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Mrs. Ballet Flat, New Orleans Age and Occupation: 24, Geographic Information Systems Analyst Fiance's Age and Occupation: 26, IT Analyst Engagement Date: March 16, 2008 Wedding Date: May, 2009 Blogging Since: September 25, 2008 Venue: St. Charles Borromeo Church/Jefferson-Orleans North About Me: I absolutely love wedding planning, spending time with Mr. Ballet Flat, various crafts, watching football, baking, pop music, bargain hunting and ice cream. My idea of a great date night is dinner and clearance shopping with Mr. Ballet Flat! I currently live below sea level in the suburbs near New Orleans, where I make maps all day, everyday for my job. I'm slowly becoming more and more obsessed with anything New Orleans related for our wedding, and I can't wait for the big day!
About Mrs. Ballet Flat

My favorite post that I loved sharing was when I made my wedding map. It’s not an emotional post at all, but I think it would be helpful to the hive!

~~~

As you might already know, I make maps for a living. So, of course, I had to make our wedding directions map for our invitations! While this map wouldn’t serve as impressive to my colleagues in GIS (Geographic Information Systems), I think this was a pretty good map for our guests, considering I couldn’t use my work’s GIS software!

My Photoshop skills are limited to none, so I used Microsoft PowerPoint to make the maps. I will admit, while it is time consuming, the steps are rather easy. It took me about 3 hours to perfect this map to my liking, but if you aren’t as picky as I am, it shouldn’t take that long! Also, it’s pretty hard to tell you how to make these maps by typing it out, so if there is any confusion, please comment and I’ll try my best to help!

By the way, my apologies in advance for the fuzzy picture examples. I don’t have Photoshop to make them perfectly clear, so please accept my meager Paint/PowerPoint skills here in showing you how to make this wedding map.

Here’s the finished product first:

Best of the 'Bee - Making Your Own Map! :  wedding best of weddingbee diy stationery tutorial 1 Making Your Own Map! :  wedding diy invitations 1 map

First, you want to open PowerPoint with a blank slide to work with. For making the map, you will be using the drawing tools, which is by default, in the bottom part of the screen.

Next, using Google Maps or whatever internet map website you prefer, get a view of the area where the ceremony and reception will be. I did this on Google maps using the “Get Directions” feature. I plugged in my ceremony address to my reception address, and *poof*, there was a well zoomed-in area of the map.

Best of the 'Bee - Making Your Own Map! :  wedding best of weddingbee diy stationery tutorial 2 Making Your Own Map! :  wedding diy invitations 2 step22

Now, just press “Print Screen” on your keyboard to copy the image from Google and “Paste” it into your PowerPoint slide. You may have to resize it (drag the corners in) for it to fit in the slide.

Using the curve tool, start tracing the lines of major roads/interstates. To get there, click “Autoshapes”, go to “Lines”, and the curve tool is the squiggly line. The thing with this is you click along the line you are tracing, and rather than it showing a jagged line, it curves. It’s less confusing than it sounds… just remember that the more you click along the line of the map you pasted in, the more accurate the curve along the roadway will be. Don’t worry if it isn’t exact, however, because your guests won’t hold your map up to a Google map image! This map is to give them an idea of the lay of the land, you could say!

Best of the 'Bee - Making Your Own Map! :  wedding best of weddingbee diy stationery tutorial 3 Making Your Own Map! :  wedding diy invitations 3 step41

You can play with the thickness (weight)/color/style of the line to differentiate between interstates, rivers, small roads, etc. To do that, right click on a line you just drew and go to “Format Object”.

Best of the 'Bee - Making Your Own Map! :  wedding best of weddingbee diy stationery tutorial 4 Making Your Own Map! :  wedding diy invitations 4 step5

So, all you have to do is repeat this step to draw all of your lines for your roadways, rivers, or whatever else is key to get to your wedding location(s).

Once you are done tracing your lines, add labels to identify your roadways with the “Text Box” tool, which is on the bottom of your screen near the Autoshape box. You can rotate your text to match the street angles, like I did.

I made the interstate labels with a white-filled circle in the background (a graphic also in the AutoShape feature) with a text box in front of it. I also grouped the text and circle graphic together to make it easier to resize and copy/paste, if you need multiple labels of the same type.

After you’ve finished labeling, go ahead and delete the Google image in the background. Here is the line work that I was left with.

Best of the 'Bee - Making Your Own Map! :  wedding best of weddingbee diy stationery tutorial 5 Making Your Own Map! :  wedding diy invitations 5 step62

To make the callout bubbles that I made for a close-close upclose up of the roads near the ceremony and reception location, I made a zoom-in of the vicinity on Google map and made a Print Screen copy/paste into PowerPoint again. This time, I resized it to be tinier (the size of a the callout bubble).

The shapes I used are called “Callouts” in the “Autoshape” feature on PowerPoint. You can resize these to the shape you need, just as any AutoShape on the tool. So, add one of those on your map and trace your roadways the same way you did for the bigger map. After you are done, group all of your lines together with the callout so that you can format it easier to make it eventually appear in front of the original roadways you drew.

