Map Text
Map Text
Importance of Text
Type
The term type is used in two ways. It may refer to the shape of the letter image; and it may refer to the actual
piece of metal, or the photographic image, from which the printed image is derived.
Type Characteristics
Beard – the space on the shoulder between the base-line and the front of the body.
Fig. 173: Characteristics and measurements of metal used in letterpressing Type face - the part of the type
which actually prints.
Shoulder – a plane of the body. It controls the minimum space the piece of type can occupy.
Nick/notch – interrupt the front plane of the body, enabling the compositor to identify the front quickly.
the distance between the upper limit of an ascender and the lower limit of a descender or
b) Type Forms/Faces/Styles
Typographic form refers to whether type is uppercase or lowercase, whether its stance is upright or slanted,
whether it is roman or italic, and combinations of these and similar elements.
Names requiring considerable separation of the letters are commonly limited to capitals. Hydrography,
landform, and other natural features are usually labeled in slant or italic, and cultural features identified in
upright forms.
(i). Roman
Roman type styles consist of vertical letters with small terminating lines, called serifs, at the extremities of the
main lines of the letter. These serifs may be straight, curved, tapered, squared off (slab serifs), or wedge-shaped
(Campbell, 1984).
These type forms are characterized by even stroke widths and usually have unbracketed slab- like serifs.
Includes all of the styles which, as the name suggests, lack serifs.
(iv). Italic
(vi). Boldness
Refers to the weight of the individual strokes that make up the letters, relative to the size of the letter.
(vii). Width/Set
c) Type Font
A font of type consists of a complete range of characters in a given style and size, consisting of capital, small
capital, and lowercase letters, and numerals, joined letters, and assorted signs that have been designed for that
style.
d) Type Color
Refers to the value and actual hue (such as black, blue, gray, or white) of the letters relative to that of the
background on which it appears.
The legibility of lettering on a map depends on the amount of visual contrast between the type and its
background. Black type on a white ground is the most readable,
Functions Of Lettering
Assignment
2. Explain giving examples, how each of the following variables of lettering are applied in mapping:
i). Style;
1. Freehand Lettering
It is lettering by hand.
1. Sit comfortably with the drawing in the most suitable position on the table.
2. Draw fine sharp guidelines for your lettering with a pencil. For lower case lettering such as b, d and f,
the guideline indicates the waist height.
3. Always keep a piece of paper on your work on which to rest your hand; thus avoiding making the
drawing dirty.
5. Before beginning up-right lettering it is a good idea to rule lines which are vertical to the guidelines.
This should be done at intervals so that the lull length of the words to be printed is covered. ln
slopping lettering, the same should be done with the slope lines at about 20° from the vertical at
intervals along the guidelines.
6. Space the letters so that the lettering appears even, although the actual spacing between the letters
varies. There should be a shorter distance between OO than II (round and straight letters).
7. Try and make strokes with the motion of the full arm and not with the fingers and wrist only.
8. Do not try to rule in letters with a ruling pen and straight edge when the lettering is less than 2.5cm. in
height.
Advantages
i). Curved and spaced names are as easy to produce e.g. those of rivers which will almost certainly follow
the river’s curved path
i). Slow
ii). Requires much more skill than most cartographers enjoy iii). extremely difficult to learn to perfect
iv). It is difficult to achieve standard results, from the same person over time and from different
draughtsmen
v). Very small sizes cannot be produced
vi). Most draughtsmen are capable of producing only a few, simple styles
Freehand lettering is now largely restricted to the compilation phase and the occasional special map produced
by free-lance cartographers and illustrators.
1. Lettering system involving perforated template or guides and a special pen (Wrico)
The pen is held in the hand and is moved around the stencil cut into the guide to form the various parts of a
word. A different guide is necessary for each size.
Wrico is the patented name of a lettering system involving perforated templates or guides and special pens.
2. Lettering system involving templates, a scriber and a special pen (Leroy Lettering)
In this system, templates are made of laminated plastic with the characters engraved in the face so that the
lines serve as guide grooves for the scriber.
The template is moved along a T- square or steel straight-edge and the scriber traces the depressed letters of
the template and reproduces them with the pen beyond the template.
Leroy is the patented name of lettering system involving the above-described device.
Advantages
1. Not much skill is needed to form an individual letter and curved and spaced names are as easy to
produce.
