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Greatest map of the U.S.

 Content Dam Slate Articles Arts Culturebox 2011 12 Indiemaps 111220 Cbox Imusmap

Each year, the annual competition of the Cartography and Geographic Information Society awards a “Best of Show” prize for excellence in map design. The winners have included the Central Intelligence Agency, the US Census Bureau, and National Geographic Magazine. This year though, the winner was one guy: David Imus. Slate posted an analysis of what makes the Imus map, titled “The Essential Geography of the United States of America,” so damn good. From Seth Stevenson’s piece at Slate:

According to independent cartographers I spoke with, the big mapmaking corporations of the world employ type-positioning software, placing their map labels (names of cities, rivers, etc.) according to an algorithm. For example, preferred placement for city labels is generally to the upper right of the dot that indicates location. But if this spot is already occupied—by the label for a river, say, or by a state boundary line—the city label might be shifted over a few millimeters. Sometimes a town might get deleted entirely in favor of a highway shield or a time zone marker. The result is a rough draft of label placement, still in need of human refinement. Post-computer editing decisions are frequently outsourced—sometimes to India, where teams of cheap workers will hunt for obvious errors and messy label overlaps. The overall goal is often a quick and dirty turnaround, with cost and speed trumping excellence and elegance.

By contrast, David Imus worked alone on his map seven days a week for two full years. Nearly 6,000 hours in total. It would be prohibitively expensive just to outsource that much work. But Imus—a 35-year veteran of cartography who’s designed every kind of map for every kind of client—did it all by himself. He used a computer (not a pencil and paper), but absolutely nothing was left to computer-assisted happenstance. Imus spent eons tweaking label positions. Slaving over font types, kerning, letter thicknesses. Scrutinizing levels of blackness. It’s the kind of personal cartographic touch you might only find these days on the hand-illustrated ski-trail maps available at posh mountain resorts.

The Greatest Paper Map of the United States You’ll Ever See(Thanks, Bob Pescovitz!)

Imus Geographics

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