Gentle readers,
Things have been fairly quiet around here lately, and I apologize for that. I’ve had some maps in mind to write about, but much of my spare time has been taken up by a major project. I present to you, the NACIS Atlas of Design:
This is a book I edited along with the superbly awesome Tim Wallace. It’s a refereed collection of some of the world’s best cartography. You may recall my announcement earlier this year that we were taking entries. Well, we had over 140 of them, and then a panel of judges selected 27 finalists to be published in this anthology.
This book is very important to me personally. In this era of quick and easy mapping, I feel that all too often we are focused only on the coding, or the data, and not enough on how the whole thing looks, and how it makes readers feel. This is a book about how maps look, and why we need to remember that beautiful and clever design is an essential ingredient in mapmaking. We wanted to produce a volume to honor talented people, and to inspire everyone out there toward new understandings of the role of aesthetics and design in mapmaking. I hope you’ll enjoy it, and I very much hope it will give you something to ponder.

wow sounds like a great project – looking forward to seeing it one day
Awesome idea. You should follow it up with a companion book: The world’s worst cartography.
I wouldn’t be surprised if I could find a number of people who would, in fact, be willing to volunteer their own work toward such a collection. I’ve certainly done some terrible pieces, and I know they’re terrible, and I’d want people to learn from my mistakes, and I have some colleagues who feel similarly.
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you have colleagues who feel similarly about your work? or their own?
A bit of both, I’d say =) — colleagues who’d like people to learn from my mistakes, and would like people to learn from theirs.