Style Guide·Updated May 20266 min read

By Jack Pan — Founder of Cartosketch, developer, designer, and map enthusiast

8 AI Map Styles for Posters, Slides, and Games

A visual reference for all 8 Cartosketch styles — cartoon, watercolor, ink wash, vintage map, pixel art, oil painting, blueprint, and cyberpunk — with guidance on when to use each.

Cartosketch is an AI-powered map styling tool that transforms real geographic data from Mapbox into artistic visual assets — watercolor paintings, ink wash illustrations, and cartoon sketches — in under 60 seconds. Cartosketch ships with 8 styles: cartoon, watercolor, ink wash, vintage map, pixel art, oil painting, blueprint, and cyberpunk. Each trades legibility for mood differently, so matching style to context is more important than picking the most technically impressive one.

The eight styles in one table

StyleVibeBest for
CartoonVibrant, playfulNotion pages, indie games, zines
WatercolorSoft, editorialTravel content, wedding maps, book covers
Ink WashMoody, monochromeMystery games, editorial illustration
Vintage MapAged parchment, antiqueTTRPG, historical docs, travel journals
Pixel ArtRetro 16-bitIndie games, nostalgic posters
Oil PaintingRich impasto, painterlyGallery prints, book covers
BlueprintEngineering diagramUrban planning, real-estate decks
CyberpunkHigh-contrast, neonTech pitches, sci-fi games
Tokyo Disneyland rendered in Watercolor style by Cartosketch AI — soft color washes, painterly textures, accurate street layout
Tokyo Disneyland — Watercolor style. Soft washes over real Mapbox street data.
Tokyo DisneySea rendered in Ink Wash style by Cartosketch AI — dramatic monochrome brushwork, East Asian sumi-e aesthetic
Tokyo DisneySea — Ink Wash style. Sumi-e inspired brushwork on real geographic data.

Pairing style to context

  • If the map will sit next to dense text, choose blueprint — its technical line work stays legible at small sizes.
  • If the map is the hero visual (poster, book cover), choose watercolor or vintage map — both have texture that prints beautifully.
  • If the map must sit on a dark UI, choose cyberpunk — its neon highlights pop against black backgrounds.

FAQ

Can I combine styles?
Indirectly. Generate a base image in one style, then use Modify with a prompt like "add neon highlights" to blend traits of a second style without losing the original composition.
Which style is the most readable?
Minimalist line art, followed by blueprint. Both preserve street hierarchy and suppress ornamentation.
Which style prints best?
Watercolor and vintage cartography — both have natural grain that forgives paper and ink variance at larger print sizes.
JP

Founder of Cartosketch — developer, designer, and map enthusiast.

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