Map Design and Custom Graphics
Transcription
Map Design and Custom Graphics
Maps and custom graphics When working with design professionals it is more important than ever to get the highest level of capability and experience at the best possible cost. Since 1982, our Hudson Valley studio has offered our clients low operating overhead, proximity to New England and New York City, ready access to support services and, of course, excellent pricing. Creative. Experienced. Practical! More projects than you might think require maps, associated graphics, and custom typography. Toelke Associates creates maps for books and publications that we produce as an integral part of the process, as well as maps for books published by others. We have adapted materials provided by cartographers and geologists, and are comfortable accessing content from a variety of sources to create custom maps. We have also created display materials and signage for our clients. Please review the selected projects on the following pages. Our work on these featured projects generally includes project consultation, concept development, map artwork and associated graphics, and vendor liaison. TOELKE ASSOCIATES Book and Publication Design and Production Services Identity and Branding | Institutional Development P.O. Box 253, Chatham, NY 12037 | 518-392-3040 | www.toelkeassociates.com Maps and graphics 1 uMap for Columbia County History & Heritage magazine Columbia County Area: 648 mi2 1,675 km2 The total area is 1.93% water. Population: 63,094 (2000) Columbia County is in the eastern part of New York State, southeast of Albany and immediately west of the Massachusetts border. The western border is the Hudson River. The terrain is gentle, rolling hills, rising sharply into the Taconic and Berkshire Mountains along the state line. 16 19 13 Columbia County History & Heritage tourism map created for the magazine, with attraction sites and key (left). Same map adapted for Columbia County Outdoors, published by the Columbia Land Conservancy, 2012 (below). 22 22 6 25 The highest point is on the Massachusetts state line near the summit of Alander Mountain, at approximately 2,110 feet (643 m) above sea level, in the town of Copake. The lowest point is at or near sea level along the Hudson. 23 9 14 12 3 0 2.5 5 7.5 10 9 9 66 8 5A 20 5 13 Scale of Miles 20 20 32 1 NEW LEBANON 90 28B 7 9 28 KINDERHOOK Valatie 9J 10 15 5 Chatham 9 25 26A 15 21B 19 18 21 9H 25 5 1 203 AUSTERLITZ 7 STOCKPORT GHENT 22 9 66 9H 37 12 9 24 13 24 18 90 9 36 22 9 9J 5 2 45 22 13 22 35 295 24 STUYVESANT 2 203 Kinderhook CANAAN TSP 25 66 18 30 38 295 13 CHATHAM 26 9 11 5 9 66 17 28 21 7 17 21 34 TSP 21 11 20 20 21C 21 71 9 Philmont 8 4 Hudson NORTH 13 18 239GB 217 23B CLAVERACK 9 9G HILLSDALE 11 23 17 23 23 923H 239 14 9G 29 7 27 LIVINGSTON 10 MAP KEY 14. Luykas Van Alen House 2. Cedar Grove/Thomas Cole National Historic Site 15. Olana State Historic Site 3. The Chatham Film Club 16. Rider’s Mills Historical Society 4. Clermont 17. Robert Jenkins House Museum and Library 5. Columbia County Fairgrounds 18. Roeliff Jansen Historical Society Museum 6. Columbia County Museum 19. Shaker Museum and Library at Mt. Lebanon 7. FASNY Museum of Firefighting 20. Spencertown Academy 8. The Ghent Playhouse 21. Stageworks/Hudson 9. The Hudson Area Association Library 22. Steepletop 10. Hudson Athens Lighthouse 23. 1880 Stuyvesant Train Depot 11. Hudson Opera House 24. Taconic State Park 12. Lindenwald/Martin Van Buren National Historic Site 25. Vanderpoel House Center for Columbia County History 32 11 TSP 31 11 19 1. Austerlitz Historical Society 22 23 33 GREENPORT 23 4 TAGHKANIC 82 27 10 10 3 7A 21 9 8 27A 19 10 16 9G 33 35 8 82 7 6 6 CLERMONT 4 9 TSP 2 22 8 GALLATIN ANCRAM 34 2 7 82 13. Livingston History Barn uMap for Waterways of War — the French & Indian War 1754–1763 French & Indian War Sites along New York and Pennsylvania Byways created for the Great Lakes Seaway Trail book Waterways of War — the French and Indian War, 1754–1763. This map has been adapted for the second book in the series, Waterways of War — the War of 1812. 