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    Jul 16, 2012

    Detailed Toner v2 (2012) change notes

    by Nathaniel

    Eric gave a general overview of the changes we rolled out for Toner v2 in this post and this post. In my post I dig into the technical details. But first, pictures!

    Visual changelog for Toner 2012:

    Toner v2 (2012 and 2011) uses High Road for more sophisticated roads and tucks San Francisco's punky park mohock under the water.

    Toner changes thru time

    There is now a "lite" version that is less high contrast, better for printing out analog style or overlaying polygons client-side.

    Toner changes thru time

    We added reservoirs!

    Toner changes thru time

    And better about showing walking and biking paths thru the meadows and woods:

    Toner changes thru time

    Back in the urban grid, we've added subways and building footprints to help wayfind:

    Toner changes thru time

    Speaking of buildings, big ones get added first, then all on the most detailed zooms:

    Toner changes thru time

    We cleaned up labels so they don't overlap as much:

    Toner changes thru time

    And added city labels world wide:

    Toner changes thru time

    And now draw kanji and other non-Latin scripts right:

    Toner changes thru time

    General notes

    • Easy-to-use tiles: Stamen now hosts easy to embed Toner tiles with CC license from maps.stamen.com, thanks to the Knight Foundation and our Citytracking.org grant! No server hardware or software setup needed, just start using the tiles in your favorite web mapping API client side. You can still roll your own tiles using the data and setup readme's in the Github repo. Read more ยป

    • More international: Plays better outside of the United States! Now displays local names in non-Latin writing scripts (like Japanese and Arabic) and better accent marks in Europe. We optimized the road symbology to more places world wide. Issue 30

    • More Toner flavors: Introduces specific flavors of Toner optimized for map sandwiches, easy to integrating with and promoting your custom map stories: toner-standard (toner), toner-hybrid-with-labels (toner-hybrid), toner-hybrid-only-lines (toner-lines), toner-hybrid-only-labels (toner-labels), toner-no-labels (toner-background). Issue 10.

    • Easy to read stylesheets: General stylesheet cleanup, consolidation. Restructured all the OSM roads using High Roads. Now uses Postgres views by zoom level, making it much easier to design what big, medium, and small roads should look like consistently between layers while abstracting the data part. Similar appraoch is taken for water bodies using Imposm tables. Issue 9

    • More content: Added reservoirs, state boundaries, and more. Map now zooms to 19+, important when you're inventory mapping stories at the city block level where locations along a street and buildings/venues are helpful. Before they stopped at zoom 18 but often when you're looking at street-level incidents (as in Dotspotting.org), you need more detail Issue 18. Along with that, the transition between bold black roads and cased white roads now starts at zoom 18 and carries thru to zoom 19+ (Issue 17). This preserves the strong contrast of Toner, but also allows better use as a background map visually at these zooms so your story points stay the focus (and consumes much less ink if you print the maps using a service like Stamen's Field Papers.

    • Urban wayfinding: At these most detailed zooms building footprints help us orient to the build landscape so we start adding those progressively in starting around zoom 14 (big airport terminals and convention center sized buildings) but most noticeably at zoom 16+. We also show metro (subway) stations now, helping navigate by landmarks in big cities like New York, London, and Tokyo. Issue 16, Issue 48, Issue 40.

    Boundaries

    • Improved graphic styling of country boundary lines at zooms 8 and 9. Issue 27

    • Added state boundary lines at the city and regional zooms. Important for places like Washington DC where a metropolitan area sprawls across multiple admin-1 jurisdictions. Made sure they stack above the water and made upstream changes in OSM master data to allow for boudnaries in the water that aren't indicator level to be not shown in Toner when using newest OSM Issue 11, Issue 24, Issue 7, Issue 6, and Issue 50.

    Map labels

    • Added support for international Unicode (UTF-8) labels from OSM by re-authoring fonts. Primarily seen in street labels and park names. Issue 30

    • Removed map label overlap by manually adjusting the Dymo output around other map features like bodies of waters, country labels, and state labels. Issue 34, Issue 35. Version 3 will address remaining occational placement funk and overlap of marine labels.

    • Added in more city labels in zooms 9, 10, and 11 from Dymo Issue 15, Issue 1, Issue 51, Issue 29, Issue 27

    • Added new park labels progressively per the zoom. Issue 13, Issue 42.

    • Easier to read street labels at zooms 17+. Issue 25

    Clean-up

    • Parks are now tucked under the water in the street-level maps. This is a OSM pecularity where some parks are mapped to the shoreline and others extend out into the water. As these are black-and-white maps, we take a shortcut by making a transparent pattern with the black stipples. When it's over the water, the black park is still drawn, but the water is also black so win-win. MapBox Streets uses a transparency on the polygon-color instead. Issue 12

    • Added reservoirs to the "inland water" aka "lakes" symbolization. Removed smaller lakes at zoms 8 to 12. Since the water is solid black, these tiny lakes attracted undue attention. Instead, they are now progressively added on each zoom in. This reduces the visual noise in the map. Issue 23, Issue 45, Issue 39

    • For lake labels, similar progressive approach but with a slight zoom delay. Issue 44

    • Similar approach to adding parks progressively. Added full set of "green areas" in OSM, this captures cemeteries such as Arlington National Cemetary in Washington, DC. Issue 42, Issue 43, Issue 45

    Transportation

    • Now uses High Roads for all OSM roads in the midzooms and street-level zooms. Issue 9, Issue 35

    • Now uses new Natural Earth 1.5 global roads in the world zooms. Issue 2, Issue 3 Issue 5, and Issue 6, Issue 52 Caveat, these are an early beta release from NE now.

    • Tunnel stret labels are now grey to match their grey linework. Issue 22

    • Where Tunnels pass under land, not just water, we introduce an additional grey outline as visual trim. Issue 21, Issue 49

    • Added airports! Symbolized and labeled using combination of Mile High Club and OSM. Issue 41

    • Added metro (subway) icons at zooms 18 and 19, helpful for city wayfinding. Issue 26

    Setup

    • Added data import scripts to PostGIS, still rough.

    • Include explicate MML and MSS for the project, including label shapefiles, so it's immediately deployable Issue 38, Issue 37

    • Updated the Readme.md Issue 36

    &etc

    A beta version of Toner v2 was released in late 2011. The final release mostly focuses on airport icons and making map labels more legibile (less overlap).

    May 30, 2012

    Announcing Field Papers

    We've just rolled out a new way for you to make atlases of the world, called Field Papers and made with our friends at Caerus Associates. Field Papers allows you to print a multipage paper atlas of anywhere in the world and take it outside, offline, into the field. You can scribble on it, add features, or make notes about the area, all without a GPS or complicated GIS software.

    Once you've annotated your atlas, you can upload photographs of each page back into the system to transcribe your notes into digital form. Each atlas gets its own page on Field Papers, and a simple history of edits and activity which you can share with friends or colleagues, and download for later analysis. Take a look at some of the atlases that have already been created on the Watch page, or browse by place, like France or Liberia.

    The interface looks like this:

    This project is a continuation of Walking Papers, which was built for the OpenStreetMap (OSM) editing community. Field Papers allows you to print multiple-page atlases using several map styles (including satellite imagery and black and white cartography to save ink) and has built in note annotation tools with GIS format downloads. You can also create a Field Papers account to collect any atlases you create or snapshots you upload, or you can stay anonymous. Maps from the two systems work together if you want OSM editing (see below).

    Field Papers also offers several automation and map customization tools for more geo-inclined people, and the open source code is on Github.

    Why not try making an atlas at Field Papers?

    View Project

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