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We made with Kai Becker a poster about 60s garage punk.
It is an study of the most used words in these songs.
See more: 66-design.de/poster/
These appeared new to me but I am not sure if it's just that I have not been on the newer trains. These newer signage, seen on the M train today is very user-friendly. Easy to quickly tell what the next stop is and easily reusable for all different lines.
See SML Pro Blog: New York City Subway LED Signage for complete description, photos and videos.
IEEE Spectrum // June 2009
Featured in Information Graphics by Sandra Rendgen & Julius Wiedemann (Taschen; 2012)
ABM Grand Neal Award (Best of Show); Neal Award: Best Subject-Related Series of Articles
AMP Excel Award (Gold): Single-Topic Issue
ASBPE Azbee Award (Gold): Information Graphics
I worked with our DD Mark Montgomery and Joe Lertola at Bryan Christie Design to create this graphic that summarizes the history of Martian space travel.
Originally appearing in our print magazine, then our web site, this graphic took on a life of its own after someone uploaded it to a random image server and it spread virally to numerous blogs, including Fast Company, Digg, Boing Boing and many others.
The signage is split into two halves. On the left side of the panel shows where the train is at while the train is stopped (with a flashing bounding box), and when it's in motion, it displays the next stop. The name of the next 10 stops, in yellow, are displayed to the right of 'you are here sign post'. Each station name is accompanied with designation in green which shows the additional lines you can do an interchange. A red handicapped icon designate whether there it is a station equipped with accessibility access.
At the end of the right half of the panel shows the last stop of the train, and the LED displays loops through the rest of the stop in multiple of 10s, so you can get a glance of all the stops while keeping the display small enough so as not requiring an extra large panel for the longer lines.
See SML Pro Blog: New York City Subway LED Signage for complete description, photos and videos.
SML 720p HD Simulcast
M.Sc. project
Poster | 1400x1000 mm
The diagram shows the connections between all the informations paths, underlining the shared informations elaboration strucutres between different sensorial systems.
mapping my ways in my city.
where I was
what I saw
at what days
and how long were the distances
(max. 11.1 km 25 days ago)
See also my walks in Hamburg 2012:
A choreographic visualization, a map of body movements based on a ballet solo for a male dancer. This map is a translations of the choreographic structures in a dance, a visual expressions of those, working with the difficult problem of making dance knowledge explicit and sharing it not only on stage and in the studio.
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Author(s):
(unknown)
Institution:
TeleGeography
Year:
2000
URL:
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Project Description:
TeleGeography has produced arguably the best flows maps of the Net thus far, based on the volume of international telephone traffic between nations. Below is an example of one of their handcrafted telecommunications traffic flow maps for the European region.
The map shows countries with traffic flows between them represented as smoothly curving red lines. The thickness of the lines is proportional to the annual volume of traffic between those two countries, measured in millions of minutes of voice telecommunication. (Note: only the principal route pairs, above a set threshold, are shown, to avoid cluttering the map.) Circular symbols, located on the capital city, encode the country's total annual outgoing traffic to all other countries. It is clear from the map that the UK, Germany, and France dominate traffic intra-European flows, forming a powerful triangle at the heart of the continent.
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Source:
How much rain?
This project was developed during the handmade visualization workshop at Breda's MOTI (Museum of the image) The purpose of the visualization is to measure the rain intensity using only simple materials (glass) and the instructions given in the workshop #hmvtk
This is the #hmvtk 2.0 that I will use in the European workshops. (Vienna, Linz, Berlin, Bratislava, Kosice, Brussels, Breda, Amsterdam and Helsinki)
Do you want your own kit for free? Send me an email joseduarteq@gmail.com
Follow me @joseduarteq
The National Science Foundation Library had an open-house event recently, the theme of which was 'Re-Introduce Yourself'. They had expanded their offerings, moved into the social media sphere, deepened their connections w/external libraries, etc. and wanted to remind the staff of their capabilities and services.
These are a series of infographics I made for the event based on a year's worth of stats I gleaned from their systems. They were designed as stickers which were placed on the side of small paper bags at a candy/snack table.