39 22 27 31 14 GERMANTOWN 7A COPAKE 31 33 8A 8 334 Maps and graphics 2 uMaps for history books/Media Projects/DK Publishing World War II maps , a series of 42 campaign maps created and produced for DK through Media Projects, Inc. Da Nang LZ X-Ray and LZ Albany DMZ Hue LAOS Dak To Da Nang Vietnam War maps , a series of 32 campaign maps created and produced for DK through Media Projects, Inc. Kontum Pleiku CAMBODIA SOUTH VIETNAM Phu Cat Duc Co Ia Drang Valley CAMBODIA Central Highlands Ban Me Thout SOUTH VIETNAM Dalat Phuoc Long Cam Ranh Cam Ranh Bay Phnom Penh Xuan Loc An Loc Saigon Bien Hoa Saigon Ban Me Thout Central Highlands Mekong R. to Saratoga Burgoyne South China Sea South China Sea Freeman’s Farm Poor r M i ll C eek Learned N ud so nR . Main roads NVA Campaign January – April 1975 American military history maps from colonial Morgan times through the First Gulf War, an extensive series of battle and campaign maps created and produced for DK Publishing through Media Projects, Inc. Bemis Heights Gates H 0 0 1 mile 1 km Here are 4 specs for key color: Here are 4 specs for key color: 1) DS Red: 100M 50Y 10K simulating PMS DS 115-1C 1) Red: 100M 50Y 10K simulating PMS 115-1C 2) 2) DSOrange: Orange: 70M 100Y simulating PMS 49-1C 70M 100Y simulating PMS DS 49-1C 3) 3) Green: 50C 100Y 60K simulating PMS ?? Green: 50C 100Y 60K simulating PMS ?? Maps and graphics 3 uGeology maps Tectonic map of Columbia County, New York created and produced for The Rise and Fall of the Taconic Mountains, based on field work by Donald Fisher, New York State Paleontologist Emeritus (left). Ice Age glacier map created and produced for The Hudson Valley in the Ice Age (below). 14 The Hudson Valley in the Ice Age that land of all sources of heat. The Gulf Stream had generated abundant snowfall in the northern latitudes. The Earth’s albedo was rising. All these trends seem to have been dragging the Earth into a colder time, and that might seem enough to account for the onset of the Ice Age. But it wasn’t. Our story has, so far, followed the Earth through tens of millions of years to a point when it was just cold enough so that glaciation might be expected. But we need something else; our theory is not yet complete. Ice ages occur in roughly 100,000-year cycles, and Wilson cycles are much too long to possibly cause anything like this. We still have to Keewatin Ice Sheet Cordillera Ice Sheet Labrador Ice Sheet Figure 2-2. Map of the great North American ice sheets at the peak of the Ice Age. Courtesy U.S. Geological Survey. 50 feet 100 feet 150 feet uTrail maps/Outdoor Columbia County book 0 600 1200 1800 e Quinn Lan 2400 ” er “S t 300 fee Roa HARRIER HILL Lett 1 inch = 1200 feet HUDSON RIVER d STOCKPORT CONSERVATION AREA Rod and Gun Roa d 0 20 et fe n e re G 150 feet GREENPORT TOWN PARK 0 275 550 825 1100 300 feet 300 feet Jo e va Bo ule sle n d oa R GREENPORT CONSERVATION AREA wA venu es fe Fairv ie cr rd A et 10 1 inch = 550 feet nty Cou Road 22 Talarico Road A series of 46 maps created and produced for an outdoor activity and trail guide book published by the Columbia Land Conservancy in 2012 — Outdoor Columbia County. Maps and graphics 4 uArt Trail map for the Thomas Cole House Tour and site location map for the first and second editions of the Hudson River School Art Trail, published by The Thomas Cole House NHS, Catskill, New York. HUDSON RIVER SCHOOL NYS RV W Parking Area Spring Street P N Gatehouse Visitor Center 1 Br id View Direction Foot Trail 6 North-South Lake State Campground N or th La ke P R d. P Haines Falls P 23 1 R VW son ud H 5 2 Olana RV Brid W ge Bastion Falls Palenville 9G 23 Bridge Catskill 23A Bastion Falls 4 Thomas Cole Site 3 8 23B 8 Kaaterskill Falls Hudson 9 9W 6 5 4 Mountain Top Historical Society 385 EXIT 21 7 7 North Lake Rd. 23A ge P r ve Ri 82 2 9G P 9W To Haines Falls 10 Taco nic P arkw ay Hudson River School Art Trail Map Sites 1 to 9 Thru way ART TRAIL 11 uMaps and graphics for “The Essential Lake George Boaters Guide 2011–2013 Maps and graphics for the Essential Lake George Boaters Guide, published by Quarterdeck Productions. 