Hand drawn hillshading
Hand-drawn hillshading is a cartographic technique that enhances the visual representation of terrain using light, shadow, and artistic shading methods. One of the most influential figures in this field was Eduard Imhof, a Swiss cartographer known for his meticulous hand-drawn hillshades that created depth and realism in maps. His techniques emphasized natural landforms, improving readability and aesthetics.
Hand-drawn hillshading specifically focuses on subtle transitions, soft shadowing, and precise light positioning to maintain clarity and prevent over-exaggeration. It is generated up to medium resolution, where it can be replaced by Terrain RGB hillshading methods.
Inspect Hand drawn hillshading
Maps with this tileset
Dataset definition
- Dataset ID: hand-drawn-hillshade
- Name: Hand drawn hillshading
- Min zoom: 0
- Max zoom: 9
- Format: webp
- Size: 647.3 MiB
- Latest version: 1
- Resolution: 30 m