Title: Tactile maps for reading by touch
1Tactile maps for reading by touch
- Museum of the American Printing House
- for the Blind, Louisville, KY
2Maps
- Maps help us to understand our world. They
come in a variety of sizes and can show a range
of features from the highest mountains on earth
to the layout of a single room. By studying maps,
we can learn about the location of countries and
cities, the distances between locations, the
shapes of the land, and much more--over 197
million square miles, the total surface area of
Earth!
3Tactile maps
- Most maps are visual. They are made to be
read by sight. - But there are also maps that are made to be
read with your fingers. They are called tactile
maps. - Tactile means understood through the sense
of touch.
4Tactile maps continued
-
- Tactile maps are designed for people who are
blind (who have significant vision loss) and for
people who have low vision (have some useful, but
very limited eye sight).
5A tactile map
World At Your Fingers map with the landmass,
major mountain ranges, and lines of latitude and
longitude raised above the surface.
6Geographic features of a tactile map
- Geographic features on a tactile map--such
as mountains, rivers, and boundaries--may be
raised, level with, and sometimes lower than the
maps surface. Different textures may also be
used--such as bumpy, dimpled, or wavyto make
features easier to identify. It is important that
tactile maps not be cluttered, that enough space
exists between features for easy reading by touch.
7Color, words and dots
- The maps may have color to aid low vision
readers. Colors are chosen carefully for their
high level of contrast (difference in
appearance), which makes for easier reading. -
- Tactile maps should include labels or
text--words, numbers, and abbreviations in
braille, a tactile dot code, and in large print.
Sometimes labels and text are on separate sheets,
rather than directly on the surface of the map.
8Materials used to make tactile maps
- Early Maps
- Different materials have been used over the
years to make tactile maps. In the 1800s and
early 1900s, such maps were usually carved from
wood or embossed (pressed) in paper.
9Map of South America
The map of South America is carved in wood with
removable pieces and was created after 1870.
Mountainous areas are raised higher than other
land. Some of the map pieces are removed.
10Map of Texas
The map of Texas is embossed on paper, circa
1900. The map has raised lines to indicate land.
Rivers are pressed down (inset) into the paper.
11Other materials used to make tactile maps
- Threads and beads, for example, were glued
onto printed (non-tactile) maps for Maria
Theresia von Paradis (1759-1824). She was an
accomplished Austrian musician who was blind.
She gave piano concerts throughout Europe. Maria
studied the tactile maps, made for her by a
friend, to prepare for her travels. Threads,
placed over the road lines on a map, indicated
the route that she would be traveling beads
represented the cities where she would be
stopping. -
- Today, most tactile maps are made of sturdy
paper or plastic, materials that are easily
shaped and hold up well during everyday use.
12Making maps using paper and plastic
- Paper maps are created by embossing shapes
into paper, using a large machine called a press.
Metal printing plates, with the design of the map
on them, are placed into the press. A sheet of
paper is placed between the printing plates. When
the press closes, it forces the metal plates
together, pushing them into the paper, embossing
the design of the map and creating a raised
picture.
13Map of Africa
Embossed paper maps are made
using printing plates like this one of Africa.
The plate is two sided and the paper is put in
between the plates and pressed using a press to
emboss the paper.
14Plastic maps
- Plastic maps are made by heating plastic
material in or on a mold in the shape of the
mapped area. When the plastic cools, it is
removed from the mold and retains the same shape.
Plastic maps may be rigid (hard), like the U.S.
Puzzle Map (shown below), or they may be
lightweight and flexible, like those in the book
World Maps, both of which are included in this
kit. Lightweight plastic maps can be hole-punched
and inserted into a book cover.
15U.S. Puzzle Map
- Map is made of hard plastic and painted in
bright colors. Each state can be lifted out.