I like the way you artistically reduced the opacity in the North, allowing the frost effect to come through, plus it says intuitively, "I am not an impassable, I am eye candy"
There are a couple of anomalies.
The big mountain in Idaho, is a little overbearing and looks out of place, perhaps reduce that mountain by 10 - 20%
You will need to swap the mountain layer order at the lower circle, I think you'll see why.
The upper one needs the shadow cutting off from where it crosses the highlight of the foreground mountain.
There's a gap in the texture / land where the territory divider was, this bleeds through the mountain's transparency.
The top arrow also shows a mountain that has been erased at the base, which got rid of the blend and makes it look like a cut-out, as well as there being the same issue with the removed divider showing through.
I assume you have trimmed the shadow blend on the mountains in California to allow for the circle? If so, I would leave the blends on there. If the circle is adjusted just a little it exposes a false look, plus when a circle is over detail it still looks fine.
Tip* If you want to reduce the opacity of parts of a mountain image, it's fine, it simply gives the effect of mist, but it has to be done in a gradient so that it slowly disappears to nothing.
If the erasing is sharp, it ruins the effect.
I zoom in and use a really light Eraser setting (10%) working it so that the outer parts get more erasing.
I know how difficult mountains are... there are so many layers and it's difficult to keep track of them all, but you need to keep them as separate layers (in a group) even after the map is finished, otherwise edits are really difficult.
If you want to flatten / merge the mountains to one layer, ensure you keep the 6 mountain PNG as a separate layer / file, so that you can at least remake them the same if something goes wrong. When I was learning Photoshop the best lessons were my mistakes, such as not backing up layers and files.
I like the way you artistically reduced the opacity in the North, allowing the frost effect to come through, plus it says intuitively, "I am not an impassable, I am eye candy"
There are a couple of anomalies.
The big mountain in Idaho, is a little overbearing and looks out of place, perhaps reduce that mountain by 10 - 20%
[spoiler=2 other anomalies][img]http://www.the-inkstore.co.uk/map_resources/NA-edit1.jpg[/img]
You will need to swap the mountain layer order at the lower circle, I think you'll see why.
The upper one needs the shadow cutting off from where it crosses the highlight of the foreground mountain.
[img]http://www.the-inkstore.co.uk/map_resources/NA-edit2.jpg[/img]
There's a gap in the texture / land where the territory divider was, this bleeds through the mountain's transparency.
The top arrow also shows a mountain that has been erased at the base, which got rid of the blend and makes it look like a cut-out, as well as there being the same issue with the removed divider showing through.[/spoiler]
I assume you have trimmed the shadow blend on the mountains in California to allow for the circle? If so, I would leave the blends on there. If the circle is adjusted just a little it exposes a false look, plus when a circle is over detail it still looks fine.
Tip* If you want to reduce the opacity of parts of a mountain image, it's fine, it simply gives the effect of mist, but it has to be done in a gradient so that it slowly disappears to nothing.
If the erasing is sharp, it ruins the effect.
I zoom in and use a really light Eraser setting (10%) working it so that the outer parts get more erasing.
I know how difficult mountains are... there are so many layers and it's difficult to keep track of them all, but you need to keep them as separate layers (in a group) even after the map is finished, otherwise edits are really difficult.
If you want to flatten / merge the mountains to one layer, ensure you keep the 6 mountain PNG as a separate layer / file, so that you can at least remake them the same if something goes wrong. When I was learning Photoshop the best lessons were my mistakes, such as not backing up layers and files.
Hyd yn oed er fy mod Cymraeg , dim ond yn siarad Saesneg, felly yr wyf yn gobeithio y bydd y cyfieithu yn gywir.