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Bucknell/Local Interest General GIS Slideshow

Making a (good) map

The previous post talked about Margaret Pearce’s call for an active, engaged map reader. Consider this post a call for cartography that’s good enough to keep the attention of those active, engaged map readers. There are tons of great blogs and websites out there that focus on cartographic design – from the high end conceptual approaches to map-making all the way through to the nuts and bolts of how to find and load different symbol sets. I’ll try to highlight a number of those in the coming weeks (it is poster season after all). For now, here’s a good blog to start with – Map Practical.

They had me at “classic mountain stamp” symbol sets.

From MapPractical’s blog description:

Welcome to Map Practical, where the cartography gets done. These are the cartographic trenches, the domain of greasy hands, busted knuckles, and sore mouse fingers. This is the home of techniques, tutorials, and tricks of all things map. Here’s how we do it; your job is to make it look good!

By Janine Glathar

Janine Glathar joined the Digital Pedagogy & Scholarship team in 2009 to fill the newly-created role of GIS Specialist at Bucknell. She has worked in the field of geospatial technologies for more than 15 years as research specialist, technical analyst and software trainer. Prior to joining L&IT at Bucknell, Janine spent seven years doing applied GIS research in Philadelphia’s non-profit social services sector as the GIS Senior Analyst for Philadelphia Safe & Sound and the Greater Philadelphia Urban Affairs Coalition. Before transitioning to the social services research world, Janine worked for the GIS software company ESRI as a trainer and education/non-profit coordinator. She earned a B.A. in European History and Russian Language/Literature at the University of Pennsylvania. If you ask Janine where she’s from, she’ll tell you she’s a Navy brat and will probably offer to show you a map of all of the various places she’s lived over the years.

Areas of expertise:
ArcGIS, Digital Pedagogy, Digital Scholarship, GIS, Google Earth, Spatial Thinking