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WHAT
IS MEANT BY THE TERM "ANTIQUE MAP"?
An antique map is a map
printed over 100 years ago by one of three main processes.
The earliest maps were
generally printed from a wooden block which had been
cut in relief (the printed area standing out from
the rest) and then inked. This type of map can be
seen in the work of Munster (c1550) among others.
Most of these maps were never colored.
Copper and steel engravings
form the vast majority of antique maps that can be
found today. In this process the image was cut, in
reverse, into the metal plate which was then inked,
placed with a sheet of paper in a press and the ink
in the grooves would produce the image.
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