How to draw mini town maps in Procreate

Chris Rosser
6 min readJun 19, 2021

For practice, and to keep the creative juices flowing even when I don’t feel like writing, I’ve started drawing and painting town maps using Procreate on my iPad. I use an iPad Mini, and drawing large maps isn’t practical, so I settled on a canvas of 6×4 inches, which is the size of an average photo print in Australia, or an index card in the United States. Keeping the size small, meant that I can knock them up in an hour or two, and typically do so while my wife or kids watch a film, or while I listen to an audiobook in bed.

I find they make nice little vignettes for my fantasy world. If I want to flesh out a location quickly, I can. The 6×4 size is easy and cheap to print and I stick them on my whiteboard for inspiration and store them in cheap plastic photo cases. The more I create them, the more I enjoyed it, and it’s occurred to me they might make decent player handouts for D&D, or stage dressing for those who play Index Card RPG.

Inspiration and references

I’m the first to admit that I’m no artist — I am terrible in fact, as you’ll see shortly. I don’t visualise space very well, nor can I draw from a picture in my head. I need inspiration and references, and there’s a couple of places where I get them.

  1. Historical maps from books, CADW and English Heritage guidebooks, articles I photocopied years ago when I did my undergraduate degree, and simple google searches
  2. Screenshots from Google Maps
  3. Using lego bricks in random arrangements on a piece of A4 or US Letter paper
  4. Free city map generators — my favourite is by Watabou over on itch.io

For this tutorial, I’m using a reference map generated using Watabou’s Medieval Fantasy City Generator.

Setting up Procreate

In Procreate, I create a New canvas, 6” x 4” inches. At this size, I get 120 layers with my iPad Mini 5 — Procreate limits the layers based on your device’s available RAM. I use about 20 layers max for this map style, so I’m well within the performance limits of the iPad.

New canvas in Procreate
New canvas in Procreate

I then import the PNG I saved from Watabou’s generator from iCloud — any file service that works with the iOS Files app will work, including Dropbox.

Importing a file
Importing a file

Procreate imports the image into a new layer. I scale and adjust it to size.

Imported and adjusted reference image
Imported and adjusted reference image

Note that while the latest version of Procreate has a reference window, I find the iPad Mini’s screen is too small for this to be usable. It’s easier for me to work with the image sitting in a background layer. If you have a larger iPad, certainly use the reference window if you wish.

Reference window on iPad mini - not really practical
Reference window on iPad mini — not really practical

Blocking in the elements

With the image imported as a guide, I’ll block the major landmarks — river, houses, castle and roads. Each goes on a separate layer.

For this stage, I’ll a thick marker brush and a solid garish colour. This lets me see the layout at glance — recolouring them later is easily done by setting the layer to alpha lock.

Blocked in river, roads and walls
Blocked in river, roads and walls

For the building, I’ll block these in as simple rectangles and circles. Rather than trace individual buildings, I use what’s there as a guide, treating clusters like blocks.

Blocked in buildings
Blocked in buildings

Outlining and details

Once I’m happy with the layout, I’ll ink my outlines. For this, I use the Stone Liner brush, I bought as part of the Map Maker set by Josh Stolarz over at Map Effects.

Major outlines
Major outlines

With the major outlines done, I ink in the details of the buildings. Here, I typically alter, refine and sometimes move things around too. This part takes the longest by far.

Adding details
Adding details

Painting

While I’ll revisit some details late, I like to start painting and texturing the map at this point. I enjoy this stage because it’s where my crude drawing start to look like a real fantasy map — or at least one that satisfies my tastes.

First off I’ll add a couple of background parchment textures and play with the blending mode and opacity until I have something I like.

Parchment textures added
Parchment textures added

Now I’ll return to those blocked in element colours I worked on earlier. I’ll repaint the roads layer, having decided I want all the central town and castle to look as though it’s all dirt. Then I’ll recolour it in a less garish colour and set the blending mode to Colour Burn. To create the illusion of gravel, I’ll add a new layer and generously stipple in the texture. That can end up looking overpowering, so I set the blending mode to Multiply and drop the opacity.

Repainted roads
Repainted roads

This has made my bridges transparent, so I’ll fill those in with a new layer, and I’ll adjust the river’s colours while I’m at it using the same combination of blending mode and opacity until it looks right. Oh and lets, fix the buildings and castle too.

Next, I paint some greenery to surround the town, and for that I use a texture wash brush, some green I like the look of and set the layer’s blending mode to Multiply. At a later point I might draw some basic tree shapes over the greenery as I’ve done with other maps. It’s getting late on Saturday afternoon, and I’m starting to think more about pizza than I am of maps.

Added some greenery
Added some greenery

Finally, I’ll add the fields.

Fields added
Fields added

Concluding thoughts

Well, here’s the final map — I did warn you I’m no artist, but it’s serviceable for my needs as a world-builder and fantasy novelist. I certainly don’t feel too self-conscious about sharing this style of map with my readers, or if players as handouts if I was a Dungeon Master.

Finished map (sort of)
Finished map (sort of)

I my revisit the map later and add more details, like trees, buildings inside the castle walls etc — in fact I might redo the castle completely. I did rush on some things for the tutorial. I’m also still learning as I go, and I do feel somewhat limited by the size of my iPad Mini, not to mention my lack of artistic skill.

The real star here is Procreate, and in the hands of someone much more proficient than me, the results can be amazing. It’s a terrific app, effortless to learn and enjoyable to use.

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Chris Rosser

Technical writer and occasional author sharing thoughts on creativity, productivity and technology. Works at Canva. https://chrisrosser.substack.com