Tutorial – Pixel Art & Structura
This Minecraft Bedrock tutorial will cover both the creation and implementation of pixel art in creative mode, and subsequently, the compilation of custom addons to display a visual guide for recreating creative builds in Survival mode
We will make use of the following technologies:
- “Map Art Maker for Minecraft,” an open-source project on GitHub. This is an online tool that converts your image into a minecraft Addon.
- “Structura“, created by RavinMadHatter, is Bedrock’s version of Litematica, which is heavily used by many Java content creators to quickly recreate Creative-mode builds in Survival worlds.
Map Art Maker
Step 1: creating the artwork
Remembering, of course, that most publicly searchable artwork is likely to be copyrighted, it is always advisable to create your own artwork, or to make sure artwork is credited to the original creator, when streaming/recording any created pixel art. Any attributable artwork should be annotated in your server’s Content Creators information section, so that anyone who publishes videos has easy access to it.
For creating pixel art maps, your artwork should be square, in order to fit in the middle of a map. A Level 0 map is 128×128 blocks, for reference, but sizing isn’t completely necessary for Map Art Maker.
Step 2: Import the artwork.
Browse to the Map Art Maker for Minecraft website.
The website provides its own documentation, and is fairly self explanatory.
– click Browse to choose an image on your device to upload, and give it a function name.
– Choose the area for your pixel art. This would usually be 1×1, which is a single level 0 map.
– Customise your block palette. You can specify all blocks, select only dyes (concrete/wool, etc), or remove individual blocks from the palette. This is the set of colours which the tool will use to approximate the colours of your image.
– 3D height variation can be used to add shading to your image, for more colour variations. This can make the artwork considerably more complex for manual translation later, in Survival mode.
– Dithering is a method by which noise is artificially added to an image, to soften the transition between colours. At a distance (or higher resolution), a dithered image can look more natural. Closer up (or lower resolution, this can make the image look too busy, with pixels that don’t make sense to the content of the image. For a 1×1 artwork, I would recommend not using Dithering, despite the tool’s recommendation.
Click Process image to upload and proceed to the next step.
View the converted image, to see what the map will look like in Minecraft.
Repeat the process for as many images as you want to add to the pack.
Then Create the Addon.
Give your Addon a name, and description if you want.
Press “Write Functions” to proceed, then Download the resulting Addon.
Step 3: Load the addon into MineCraft.
Browse to your downloads folder and open the .mcpack download to import it into MineCraft.
Create a new Flat world, and add the Behaviour Pack you’ve just imported.
Once in the new Flat world, grab a locator map from the creative inventory. You will notice that your starting position, 0 -60 0, is in the centre of the map, so navigate over to -64 -60 -64
Once you’re in position, start typing “/function ” and you will see a list of the functions you created on the Map Art Maker tool. It takes two functions per level 0 map, so you will see the list corresponds.
Complete the command by filling in the first Function name, followed by /1. In this example: “/function A/1”
The first half of the map is generated, and you are automatically teleported to the second location (0 -60 -64) NOTE: There is no teleport necessary if you selected “use the same starting coordinate for all functions”
Repeat the above for the /2 part of your function
And that is your completed map. Fly around holding your map to fill in the missing parts, and make sure you’re happy.
Structura
Step 1: Save the structure.
If you skipped the map making section above, load up the world containing the build you’d like to replicate, and head to the northwest corner of the object. In our example, we’ll continue using the map we created earlier.
From the creative command line, /give @s structure_block
Place a structure block in the northwest corner of the build, and click to open the dialogue box.
Structures have a maximum size of 64x380x64, but you must remember to take into account the render distance of an armour stand, for that is how we will draw the ghost outline of our structure in Survival; as you approach 64 blocks, the armour stand will de-render, and you will start to lose sight of your ghost.
Choose the Save Mode, and play with the size & offset of your build to get as much of it included as possible. In our example, we will select 64,1,64, with an offset of 0,-1,0 because we placed the structure block on the layer above our map image.
Choose a name that makes sense to you, press the Export button, and save the file into a folder.
Next, if you’re doing a map, or didn’t get all of your structure in the frame, move along to the edge of the last block, and repeat the process until you’ve exported the whole area.
For our example, this would mean placing structure blocks at -64 -59 -64, 0 -59 -64, -64-59 0, and 0 -59 0.
Step 2: Create Addon
If you haven’t already downloaded Structura, Download the most recent release from GitHub (beta 1.4, at the time of writing), and unzip the contents into a folder on your computer.
Structura is written in Python, and compiled as a standalone application. It does not install anything anywhere else onto your computer, and it runs safely in the user context (no administrator access needed or required).
Open Structura.exe. This will run in a command window, which will then pop-up the user interface.
Start by enabling Advanced mode. This allows us to assign name tags to the armour stands, so we are not interfering with other armour stands, and so it allows us to load our multiple structures.
Browse for your first mcstructure file, and give it a memorable Name Tag. In our example, I loaded AthosA_TopLeft, and called it A1.
Set your Pack Name to something that will describe your structure to you.
the offset section is where you can adjust the position of your armour stand to remain in render-distance while you cover the whole build. For our 64x1x64 section of the map, decreasing the offset to -16, 0, -16 is enough to keep the stand rendered even in the far corner.
For smaller builds, the default 8,0,7 will usually suffice. Remember of course that any offset below zero will be inside your build as you assemble it.
