this kind of "but I am a simple mapper" when they are told MS paint is like the worst choice out of many. It's a graphics software you will use like 3 features from, not quantum physics.
Ahhhhhhh--
I don't know what version of it you tried but none of what you said about PDN is true. If you don't want to use anything other than MS paint, then don't complain about MS paint itself imho.MS Paint is easily the best choice when it works (which it has done, consistently, for many years; the issue I am facing now is the first actual hindrance I've ever faced with this programme). Paint.net is probably the worst programme I've attempted to use. The pencil tool is hidden beneath like two other menus. Plus it doesn't have the convenient 'right click and drag to swap colours' feature that MS Paint has.
It's pretty much an improved version of MS Paint in every way, virtually everything that's in MS Paint is in Paint.net and it also has many tools that will likely save you a ,ot of time, like shift-clicking with the fill tool to fill all pixels of a given color, having multiple windows open at the same time, using layers to trace off other maps, and what I believe is a godsend for anyone working on pixel art maps, the recolor tool, which is like a brush but only works on pixels with the same color as the pixel your pointer was on when you started clicking (if it doedn't make sense just try it, you'll figure it out eventually).MS Paint is easily the best choice when it works (which it has done, consistently, for many years; the issue I am facing now is the first actual hindrance I've ever faced with this programme). Paint.net is probably the worst programme I've attempted to use.
What do you mean? It's in the tools drawer which hovers over the workspace, if it's not there the "Tools" icon in the top right will bring it back.The pencil tool is hidden beneath like two other menus.
Shift-click with the fill tool on one color with a third color, do the same on the second color with the first color, do the same on the third color with the second color.Plus it doesn't have the convenient 'right click and drag to swap colours' feature that MS Paint has.
As I said, Paint.net has many tools that are able to help with mapmaking.There's literally no advantage to using a different programme.
No, this is a direct copy-paste from the first page of this thread into MS Paint. And paint-bucketing the background colour is how I ended up with the picture I shared.
For example with France the base colour is 51/51/255, but for some reason MS Paint has randomly decided these few edge pixels are 50/50/252 and 50/50/251.
Even WEIRDER:
View attachment 904549
Those two pixels next to Nice there are still coming up as 51/51/255, which is the exact colour I filled over with white. So for some reason, MS Paint is just being a world-class c**t and not even recognising that those two pixels are the same as the rest of France. Utterly bizarre. I think MS Paint is actually just glitching. Very frustrating. A hobby I use to relax has suddenly become annoying.
Ahhhhhhh--
Why did you make it do convoluted?/genq
Like what?As I said, Paint.net has many tools that are able to help with mapmaking.
I guess what I mean it's, why are there so many types of borders that look nearly the same? I understand having lots of border types , but (for example) Coastline and Border are basically the same, as are imperial and civil conflict borders. Only the red unrecognized border and the white-ish internal border are particularly unique.It's not, I made it pretty simple.
If you mean why are their many different border types, well because their have to be to properly show things.
I guess what I mean it's, why are there so many types of borders that look nearly the same? I understand having lots of border types , but (for example) Coastline and Border are basically the same, as are imperial and civil conflict borders. Only the red unrecognized border and the white-ish internal border are particularly unique.
My first guess is you forgot to turn off anti-aliasing and color spill. the fill tool works perfectly pixel by pixel and with exact value RBG colors at 0% error toleranceLike what?
I mean, look at this:
View attachment 904766
The paitbucket fill tool doesn't even work correctly. It creates weird colour artefacts like a JPeg. MS Paint just fills the space occupied by a single colour and nothing else. It's simple. That's all you need that tool for. Whatever the heck else PDN is trying to do is completely counterintuitive.
Edit: The only way I could get it to work was using that "magic wand" thing. But then after using that tool, the pencil tool stopped working. Paint dropper > select colour > select pencil took > try to draw, nothing happens.