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Comments from the JAM guys -- thanks!

Screen capture before the applet finished. Done via websitesasgraphs

Curso de pensamiento visual para planners, en Brother. Comienza la primera semana de abril y dura 3 meses.

Working with David Sibbet from the Grove the group mapped out a vision for Artrain.

Here's a picture from one of my kindergarten classes when I was an art teacher. The dozen or so kids visible are working on a great big thank you banner for the fire station they just visited. (I drew it and they colored, following guidelines from our lesson in color theory.) As you can see, they're all engaged and working hard to see the finished picture!

 

Large-scale graphic recording has the same effect on grown ups. It gets them engaged (even thought they're just watching) and keeps them engaged in the content. Even when minds wander, the subtle movement of the graphic recorder and the curiosity of what the finished picture will look like draw them right back to the content - just where you want the focus to be!

 

onesquigglyline.com/onesquigglylineblog/2014/11/30/large-...

Connecting the Dots - Euviz meets VizThinkBerlin at the Radialsystem

Comments from the JAM guys -- thanks!

Comments from the JAM guys -- thanks!

EOI · 20/01/2012 · a.eoi.es/1499

 

El dibujo y el retorno: mínimo esfuerzo, máximo rendimiento

Comments from the JAM guys -- thanks!

UNDO™ visualthinking | At The Boca Bar

03.03.2007 | the boca bar | Orizaba | Veracruz | ©2007 UNDO™ visualthinking

I never wanted to be famous. I only wanted to be great.

 

~ Ray Charles

 

While some highly creative people may become famous, few set out to be. Creative people generally pay far more attention to their own internal standards than those of society. Highly creative people create, whether or not their creations are well received by others. They create not to impress others, but because they enjoy it.

 

I wrote because I needed to and wanted to. It never occurred to me that I'd become famous.

 

~ Danielle Steel

  

This was a little experiment to solve a common problem I face:

 

My dogs keep ripping up any mail that gets wedged into my front gate despite a sign on the gate that says:

 

"Please do not wedge mail in the gate. Put it in the post-box instead. Thanks!"

 

This means that I often come home from work and spend several minutes picking up the 'confetti' strewn across my front lawn by my dogs.

 

I think there are three possible reasons why people are ignoring the current sign:

1. They are lazy and just couldn't be bothered

2. They are unskilled workers that can't read very well (it is South Africa after all)

3. They are scared of dogs and putting their hand through the gate

 

I'm being optimistic and assuming Option 2, so I have taken a visual approach to the problem. Hopefully it works :P

Creació d'una de les participants en la jornada de Design Thinking d'AutenticArt on mostrava la primera impressió que va rebre en entrar a l'espai citat.

Nancy White's Graphical Facilitation Session

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