Newsletter Subject

Put a label on it

From

mapbox.com

Email Address

newsletter@mapbox.com

Sent On

Tue, Feb 27, 2018 03:13 PM

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If you liked it then you should've put a Label on it. started as an exercise in cartography: could I

If you liked it then you should've put a Label on it. [Add Labelmaker to my account]( [Labelmaker]( started as an exercise in cartography: could I design an aesthetically engaging map with as few layers as possible? Behind the design Starting the map from scratch made it clear the map would not be compelling if I didn’t break some rules. Abusing the [text-halo-width]( property by turning it up as high as it could reasonably go made loud map labels that resembled plastic labels printed by a label maker machine. From there, keeping with an over-stated style meant only adding layers required for the map to be legible. Labelmaker consists of only 32 distinct layers, whereas the [streets-v10]( style has 193 layers and the [light-v9]( style has 151 layers. [Explore Labelmaker]( To keep the layer count down, only the most orienting features — popular points of interest, major roads, neighborhoods — are labeled. For the design itself, I used a cold background and simple noise pattern for water and parks to offset the flat and kitschy labels. Finally, the Roboto Black Italic font against overblown red and yellow text halos references the work of [Barbara Kruger](. To [make this map your own](, try adjusting the label colors, adding in your own font, or changing the water pattern. [Design with Labelmaker]( Meet the designer [Ian]( helps lead the Maps API team at Mapbox. Get to know him by exploring [Labelmaker]( or follow him on Twitter [@ian_villeda](. [Unsubscribe]( | [View this email online]() © 2018 Mapbox | 750 15th St NW, Suite 500, Washington, DC 20005

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