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More crafty cartogeeky

I needed a new table in my study for crafty projects (sewing machine, somewhere to use cutting board, dedicated place for framing etc) but I quite fancied something a little bit different.

Coincidentally, our old road atlas was falling apart (and out of date), and I cannot bear to throw away a map, even one as pedestrian as that, so I thought I could combine the two creatively….

So yesterday while the football was on I nipped to Ikea and bought a plain boring 100X60 tabletop, and today I took advantage of the sunshine today and decamped to the back garden with a few bits and pieces and got to work.

Essential ingredients

And in case anyone wanted to do the same, here’s what I did and what I learnt.

I cut about 20 shapes out of the map, each nearly a page in size. I cut along the lines of roads, motorways, rivers, coastlines and county borders, so that the overlaps would seem less obvious.

I chose places which are familiar to me from family, holidays or former homes.

I used repositionable spraymount to stick the pieces to the tabletop. If I was doing this again, I’d probably use something else. It was good to be able to reposition the chunks, but the glue went everywhere and was nearly impossible to get off my hands later, plus it didn’t stick terribly well – though that might have been a side-effect of failing to spray the edges.

Making a new country

I laid the pieces out to overlap, and kept the grid on the map intact as much as possible, so even though I was inventing whole new landscapes and regions, there would at least be some flow through it in the form of thin blue lines.

After the whole thing was laid out, there were a few gaps, so I cut out chunks of blue and tucked them underneath the other bits. New lakes! I used Copydex to stick down the edges which were all a bit flyaway.

Then I gave the whole thing a layer of clear varnish, followed by another one an hour later and still another later on.

Waiting for the varnish to dry

The varnish dried well, but it didn’t quite work as I was expecting – I was hoping it would be heavy enough to weigh down the paper and provide a sort of clear layer on top. The spray varnish I was using was much more lightweight, which meant it caused some of the paper to curl and bubble up.

Hmm.

So I had a rummage in my study and found some sticky-back plastic, which I then smoothed over the whole thing.

Sticky-back plastic

This worked much better, but unfortunately the bubbling caused by the earlier varnish is still vaguely perceptable. That’s ok – I’ll just stick the sewing machine on top and no-one will ever notice.

The finished product

And that was it. Total cost, including buying the varnish, spraymount and table = £15. (I already had the copydex, map and sticky-back plastic (how very Lesley Judd of me, I know))

There’s a full set of photos here.

Now I’ve just got to figure out what to do with the rest of the atlas…

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Category: Creative, Projects, fmp

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8 Responses

  1. Sarah says:

    I love this. And being lazy I’m thinking of smaller-scale projects such as map placemats and coasters, photo borders, and to cover tin cans to keep pens etc in.

  2. Lloyd says:

    Lovely idea, Meg. I can feel a trip to Purley Way coming on….

  3. Emily* says:

    He he. Great work Meg! I have a bit of a fetish over maps too, so I love this idea and can’t think of a better way to spend a sunny day in the garden (though I don’t suppose the hot dry air helped the sticky glue situation!).

    I’d just be worried if I did this that I’d actually start forgetting the real geography of the country and find myself wondering why, when I’m next in Lancashire, I couldn’t just drive a few miles west and find myself in Glen Coe!

    I guess from looking at this and your cross-stitched tube map you must have loved the map art works in the Sensation exhibition back in ’97, like Simon Patterson’s The Great Bear (the London Underground map with new station names) and Jonathan Parson’s ‘Carcass’ – a road map of the UK with everything cut out except the roads – a transformation which made the roads really look like the arteries of a body.

  4. Matt says:

    very very nice – BUT – who the hell ‘nips’ to IKEA? Not the word I’d associate with the experience…

  5. Meg says:

    You’d be amazed, Matt:

    Sunny afternoon +
    Football cup final +
    Rugby on telly
    =
    No-one on the roads and no-one in Ikea.

    It was almost spooky.

  6. Jane Perrone says:

    Love it! I use old maps for wrapping paper – works really well for smaller gifts.

  7. Jo says:

    Very nice, I’m enjoying the map crafts – combining two of my favourite things! More please!

  8. Angela says:

    You conceived, started, and completed a project in ONE DAY!!!

    I’m jealous. Deeply, shamefully jealous.

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What’s all this, then?

This is a personal site, created and curated continuously since early 2000 by Meg Pickard, a creative geek, passionate photographer, anthropologist and web experience /community /social media specialist, who works for The Guardian & lives in London, UK.
 
The site includes a blog - a personal and evolving collection of links, opinions, thoughts, ideas, anecdotes and musings - as well as a variety of other projects. It is also a place to aggregate some of the author's distributed web activity, like photos, links and music.
 
More info about this site and its author.

Important note #1

This is a personal site. The contents and opinions contained within don't necessarily reflect those of my employer, family, or cat. They think for themselves (though mostly about tuna, in at least one case), and so do I.

Important note #2

Since the overwhelming majority of content on this site is historical, it should be regarded in light of the context in which it was originally published, and not as indicative or revealing of current perspectives, preferences or experience.

Important note #3

While I work and spend a lot of time thinking and talking about social media, participatory technologies and community development strategies, the vast majority of content on this site is not about that.

This personal site isn't about anything, except the perpetual unfolding of one person's experience, and the perspectives, observations and opinions that involves and inspires.

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