Every time I start thinking of a tutorial to write, I try to show techniques that I use in my job as a designer. For example, today I will be showing you how to make a nice little map. I was called to make a map for the university which was tedious but still fun. This can also be a neat little add-on to a party invitation or the like.First and most importantly turn on some music! Some Armin van Buuren thumping in the background helps the creative process.
Secondly Make sure your computer is on. Really. Enough small talk, let’s get started.
Setting Up
Same old setup as in my other Illustrator tutorials. Choose New Web Document, and just hit OK until your canvas is set up.
Getting Started
First off, you are going to need a map to use as a reference, unless you have some sort of crazy photographic memory. Google Maps is your friend on this one. For this example I pulled a screen-grab of my apartment complex. Go ahead and drop your Map into Illustrator.
Building Map Legend
Before we even start, it is a good idea to plan the different sizes of roads and terrains that you will be working with. If you decide that a four lane road has the largest shape and you run into a highway, what now? Here is what I came up with:

I am going to go pretty simple for this example, but it can be as complex or simple as you want.
The road graphics are very easy to make, just choose the Line Segment Tool [\] and draw a line with different strokes/colors. For the yellow one I placed a large yellow stroke on top of the two small orange strokes.

Making the Brushes
With the road graphic selected, open the Brush window. Click on the options button which is the small icon with the three lines in the top right corner. This will open up the Brush Options, choose New Brush.

You will be presented with the following dialog box. Choose New Art Brush and hit OK.

A new window will come up that will allow you to customize your new brush. In this case it is set up perfectly for what we need. All we need to do is give the brush a name. Choose something appropriate for the different sized roads. I do encourage you to poke around all the neat settings you can use with this tool.

Repeat this process until you have a brush for each road you made.
Drawing the Roads
Using the Pen Tool [P] draw over one of the existing roads in you map, taking note of how big your graphic will be. Now simply click on the brush in the window that you want to apply to the road.
Repeat this process for all main roads.
This is what I came up with:
Fixing Intersections
As you may have noticed, the lines will sometimes not line up right at intersections, which is easily fixable.

In some cases it is just a matter of changing the layer order. Using Ctrl+[ to send the shape backwards, and Ctrl+] to send it forward try to adjust the roads to where they line up right.
In some cases you will need to draw the intersections. Draw some shapes with the pen tool that imitate the turn lanes at the intersection. Use the satellite picture as reference. Here are a few examples of how I achieved this.

Make sure to add some strokes too.
The quick fix is to just throw a dot over the intersection that matches the style.
Making Houses and Backgrounds
Using the pen tool draw out some houses using the graphic style you decided on. Here is an example of what I campe up with:

Using the Pen Tool still draw some terrain changes and send them back behind all of the other shapes. This is what I came up with:

Conclusion
Map making is very time consuming and requires a good deal of patience. More than likely if you become a graphic designer, someone will eventually ask you to make a map. It is the basic skills I illustrated in this tutorial that can lead you to make much more complex and interesting maps. Here is an example of a map I have made for a university:

Keep practicing and have fun!
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52 Comments Leave a Comment
Very nice read Isaac! It’s a pretty simple technique, and the end result is great! You did a nice job with that UT Map
wow that was a great tut very easy to follow and do great job
I find Illustrator confusing, but this tutorial is very well written and helped me sort out some things. Thanks!
Great final result.
Hi,
I’d like to know how to make the shapes in the map 3D? Any help?
Lauren
@ Lauren to make the shapes 3D, use the Effect>3D>Extrude & Bevel. Play with the 3D settings until you find an angle & depth that suits your purpose!
Great job with the tutorial .. also was great to see my university map on tutorial 9
i actually love the tedious jobs… maps are one of my favorites… ok, i know i’m in the minority on this. thanks for the great tips!
Sweet! I needed to do a map for a school project, this really helped.
really cool tutorial! good job.
Excellent Work. Thanks for the visual.
Very nice one! I’m sure i’ll need this soon enough!
It is a simple and nice tutorial. Thanks for sharing.
very interesting and useful.
thanks a bunch
What do you say about these freebies http://www.designious.com/free/cat_11.html
great tutorial. fantastic way to have a map that matches the rest of the flyer you just spent hours designing
this was a nice tutorial, though you should have used dynamic editing and live effects so that one path had multiple strokes instead of having to put one on top of the other, blah, blah.(Yes I’m a designer and certified expert in illustrator CS3 among other apps.)
wow very nice ineed to master this tutorial
Isn’t creating derivative works from Google Maps disallowed by the terms and conditions?
This i is really helpful!
Thanks ISAAC.
This is pretty neat, thank you. But the intersection thing is puzzling me… in a more gridlike city there’s LOTS and they all look a bit weird. Anyway to mass correct all the crisscrossing lines?
much easier (to me) :
1/create all paths of the same legend element on the same layer
(ie: all freeways on layer 1, all rivers on layer 2, etc. )
2/ group all path of the same layer
3/add a new apparence to the group with several stokes
(this will avoid the crossing mess)
4/ tadaaa…
yes, you can improve the crossing mess with grouping lines and then apply a style over it with several strokes. that’s easy as hell!
great tutorial. i make maps all the time & never thought about making a brush for them-off to do that now. & for joining roads:
put all like roads on own layer (or not, but) select like roads, then cmd8 (compound path) and it makes all of the intersections, well, intersect with one another. mind you, it also puts these on the same “level” so if you have some of these roads going under AND over things (ie other roads) they will now ALL be over or all be under. but i’ve found, in most of the maps i do (def not all), overpass vs. underpass isn’t as important as where the roads/intersections are.
again, thanks for the tutorial!
Not bad. Creating maps in AI was my job for about 12 months not so long ago and these are pretty much the same principles we used
this tutorial is exactly what I need for the maps I will use in my website.. Thank you for sharing this precious thing..
Hello!
I’ve done a print screen from the photo in Google Maps, but when I place it in illustrator and select “new brush-> art brush” Illustrator gives me an error ( The selected artwork contains elements that can not be edited with art brush) what should I do? PLS HELP
This is great. I’m regularly asked to make maps, and having a straightforward workflow is going to save me time/money!
this is shit it has not helped me at all!!!!!
THis thank