The last wall maps I generated of Ashgabat and Turkmenistan took a different turn, due to the heavy data requirements involved in a road atlas of the whole country. I was forced to learn Osmosis and the rudiments of Inkscape to edit SVG files first in order to reduce the volume of data and second to take the Maperitive-generated map and tweak it more easily. The lessons learned are now posted on the OSM wiki here. Comments on this tutorial are welcome.
Working with SVG images has its pros and cons, but on balance I think the map quality is better with this approach. That said, one can only wish that Inkscape and Osmosis were a bit more intuitive!
Discussion
Comment from stephan75 on 17 July 2019 at 18:33
Is there any specific reason why you use osmosis to do some filtering on the raw osm-file?
Have you considered to use osmfilter as an alternative?
See osm.wiki/Osmfilter
IMHO osmfilter is easier to use, and it does not need Java.
Comment from Tomas Straupis on 18 July 2019 at 04:24
Any reason not to youse QGIS? It’s purpose is to build professional maps.
Comment from apm-wa on 19 July 2019 at 15:12
@stephan75, when I was struggling with the data volume, other mappers recommended Osmosis, that’s all.