27 maps were created based on satellite photos to detail ATONs, navigational hazards and other features of Lake George, New York, for recreational boaters. Custom graphics created to illustrate boating “rules of the road.” Lake George’s Southern Basin to Diamond Point The Essential Lake George Boaters Guide 2013 Diamond Point and Vicinity DIAMOND POINT 0 mi. .5 mi. Wood Pt. Scale of Miles Diamond Point is actually part of Lake George, though by most it is considered a separate community, complete with its own zip code and post office. Diamond Point is often favored among vacationing boaters. Its location on the west side of the lake, roughly midway between Lake George Village and Bolton Landing, allows easy access to the attractions of both, while providing a more quiet setting with spectacular views of the lake and surrounding mountains. This area is also home to several of the historic mansions that are part of Millionaires Row along the west shore of the lake. Hogback Reef 24 U6 23 22 M 21 26 STARBOARD 1 Blast 27 Cramers Point Motel & Cottages 15 Stepping Stones Resort 2 O’Connors Resort Cottages 16 Canoe Island Lodge 3 Still Bay Resort 17 Juliana Resort 4 Depe Dene Resort 18 Thunderbird Resort & Marina 5 Diamond Cove Cottages 19 Yankee Marina 6 Golden Sands Resort 20 Flamingo Resort 7 Mt. Knoll Beach Cottages 21 Capri Village 8 Lake George Suites 22 Treasure Cove 9 Gilchrist Marina and Motel 23 Beckley’s Boats See page 127 11 24 Lake George Club 25 O.D. Heck Day-Use Island 12 Olympian Village Motel 26 Long Island Campground 13 Diamond Point Grill 27 Long Island Ranger Station 14 Diamond Point Community Beach 28 Diamond Island Day-Use Site 5 7 6 DANGER See page 115 U5 5 MPH ZONE 4 See page 113 Still Bay 2 W1 Cooper Pt. DANGER GREEN HARBOR 1 5 MPH ZONE Cramer Pt. PORT Diagrams show boats with regulation lights (red: port or left; green: starboard or right on bow; white: aft or stern). This is a situation in which two power-driven vessels are crossing and risk of collision exists. In this situation, the vessel that has the other on its starboard side is the give-way vessel. The give-way vessel should sound one blast on its horn, turn to starboard, and leave the stand-on vessel on its port side. The stand-on vessel should respond with one short blast and maintain course and Cannon Pt. 3 STARBOARD Assembly Point 5 MPH ZONE Orcut Bay M Marina 124 U7 5 MPH ZONE 25 5 MPH ZONE M 8 1 Blast GIVE-WAY VESSEL Crossing Situation 15 12 14 9 11 Pot Beli Deli DANGER Canoe Is. 10 10 Blue Lagoon 17 16 13 GIVE-WAY VESSEL PORT Long Is. 18 Diamond Point map key 1 When two power-driven vessels meet on reciprocal or nearly reciprocal headings, each vessel is required to exchange a short blast of their horn and pass with each other on their port (left) side. At night, you will know that you are in a head-on situation when you see both red and green sidelights of the oncoming vessel. DANGER Middleworth Bay 19 M 20 General Boating Information and Recreational Activities Meeting Head-On 1 mi. 125 28 STAND-ON VESSEL GIVE-WAY VESSEL DANGER ZONE From dead ahead to 112.5° or 22.5° abaft the starboard beam Diamond Is. 59 Maps and graphics 5 uSite map and signage for the Mountain Top Arboretum TO WINDHAM MOUNTAIN TOP ARBORETUM VISITORS MAP & GUIDE TO WINDHAM ALL SOULS CHURCH ALL SOULS CHURCH NORTH COUNTY ROAD 25 Tannersville, NY • Elevation 2400 Ft. W E COUNTY ROAD 518-589-3903 www.mtarboretum.org CEMETERY S WEST MEADOW GATE E S 0 Pond MAUDE A DA MS ROAD ENTRANCE PARKING 3 12 WEST MEADOW 4 PARKING 13. The Pump House B. Restrooms 14. Wetland Walkway 13 14 C. Nursery beds 0 Pond 6 50 12 YARDS M A UD E ADAMS RO AD ENTRANCE 7 C B A. The Barn 5 WEST MEADOW GATE A EAST MEADOW 11. Pine Grove 12. The Fern Trail Gazebo ENTRANCES BLACK SPRUCE GLEN 11 EAST MEADOW ARBORETUM FACILITIES 1 MAIN ENTRANCE WOODLAND WALK 9. Mountain Laurels 10. Sunny Meadow 6. Butterfly Garden 2 ENTRANCE TO TANNERSVILLE 8. Seasonal Wildflowers 3. Meadow 4. Dwarf Conifers 5. Devonian Bedrock 50 YARDS ENTRANCES 7. Deer Resistant Plants 2. Conifers W EAST MEADOW WEST MEADOW 25 WOODLAND WALK 1. Rain Garden ROA D2 3A MAIN