Digital Political World Map, Aitoff Projection, Asia centric, small scale

£29.00
In stock
SKU
ADMAitoffJap100
Product code: 449

Buy 2022 Digital vector Political World map with countries, capital cities and water features. Aitoff Projection, Asia centered, small scale (A4). Fully editable and layered in Illustrator and PDF formats.
You can turn the layers on or off, customise the lines, fills and editable font text, add your own information to create your own styles. 

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Digital Political World Map with Countries, Capital Cities and water features, Aitoff Projection, Asia-centric @1:100m scale (A4)
Fully editable and layered small scale World Political map for Illustrator CS6/CC format. 

Layers include: Coastlines, country borders, country fills (as separate objects), country names, sea/ocean names, rivers, major lakes, capital cities plus latitude/longitude @ 10 degree intervals.

Formats: Choose Illustrator CS6 (for use with Illustrator CS6 or CC) or Adobe Acrobat Editable PDF 6.0 format (on request). Our maps in PDF 6.0 format are fully layered within Acrobat but can still be opened and edited in Illustrator CS6/CC while retaining full layering with 100% editability.

Map dimensions:  8" D x 10" W (28.26cm D x 21.72 cm W)

Extracted Document sizes:  Illustrator CS: 4.5Mb  Acrobat PDF: On request

Licence: Please click on the Licence tab to download and print the lifelong licence for this product.

How to download: You will be able to download by logging into Your Account where you can check the status and details of orders (including the applicable Product End User Licence). You can download product purchases for a period of 10 days from date of purchase.

Please note: Product purchases and invoices are downloadable only and are not sent to any postal address

Authors notes: This map is updated for 2022. Suitable for use up to A4 size or a little larger. If you would prefer to purchase a set of world maps please visit our World Map Collections category.

The Aitoff projection is a modified azimuthal map projection proposed by David A. Aitoff in 1889. Based on the equatorial form of the azimuthal equidistant projection, Aitoff first halves longitudes, then projects according to the azimuthal equidistant, and then stretches the result horizontally into a 2:1 ellipse to compensate for having halved the longitudes.
Three years later, Ernst Hermann Heinrich Hammer suggested the use of the Lambert azimuthal equal-area projection in the same manner as Aitoff, producing the Hammer projection. While Hammer was careful to cite Aitoff, some authors have mistakenly referred to the Hammer projection as the Aitoff projection.
Source - Wikipedia

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