It may help you to check the “make lists” box, as this will produce a text file containing a list of all required blocks (some variants & colours may end up as a combined total)
Press Add Model to add this entry to the pack.
Repeat this process for each of the .mcstructure files.
Complete the process by pressing Make Pack.
You will see the output in the command window behind, and moving the GUI window will reveal the progress.
Once the pack making is complete, you can browse the Structura folder, to see the .mcpack, and associated txt files.
Open up the .mcpack to import the addon into MineCraft.
Step 3: Loading the pack in your world
Once the pack has successfully imported, navigate into Settings, and Global Resources, then activate your pack.
If you’re playing on a single player world, you may need to add the Resource Pack to your world in it’s settings.
If your server/realm is running an armour stand resource pack, like the FoxyNoTail’s Combo ArmourStand+ mod, you need to temporarily disable this by removing the cached download of the Resource pack.
Once you’re in the world, place your armour stand, and tag it with the name you specified in Structura. For our example, we’ll start with A1. For map art, you will need to align your build with the level 0 map.
The Armour stand will show an opaque image of your design, with blocks that are slightly smaller than real blocks, so once you place the real block, it will be hidden inside.
Shift+clicking on the armour stand to cycle through the poses will reveal different individual levels of your model, so that you can build one layer at a time.
Step 4: Build
Place the blocks in the right place, as you see them, cycle the armour stand, and repeat.
Over to you. Enjoy!
Tips:
– If you’re building a water object, you may want to clear out the water in the area, and replace with structure_voids. These are invisible barriers that will not be saved in the structure file, and will make it easier to see the actual build in Survival.
An Announcement from Atlaskes
AthosCraft is now recruiting new members!
We would love for a few mature players to join our community.
Please see the recruitment post on the Minecraft Forum on how to apply to join us:
https://www.minecraftforum.net/forums/minecraft/multiplayer/realms/3143975-athoscraft-season-4-bedrock-survival-realm-now
Please be aware that it can take a little while for the recruitment team to respond, but we will send a message on Discord as soon as we can.
Endgame
I did it!
I finally did it!
I fixed the portal, I told you I would! The crying obsidian you all helped me get was invaluable.
Listen, I just got back from AC4, and it’s everything we ever hoped for. It’s just beautiful! The mountains, and the deep caves, and oh! You should see how lush and green it is!
The corruption in this world is spreading. I can feel it in my pixels… everything is… sluggish. Things are very not right here. I love this world… all the amazing things we’ve done here… but I just can’t stay.
So I’ve made up my mind. I’ve shuttered up the Black Market. My belongings are all packed away in storage. The shops are stocked one last time. I will be activating the portal one final time, and leaving this place forever.
You could come with me… you all could! There’s plenty of land for everyone, and we can make a fresh start in the new world.
Think about it, would you? If you’re coming with, meet me at my hideout at 21:00 GMT on December 4th.
This next part is very important… you can’t bring anything with you through the portal. Put everything into storage before we jump.
I’ll be waiting for you.
-Molly
An Announcement from Atlaskes
It is coming… It is finally coming! Minecraft announced the release of the long-awaited 1.18 Caves and Cliffs (part II) update on November 30th!
See the tweet here: https://twitter.com/Minecraft/status/1461001691113959433
Season 4 start
This also means that – after 20 months in season 3 – we can plan the start of AthosCraft season 4!
We are hoping to start season 4 on ***Saturday December 4th at 9pm GMT / 3pm CST***
*Disclaimer: This is depending on everything going smoothly with regards to picking a seed and preparing the world! If any major changes to the update are introduced then delays may occur.*
Athos News Broadcast, live from JangoBritt
Last night, I sat in front of the TV, through dinner, with my family, and watched Minecraft Live 2021.
This was a bit of a turning point for me, firstly because it was a moment of acceptance, but also because it was an opportunity for my wife to see what it is that we do in Minecraft, and why we find a game with such low-poly graphics so interesting.
I mean, at age 39, “normal” society says I shouldn’t be playing “kids” computer games, right?
Well, this was an opportunity for my wife to see some of the graphics in the game, especially the incredible new 1.18 terrain generation that we are all so looking forward to, and to listen to how intensely the devs and community creators feel about the game.
From the whacky content creators like @eystreem that my 6 year old loves watching, to the more serious builders like @ThatMumboJumbo that I watch, it was nice for my wife to see that it was something the whole family can enjoy.
More relevant though, was the sense of community all of these creators portrayed with their clips.
I started playing Minecraft almost a year ago, when my son got it for his 6th birthday. I started playing only with him, but as my geeky nature took over, I started to realise just how much I enjoyed creating builds & redefine machines. My interest quickly outpaced his, and I found I was doing more creating in our realm than he was… and it was a bit lonely.
Right in the height of the UK’s second lockdown, I felt I had nobody outside of my family to talk to on a daily basis, as work was just that… work. Scheduled meetings took the place of casual workplace conversation and banter, and I felt very isolated, even with a family behind me to talk with.
Joining AthosCraft was one of the best things I did. Almost as soon as I joined, I felt accepted into the community, and I had interesting people from all around the world to talk to again.
“How come you aren’t all watching this together on a zoom call or something?” asked my wife.
Well…
An Announcement from JangoBritt
Welcome to the new Website!