Guide book from the Soviet Pavilion at the 1967 World's Fair.
You can see more pictures and text at my blog:
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Silver medal at 17 Malofiej International Infographic Award
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I've been blowing up lightbulbs like mad recently,, so I thought I'd make myself a nice lightbulb shopping list to remind me of the size and the fitting... I always tend to go blank once I'm in the shop.
Czech designer Ladislav Sutnar pioneered the practice of what we now call information design.
Image: "Catalog Design: New Patterns in Product Information" published in 1944 by Ladislav Sutnar and architect Knud Löndberg-Holm.
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Follow Design Facts on Twitter: twitter.com/DesignFacts
Interaktives Gestalten/Konzeptuelles Gestalten
WS 2007/2008
Im Garten der Information
Gestalten mit „processing“
Florian Jenett (processing)
Prof. Philipp Pape
Prof. Anna-Lisa Schönecker
Informationen aus Datenquellen werden mit Hilfe von processing in lebendige Visualisierung umgesetzt, die dem Betrachter einen erlebbaren Zugang zu diesen Daten bietet bzw. neue Verknüpfungen erkennbar macht.
Studienarbeiten von:
Gernot Baars
Alex Balzien
Daniel Becker
Helena Fischer
Marcel Fleischmann
Nils Holland-Cunz
Stefanie Jellen
Susanne Kehrer
Sabrina Koehler
Nora Korn
Martha Richter
Kristina Klinkmüller
Christopher Adjei
Interaktives Gestalten/Konzeptuelles Gestalten
WS 2007/2008
Im Garten der Information
Gestalten mit „processing“
Florian Jenett (processing)
Prof. Philipp Pape
Prof. Anna-Lisa Schönecker
Informationen aus Datenquellen werden mit Hilfe von processing in lebendige Visualisierung umgesetzt, die dem Betrachter einen erlebbaren Zugang zu diesen Daten bietet bzw. neue Verknüpfungen erkennbar macht.
Studienarbeiten von:
Gernot Baars
Alex Balzien
Daniel Becker
Helena Fischer
Marcel Fleischmann
Nils Holland-Cunz
Stefanie Jellen
Susanne Kehrer
Sabrina Koehler
Nora Korn
Martha Richter
Kristina Klinkmüller
Christopher Adjei
Based on research made mainly with Wikipedia + scheme of A. H. Barr "Flowchart on the evolution of art styles between 1890 and 1936, Cubism and Abstract art"
By this necklace I measured the time I took for each section.
And I've noted the movies I watched at that time.
The whole time of crocheting: 7h. 32min.
(necklace is available)
This sketchnote is featured in Eva-Lotta's new book that gathers her sketchnotes from over 100 talks taken at design events and conferences in 2011.
In addition, Eva-Lotta invited 10 of her favourite sketchnoters from all over the world to contribute to the book. They all sketched the same TED talk and created some stunning sketches that show off the wide variety of styles and different ways of summarising content.
This sketchnote is featured in Eva-Lotta's new book that gathers her sketchnotes from over 100 talks taken at design events and conferences in 2011.
In addition, Eva-Lotta invited 10 of her favourite sketchnoters from all over the world to contribute to the book. They all sketched the same TED talk and created some stunning sketches that show off the wide variety of styles and different ways of summarising content.
Quarto-sized folding sheet from 1942.
Calling for efficiency during wartime.
c2008 grainedit
See the the rest of the photos at grainedit.com
i always found it curious that the colors of the signs did not match up with the transit line you ride. for instance...this is a blue sign posted at the red line terminal. more confusing is that this is the same blue used for the "blue line" as well.
also consider that the large "D" does not correlate to anything on the transit maps. "Diversey" is the word or icon one would be looking for while pulling into the stop. Yes, the D helps, but its importance is overstated.
Not all stops are like this. There are lots of variations across the city (much like NYC) with most being pretty obvious (large banner signs) but really no overall standards. The real problem might be locating a map in the first place. Any travelers find confusion in Chicago?
p.s. I'm an ex-chicagoan with transit fixation. Tell Richard M. Daley to call me and we'll fix this right up.
