![]() ![]() You see the W and the H on the lower right of the “info” box? That’s the width and height of that square you selected with the Marquee Tool. ![]() Then go to Window–>Info and make the “info” box appear.ģ. ![]() With the Rectangular Marquee Tool, making sure you make it a fixed aspect ratio, and outline along the lines of one of the squares on the grid. Find, download, and open your map in Photoshop.Ģ. you can click on the pictures to make them bigger.ġ. You can use GIMP instead of Photoshop, but I do not know how to use it. Now, like the counters and tokens tutorial, I asume you are working with Photoshop for your resizing. If you want to do it along with the tutorial, the map I’ll be using comes from the Wizards gallery for Dungeon Magazine Issue 160. Nice, right? That’s not going to be the map I’ll use in the examples, but it doesn’t matter. Taking a map from the Wizard’s gallery, and converting it to a 1″ playable map isn’t very difficult, and it looks better than some Dry-Erase markers a on a grid… although this may not be the best thing for every encounter… maybe just for the big fight at the end of the night or something… Take a look… So you’ve made yourself some kick ass tokens, but now you want to make yourself some kick ass maps to use them with. ![]()
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