It's beautiful.
The bronze-ish colors perfectly complement the room and the globe and stand were easy as pie to assemble.
The relief feature adds a nice touch. You can order updated globe from Replogle as country names and frontiers, an inevitable fact on the ground as the nation-state redefines itself in our time.
Some will want to invest more for a heavier globe. For my preferences and budget, I can declare myself more than satisfied with this one.
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This is a beautiful globe that I purchased for my husband as a gift. It does require assembly, but it is very easy to set up and is very sturdy both in appearance and in function. The words are legible and my husband was impressed at how many place names were included. The printing of the globe is on paper affixed over the mold so there were some minor flaws in the paper over some of the mountain ranges, but you have to be really close to the globe to tell that they are there. This globe would make an excellent addition to a den, study, or office and is a great gift for anyone in your life who is interested in learning about the world and being able to see where news events in the world are in relation to themselves.Best Deals for Replogle Globes Lancaster Globe, 12-Inch, Bronze Metallic
I do not own this model. Mine is the same globe in a tabletop stand. Same Replogle globe with a different stand. I am comparing it to a globe made in the early 1970's since I have it and they both are the same size and both were built inexpensively for their time. THAT is the caveat. A good globe on a stand used to be $500.00 minimum. It would be pretty small, too. NOW, thanks to mass-labor forces overseas they can sell them cheaper than ever. Good for people wanting cheap stuff but bad for people wanting high-quality stuff. First, the equator is "marked" on these globes by a fat, gold strip...look closely and you can see it. If there is a city or island under it, too bad, the strip is evidently tape, perhaps to aid in preventing "continental drift" if you get me. It is way to big and covers islands, names and the like. Next, the darned map itself is "slapped" on pretty sloppy...in looking at the globe I can see how it is put together.First, they take a plastic sphere that has ridges for mountains (funny, The mountains on the island of Hawaii didn't even have a dimple...it is the largest mountain, in volume, in the world and well above 20,000 feet). The globe map section is thin cardboard and I think assembled in two parts. The bottom and top with the strip joining them. Mine is off by 2mm which means nothing on the globe lines up right. It also has cracks in the cardboard, I'm guessing but the paper top and bottom are "scored" every 30 deg. It might be a tight fit to get the paper on the mountains. But they have not got the process down well enough yet. If using for teaching or homework will probably be OK...away from the equator but a globe with a floor stand should be the company's best products. Without insisting on
better quality-control and going for the cheapest method of manufacture Replogle , a fine old company, now is a middleman for shoddy chinese goods.
If you just want a pretty globe that will pass a glance or casual look they are fine. I think that is their intended use.




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