I am trying to make a map from a digital elevation model using this tutorial. So far it's working well. I have a plane where displacement is set to the corresponding color/height of the DEM. And the map looks good.
I am now trying to color the map using a vintage USGS map. The map I want to use as a base color for my DEM-plane includes both the map itself and a border. I used GIMP to cut out the map-section from the USGS map and apply it to the DEM which worked, however I am now trying to add in the border. My first idea was to add a second plane directly under the first, use the full USGS map as a base color for this plane, and then have the plane with the elevation model sitting on top of it. Unfortunately, the plane underneath cuts into the DEM-plane at low elevation areas.
Next I tried applying a mask modifier to the base-layer plane, so that it is only visible where the DEM-plane doesn't exist. Upon adding the mask modifier however, the bottom plane disappeared completely.
Am I going about this wrong? Is there a way to do something akin to a clipping mask in Adobe Illustrator, where my base-layer-plane isn't visible in areas it is overlapped by the DEM-plane, or is there an entirely different workflow that would work better? The effect I'm going for is something akin to Scott Reinhard's maps, where the elevation appears to be sitting on top of the paper it's printed on.
I'd be really grateful for any advice here. This is my first time using blender, and it probably shows. Thanks in advance for your help.