Best of the 'Bee - Making Your Own Map! :  wedding best of weddingbee diy stationery tutorial 6 Making Your Own Map! :  wedding diy invitations 6 step7

To rid of the background roadwork and rivers, all I had to do was fill in the Callout with white. You may have to also right click on the callout, go to “Order”, and bring it to the front if the white fill doesn’t completely work.

Best of the 'Bee - Making Your Own Map! :  wedding best of weddingbee diy stationery tutorial 7 Making Your Own Map! :  wedding diy invitations 7 step71

YAY!

Repeat the same thing for the other location so you can have two callouts: one for the ceremony, and one for the reception.

Best of the 'Bee - Making Your Own Map! :  wedding best of weddingbee diy stationery tutorial 8 Making Your Own Map! :  wedding diy invitations 8 step81

For the reception and ceremony graphics to mark the locations, I simply Googled “Free Chapel Clipart” and “Free Wedding Bells Clipart” and found the cute graphics that I used in the wedding map.

After that, just add your graphics in the map (using the Insert tool at the top of PowerPoint, then Picture, then “From File”), and VOILA! There is your wedding map!

Best of the 'Bee - Making Your Own Map! :  wedding best of weddingbee diy stationery tutorial 9 Making Your Own Map! :  wedding diy invitations 9 map1

To export it into a printer-friendly image, you can do one of two things. One way is to copy/paste this into Photoshop and to export it as a high-resolution jpeg. (I don’t have Photoshop, so a friend did this for me. Thanks again!) Another way to do this (thanks to Mrs. Corn for the idea) is to download CutePDF (a free program) and to print the map to PDF. If you try to “Save As” in PowerPoint as a JPEG, the resolution it saves your image at will look pixelated, so you have to do one of these two things.

Did you make wedding map inserts? What programs did you use?

Tags: best-of-weddingbee, diy, stationery, tutorial |
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11 Responses to “Best of the ‘Bee – Making Your Own Map!”

1.
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Member
upstatebroad (message)  414 posts, Helper bee

I remember seeing this when I first started stalking the hive! This was one of my first DIY projects!

 
2.
Jennifer5642
Member
Jennifer5642 (message)  233 posts, Helper bee

I think this is such a useful post! IMO, PowerPoint is too often over-looked as a graphic tool. It works with artwork, clip art and photos sooo much more easily than Word and is way more intuitively user-friendly than Illustrator. I think your post is awesome!

 
3.
spitfire229
Member
spitfire229 (message)  381 posts, Helper bee

I made a map based on your tutorial! It, too, was my firs DIY project. Thank you again!

 
4.
Jenniphyr
Member
Jenniphyr (message)  3,426 posts, Sugar bee

Very useful post! : ) Another way you may be able to format the map would be to save it as a PowerPoint. You can resize your PowerPoint page to be the same size as the map insert is supposed to be & that way you don’t need to covert the file & thus lose resolution. (You can also save as a .png instead of a .jpeg from PowerPoint — I think — and that’s a higher resolution image, as well.)

 
5.
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Member
Miss Sand (message)  13 posts, Newbee

just what I needed! Thanks for posting this. I love how you can customize this to just the right specifications :D
Thanks Again!

 
6.
mak418
Member
mak418 (message)  712 posts, Busy bee

Thank you! I’ve been asked by my MOH to make a map for her invitations (she loved the way mine turned out, but I did mine in a way that I can’t recreate for her.) This will be perfect for making hers!

 
7.
Bee Icon
Bee
Ms Cheetah (message)  1,189 posts, Bumble bee

I’ve had this bookmarked since it first went up!

 
8.
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Member
littleweddingbits (message)  38 posts, Newbee

So simple, yet so awesome! I’m about to start working on our maps so big thank you for sharing this!!

 
9.
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Bee
Mrs. Ballet Flat (message)  852 posts, Busy bee

:-) So glad that you guys like this tutorial!

 
10.
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Guest
Andrea

Is there any way you could email me the graphics (church and wedding bells) I can’t find any free clip art/vectors (I’m using illustrator to make the map). This is a great tutorial,very helpful thank you!

 
11.
Earlybride
Member
Earlybride (message)  2,597 posts, Sugar bee

Oh my gosh!! Thank you for sharing this!!! I have been wondering how Im going to make a directions page and all. And have no clue on how to do it. In fact I was terrified. I googled it and found examples but nothing that would help. I finally found this blog on goggle. All I can say is genius. Its simple yet very imformative.Plus I plan on marking where the two hotels are on the map. Thank you for sharing your gift of map making!

 

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Mrs. Ballet Flat
Mrs. Ballet Flat

Mrs. Ballet Flat, New Orleans Age and Occupation: 24, Geographic Information Systems Analyst Fiance's Age and Occupation: 26, IT Analyst Engagement Date: March 16, 2008 Wedding Date: May, 2009 Blogging Since: September 25, 2008 Venue: St. Charles Borromeo Church/Jefferson-Orleans North About Me: I absolutely love wedding planning, spending time with Mr. Ballet Flat, various crafts, watching football, baking, pop music, bargain hunting and ice cream. My idea of a great date night is dinner and clearance shopping with Mr. Ballet Flat! I currently live below sea level in the suburbs near New Orleans, where I make maps all day, everyday for my job. I'm slowly becoming more and more obsessed with anything New Orleans related for our wedding, and I can't wait for the big day!

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