Many years ago, I stayed at a Youth Hostel where the warden had papered on wall with Bartholomew's Half-Inch maps covering all of Wales and the borders. This inspired me to do something similar with OS 1:50,000 maps in the first house I bought. It was quite difficult because some of the map sheets had been printed at different times to different standards. There were woods that changed their shade of green half way across and and "C" was missing from "Cotswold Hills".
It's a lot easier today as the OS (and some of their distributors) offer what are essentially paper prints from their database. The actual map area of the sheets is 80cm x 80cm corresponding to 20km x 20km (1:25,000) or 40km x 40km (1:50,000). You can specify the exact centre point of the map you want so I chose my house.
(Actually, that's not quite true, you can only specify the nearest Postcode and the software jumps to the grid reference for that. If you wanted to order more than one map and put them on a wall as wallpaper, you would be unlikely to be able to get a map that was centred exactly 20/40km from the next. I was planning to have just one 80cm square so that wasn't a problem)
Start the ordering process here (Doesn't seem to work well on a mobile)
The sheets as supplied are larger than 80cm because there's a border and a panel showing what all the symbols mean. If you want to include everything, you're going to need a frame that's 100cm x 89cm which is unlikely to be sitting on a shelf somewhere for you to buy. However, 80cm x 80cm frames are "standard" so that's what I went for. Here's a link to the frame I used (I'm just an ordinary customer)
Frame sizing isn't quite as simple as you might think, take a look at this table:
Advertised frame size |
80cm x 80cm |
Largest sheet of paper that fits inside |
80cm x 80cm |
Outside dimensions of the frame |
Maybe 85cm x 85cm depending of frame thickness |
How much of the map you can actually see |
Maybe 79cm x79cm – check with the frame manufacturer, |
- that you have a enough wall space for 85cm x 85cm or whatever it is.
- that any features on the maps that are important to you are not too close to the edge
How to cut out your map
The final result |