Illustrating the profile of 1.17% of the UK population.
See the infographic at 1.17% of the UK infographic
Final for InfoDesign, organizing my morning routine. The assignment was to break the rules, so I did.
MULHOLLAND DR. is a David Lynch Film.
The film lasts 2 hours, 16 minutes and 30 seconds.
After viewing the film several times to try and fully understand it's meaning, I then examined it second by second.
Every second of the film is A MILLIMETRE LONG.
The different colours indicate the different characters of the film, which often overlap with each other. The borders have three different colours: blue, red and yellow.
The blue indicates the DREAM, the red indicates the PRESENT REALITY and the yellow represents the PAST REALITY.
Sara Imbesi
Accademia di Belle Arti di Urbino
Progettazione Multimediale
Information Design
Prof E. Bertoni
AABB 2007/2008
Take note, Centro and all the other braindead British bus companies! (hover over the large version to see annotations)
For some reason, the Birmingham bus company seems completely incapable of providing almost any of this information, thus rendering the whole bus network bloody useless.
Another important part not shown here: a little display (and voice) on the bus that tells you the name of the stop before you reach it - which is ABSOLUTELY CRITICAL otherwise how the hell are you supposed to know when to get off?! At least once you've sailed past your stop and landed up the other end of the city, you're unlikely to make the mistake of taking a bus ever again.
Nice optional extras include:
* a driver that speaks (at least) the native language of the country you're in, sells tickets and gives change. Really great ones even know where they're going and can answer questions like "Do you go to/near [well-known place]?"
* a unified flat-rate ticketing system across different modes of transport, with paper tickets for visitors and affordable season tickets for locals
If I thought there was any chance of it making a difference, I'd make a video comparing how a functional bus network (e.g. London) works and then comparing it with the completely idiocy of the Birmingham buses. Maybe I'll make it anyway, just to let off some steam.
InfografÃa multiplataforma, con versión impresa y digital responsive.
Investigación e infografÃa: Juan Pablo Bravo
infografias.elmercurio.com/20181201-VA-edwardhopper/
Publicada en diario El Mercurio.
InfografÃa/Análisis sobre la pintura "Nighthawks" (Trasnochadores) del pintor norteamericano Edward Hopper, Uno de los principales representantes del arte norteamericano, pintor realista que plasma en sus óleos escenas rurales y urbanas que reflejan su personal visión de la vida estadounidense de las décadas 40 y 50.
mapping my ways in my city, sorted by months. Max committed routes in December - 171 km.
See also my walks in Hamburg 2011 + 2012: www.ulani.de/infografik-%E2%80%9Emy-walks-in-hamburg-last...
This infographic shows where 20 countries in the world are directing their purchasing power based on five different categories: Recreation (green), Clothing (blue), Household goods (red), Alcohol (teal) and Electronics (purple). The data is based on how much the average citizen spends on each category in one year.
The outer ring show how much money each country is spending on each category. For example, Norway is always the outer most ring because they spent the most in every category. India and Pakistan are always on the smallest ring because they spent the least in each area.
The inner ring shows how each individual country ranked each of the categories. For example, the inner most ring is completely purple because every country spent the least amount of money each year on electronics and Brazil is the only country who ranked alcohol as number 1.
This information would be most helpful to marketers who are planning to introduce a new product or business to figure out where their potential target markets are located around the world.
*Only applies if you’re a South African expat
Illustrations of some of the favourite South African products!!
Newsmap is an application that visually reflects the constantly changing landscape of the Google News news aggregator. A treemap visualization algorithm helps display the enormous amount of information gathered by the aggregator. Treemaps are traditionally space-constrained visualizations of information. Newsmap's objective takes that goal a step further and provides a tool to divide information into quickly recognizable bands which, when presented together, reveal underlying patterns in news reporting across cultures and within news segments in constant change around the globe.
Newsmap does not pretend to replace the googlenews aggregator. It's objective is to simply demonstrate visually the relationships between data and the unseen patterns in news media. It is not thought to display an unbiased view of the news, on the contrary it is thought to ironically accentuate the bias of it.