|
Here is a step-by-step guide to creating your own 3D globe of the earth, using the traced Mercator map and Adobe Illustrator CS.
Step 1. Download the PDF of the map (above), drag it onto the Illustrator CS icon, and allow it to open. Select and copy the Mercator projection map, paste it into a new AI CS document, and leave it selected. In the Symbols palette, click on the New Symbol button. The map becomes a symbol, and you can now delete the map.
Step 2. Get the Ellipse tool. Hold down the Shift key, and drag out a circle. Direct-select the left-most anchor of the circle and delete it, leaving a half-circle.
Step 3. With the half-circle selected, go to the Effect menu and choose 3D > Revolve... In the 3D Revolve Options dialog, click on the Preview button. By default, a selection is revolved around its left-hand axis 360 degrees. The preview shows that the half-circle has become a globe.
Step 4. Click the Map Art button. The Map Art window appears, showing a grid with the globes single surface flattened out in a Mercator projection. The curved shadow area represents the globes far side. Click on the Symbols list, scroll down and choose the new Symbol you created in Step 1. It appears on the grid. Click the Scale to Fit button to fit the map to the entire surface. Click OK.
Step 5. The flat map has been wrapped around the globe, and appears in the preview. You may now drag the edges of the cube in the 3D Revolve Options window to re-orient your view of the globe from any angle. Click the OK button and save.
Step 6. As long as the globe remains in its current state as an Effect applied to a half-circle shape, its 3D attributes are editable by double-clicking the Effect in the Appearance palette. You may flatten the globes appearance in the Object menu to convert it to regular 2D art that can be edited the same as any other art in Illustrator. The far side of the globe is grouped separately, so you can creatively add gradients, transparency and drop shadows, as you wish.
|