Biomes from terrain - Printable Version +- Gimp-Forum.net (https://www.gimp-forum.net) +-- Forum: GIMP (https://www.gimp-forum.net/Forum-GIMP) +--- Forum: General questions (https://www.gimp-forum.net/Forum-General-questions) +--- Thread: Biomes from terrain (/Thread-Biomes-from-terrain) |
Biomes from terrain - DcNdrew - 05-16-2017 Hi! First: sorry for my English. Second: I made a terrain map with THIS, and I'd like to make biome map to Minecraft – Open Terrain Generator mod. This heightmap won't be accurate when OTG will regenerate the biomes, but it isn't problem yet. I'd like to make climate zones and I can change the colors of the biomes. I thought I can make colored stripes and someway they will change the colors of the terrain, but I'm not sure what would be the best way. And of course I'd like to make less colors to work with them easier. Do you know any tutorial? I'll try by my own, but I asked if you can help me. Thank you! RE: Biomes from terrain - rich2005 - 05-16-2017 (05-16-2017, 03:28 PM)DcNdrew Wrote: ....I made a terrain map with THIS, I'd like to make climate zones and I can change the colors of the biomes. Welcome to gimp-forum.net It would help if you could post an example map and some indication of expected result. It might be straight forward, this example is a simple layer over the top in desaturate mode to give an impression of 'cold' at the poles. This is the manual page, https://docs.gimp.org/en/gimp-concepts-layer-modes.html gets a bit technical. [attachment=531] You could experiment with different colours and layer modes to get different effects. Or you might need some more complex editing. Quote:And of course I'd like to make less colors to work with them easier. Reducing the colours will again partially depend on the type of map. One of the Gimp color filters is posterize which might do it, or there are several other ways, depends what is required. There is one site dedicated to producing maps for games etc. see: https://www.cartographersguild.com might be some tutorials there. RE: Biomes from terrain - DcNdrew - 05-16-2017 Thank you very much! RE: Biomes from terrain - DcNdrew - 05-17-2017 One more question: Is there a way to find that how many colors are used on the image? RE: Biomes from terrain - Ofnuts - 05-17-2017 (05-17-2017, 06:42 AM)DcNdrew Wrote: One more question: Colors>Info>Color cube analysys RE: Biomes from terrain - rich2005 - 05-17-2017 (05-16-2017, 03:28 PM)DcNdrew Wrote: ....And of course I'd like to make less colors to work with them easier.... You can use Colors -> Info -> Colorcube Analysis lots of screenshots so not inline http://i.imgur.com/nEKI3WZ.jpg That is straight from the site you referenced - 56 colours although there are options on that site for different color schemes. Looking at your request on how to reduce the number of colors. 1. Posterize sort of works. Give the image a small gaussian blur Filters -> Blur -> Gaussian Blur Apply Colors -> Posterize can get you down to 16 colors, depending on original image. http://i.imgur.com/WITxBqT.jpg 2. An alternative is Apply a gaussian blur Convert the image from RGB mode to Indexed mode. Image -> Mode -> Indexed http://i.imgur.com/JauAZf5.jpg with a small number of colors (using 8) here. That gives an image with a color map Windows -> Dockable Dialogs -> Colormap that looks like this http://i.imgur.com/fnGUVIz.jpg (7 colors + white) The colormap can be edited to further reduce colors, the sea for example http://i.imgur.com/2iRp1Dk.jpg Set the image back to RGB mode Image -> Mode -> RGB and a check gives 6 colours. http://i.imgur.com/jU8amzS.jpg RE: Biomes from terrain - rich2005 - 05-17-2017 Back to reducing the number of colours. Seach enough and there is often a Gimp script/plugin to implement a procedure. This one which uses the index method but returns the image to RGB mode. I found the discussion for the script here, it was originally from gimpusers.com: http://gimp.1065349.n5.nabble.com/Reduce-the-number-of-colors-on-a-selection-td8887.html In use, same image as before, looks like: The script is attached, if you want to try it, un-zip, copy to your Gimp profile In windows C:\Users\your-name\.gimp-2.8\scripts In linux ~/.gimp-2.8/scripts Only given it a very brief try, it is old, 2008, bound to be some snags. I still advice a small gaussian blur before (depending on image) |