Individual letters are photographed from a master disk onto a white bromide paper and stripping film. These
intense black letters and hence words are then cut up and stuck down on the map drawing in the appropriate
places.
In a photo-setting machine, each face has to have a separate master disc from which each letter is
photographed. Letters when ready are waxed and mounted ready for use.
Advantages
7. The edges of stripping film can collect dirt and names can fall off. Therefore a negative must be made
immediately from a names overlay and all unwanted masks opaqued out.
4. Letterpress/Relief Process
Letterpress refers to the composing of letters with inked-coated, raised relief (extruded letters) and pressing
the composed letters on paper to get an image. The method by which this is done called process engraving.
Advantages
1. Clean and dry; not much skill is required to rub down an individual letter.
2. Letters are uniform
3. A very wide variety of styles is available (the most of any system of lettering)
4. Smaller sizes are available than when using stencils.
5. Names can be added easily to the same sheet as the line drawing
Disadvantages
2. It is not possible to produce the very small sizes sometimes used on maps
5. Some of the letters may be used more than the others depending on the language. The unused ones
will be a waste
6. Computer-Assisted Placement
One can select from a variety of typefaces options, and can specify type design parameters. The cartographer
can place the type at the desired map location.
ii).Automated Methods
The computer automatically does the placement based on the cartographer’s instruction. Uses placement
programs engines such as Maplex.
1. The general rule is that straight sided letters together are spaced wider apart than round letters
together.
2. The arrangement of names in the map sheet should be regular i.e. if possible parallel to the lower rim
of the map or parallel to the parallels and meridians. If a deviation from the above is necessary, then
the names should be written below upward if in the left side of the map and from above downwards
in the right part of it.
3. Names of areas or countries should occupy about 2/3 of the length of that area.
4. The placing of the name should indicate as far as possible the characteristic shape or shape of the
area.
5. The distance between the letters of a spaced name should be visually equal.
6. Names may not cross each other unless at least one of the names is clearly spaced.
7. Place names near rivers, coasts, boundaries and other dividing linear features should, if possible, not
be written down over these features.
13. Names for linear features e.g., rivers should be adopted to the form/shape of the objects. The name
should be preferably placed slightly above the object.
14. The height value of a contour line is written down in a gap between the contour line or above the
contour line in such a way that the number is perpendicular to the slope.
Construction of Rectangular Grid
Grids may be plotted by machine methods or constructed by hand. The instrument or machine which is used
for plotting a grid is called a CO-ORDINATOGRAPH.
a) A stainless-steel metre scale divided into centimetres on which at one end is a diagonal scale, so that
measurements to a 10th of a millimetre can be made.
b) A beam compass of good quality, the beam being rigid, preferably made of metal. The length required
approximately 120cm.
Before the construction of a grid can begin, its overall size must be determined. Supposing it is required to
construct a grid 30 km. East - West by 20 km. North- South at the scale of 1:50,000 the first task is to calculate
the overall size of the grid.
Scale (S ) =
∴ MD S GD
1 301000 100cm
50000
= 60cm
The distance East – West is 60cm while the distance North – South is 40 cm. The overall grid size is 60×40 cm.
To ensure a perfect rectangle has been constructed, diagonals must be calculated after plotting the grid. They
are calculated using the Pythagoras theorem.
c a2 b2
602 402
= 72.11 cm
1. Find the approximate centre of the drawing material by drawing diagonals from corner to corner using the
straight-edge and well sharpened pencil. The centre O is the point where the diagonals cross.
2. Through 'O' the centre, draw two lines at right angles to each other. The way to do this is as follows:
a) First describe arcs to cut the diagonals using the beam compass and the centre 'O'. The arcs cut the
diagonals at A, B, C and D.
b) Set the beam compass at 'A' and describe arc 'a' in the top quarter of the sheet. Without altering the
beam compass, set the point at 'B' and describe the arc 'b' so that it cuts arc 'a'
c) Carry out the same procedure from points 'C' and 'D' to form arcs 'c' and 'd'. Draw a straight line
passing through the intersections ab, O and cd.
d) Repeat this procedure from A and D, and B and C ending up by drawing the horizontal line
passing through ad, O and bc. The two lines will cross at right angles.
e) Rub out the two diagonals etc. so that only the straight lines at 90° to each other are left.
Uses of a Rectangular Grid
(iii). Bearing and distance can computed if rectangular coordinates are given. (iv). Essential in
transferring details from one location to another