ENTRANCE WEST MEADOW CEMETERY COU NT Y CO UN TY RO AD 23A NORTH WOODLAND WALK 8 9 Access to the East Meadow is along Maude Adams Road from the West Meadow. The walk takes five to ten minutes. This is a dirt road and may not be accessible to all persons. Seasonal conditions may make the walk more difficult. Visitor vehicles are not allowed on this road! 10 RESTROOMS TO TANNERSVILLE Tannersville, NY • Elevation 2400 Ft. 518-589-3903 www.mtarboretum.org The Arboretum is tucked in a valley formed by the Blackhead and Jewett ranges of the northern Catskill Mountains within an easy hike to an overlook where the Hudson River School painters defined America’s sense of the vanishing wilderness. It is a living museum of native and exotic trees and shrubs founded by the Ahrens family in 1977 to display the range of hardy flora that can successfully adapt to the rigorous climate at 2,400 feet elevation. The Arboretum’s mission encompasses three goals: to engage in the applied science of horticulture; to promote stewardship of the environment; and to offer a diversity of programs for the education and enjoyment of the public. The Arboretum’s collections contain over 1,500 accessioned and mapped trees and shrubs on display, as well as pest resistant perennial borders planted outside the deer fencing that surrounds the main collection areas. Mountain Top Arboretum Route 23C & Maude Adams Road, PO Box 379, Tannersville NY 12485 518-589-3903 www.mtarboretum.org Printed on recycled paper HIDDEN MARSH BLACK SPRUCE GLEN BOARDWALK WETLANDS WETLANDS Site and trail map for the Mountain Top Arboretum, updated since 2007 as the site adds land and visitor features. Map used for on-site visitor brochures and informational kiosk. Designed a series of six 24" × 36" signs for Wildflowers at the Mountain Top Arboretum various Arboretum locations This list includes many of the wildflowers and ferns that grow in the Woodland Walk. The habitat is predominantly maple-beech-oak forest on a south facing slope. There is a seasonal stream, and the rocky clay soil is well drained. Summer Blooming Summer/Fall Blooming Bird’s Foot Trefoil (Lotus corniculatus) Asters (Aster sp.) Blue Flag (Iris versicolor) Blue-Eyed Grass (Sisyrinchium angustifolium) Silverrod (Solidago bicolor) Bluets (Houstonia caerulea) Blue Vervain (Verbena hastata) Spring Blooming Bird’s Foot Violet (Viola pedata) Columbine (Aquilegia canadensis) Foxglove (Digitalis lutea) Crested Dwarf Iris (Iris cristata) Goldenrod (Solidago spp.) Fall Blooming Early Meadow Rue (Thalictrum dioicum) Hawkweed (Hieracium aurantiacum) False Hellebore (Veratrum woodii) Heal–all, Self Heal (Prunella vulgaris) Foamflower (Tiarella cordifolia) Jewelweed (Imaptiens biflora and I. pallida) Herb Robert (Geranium robertianum) Meadowsweet (Spirea latifolia) Jack-in-the-Pulpit (Arisaema triphyllum) Monkey Flower (Mimulus ringens) Lesser Celandine (Ranunculus ficaria) Pale Green Orchid (Habenaria flava) Marsh Marigold (Caltha palustris) St. John’s-Wort (Hypericum perforatum) Spring Beauty (Claytonia caroliniana) Three-toothed Cinquefoil (Potentilla tridentata) Sweet Violet (Viola odorata) White Snakeroot (Eupatorium rugosum) Toothwort (Dentaria diphylla) Wild Basil (Satureja vulgaris) Trout Lily, Dog Tooth Violet (Erythronium americanum) Wood Betony (Pedicularis canadensis Beech–drops (Epiphagus virginiana) All Season Interest Interrupted Fern (Osmunda claytoniana) Maidenhair Fern (Adiantum pedatum) New York Fern (Thelypteris noveboracensis) Partridge Berry (Mitchella repens) Royal Fern (Osmunda regalis) Silvery Spleenwort (Athyrium thelypteroides Common Woodrush (Luzula campestris) Speedwell (Veronica prostrata) Forget–Me–Not (Myosotis scorpiodes) WETLANDS Wood Anenome (Anenome quinquefolia) Wild Oats, Bellwort (Uvularia sessilifolia) Blue Cohosh (Caulophyllum thalictroides) Caption Caption Caption Caption Caption Caption Caption Caption uSignage for Hudson Riverfront Park — 2009 Henry Hudson Quadricentennial in 2009; designed park signage for the City of Hudson’s Riverfront Park, and created diecut “Henry Hudson on a Stick” mask souvenir.