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“The Why Axis” to Bring a Critical Voice to Infographics

We all know there are lots of information graphics out there these days. Hopefully, we also all recognize that not all of these visualizations are well crafted or considered. I have touched on this subject before, calling for a more thorough, critical analysis of the information graphics in the media today. Bryan Connor, friend, colleague, and former roommate, knows a lot more about this stuff than I do, and he has just started a new blog, The Why Axis, examining the various forms of data visualization bombarding our eyes and brains on a daily basis. The modest amount of content he has posted to date already shows how relevant The Why Axis is going to be. Just in 2011, we have experienced a major revolution in Egypt, furthered unrest in the Middle East, and an earthquake, tsunami and ensuing nuclear disaster at Fukushima, ALL covered in the news by information graphics. Bryan provides us with an unbiased voice to help us digest all of this data; a safe haven in a world of politically and emotionally charged info graphics. I expect The Why Axis to be part celebration of successful data viz, part whistleblower on inaccurate and misleading information graphics in the news, and wholely informative and thoughtful.

The Why Axis

Holiday Enjoyment: Real Life vs. The Internet

Working on some big stuff, but in the meantime here is some quick silliness.

Two Faced Business Cards

I know it’s been quiet around here, but here is a business card I created for local photographer Josh Sisk. Josh has two distinct sides to his photography practice: that of a seasoned, professional studio photographer, and that of a scrappy concert photographer not afraid to put himself or his equipment on the line to get the best shot. In a dark venue or black-lit club, the glowing lettering highlights Josh’s gutsy gig photographer side, while in a well lit studio or office the cleanly typset information speaks to his professionalism and experience.

These are just the proofs, hence the mediocre documentation. Will take better shots when I’ve got a nice big stack of them.

Heirloom Print on Demand Now Available

It took almost a year and a half, but Heirloom is finally available from Lulu, one of the largest print-on-demand publishers. The quality of the book is actually much better than I expected; I have included some photographs so you can get a real idea of what you’ll be getting. For super hi-res versions, check out the Flickr Set.

Purchase the book here!
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Crowdstorms is Live!

After months of hard work, Josh and I have finally launched Crowdstorms, a new online tool that uses the power of words and people’s associations with them to inform the creative process. Registration is on an invite only basis and will likely be for sometime, so if you want in be sure to apply for an invitation here.

For those of you without an invite, we would love some feedback on the top level messaging of the brand, homepage, FAQ, etc.

Degree Project Timeline

I have been hard at work on my degree project for the last month or two. For those of you that haven’t figured it out, I will be designing, branding, and marketing a small line of products. I am going to intentionally stay light on the details at this time, but until I have finalized a name for the product line I will be posting updates directly to this blog about the project. Above is the timeline I created for myself back when I began designing Love & Utility, if you feel like sleuthing you can probably figure out a good bit from it.

Pompadour Available as a Font (still free!)

Thanks to the wonderful Johno of I Love Typography, and the magic of the Creative Commons, the Pompadour numeral set is now available as both TrueType and OpenType fonts. I figured if John was going to go through the trouble of making Pompadour into a working font, the least I could do was add some punctuation. You’ll find a full stop, semi-colon, colon, comma, hyphen, en-dash and em-dash enclosed, all designed to work with those chunky-ass numbers. Enjoy!

Pompadour (OpenType 8kb)
Pompadour (TrueType 20kb)

Creative Commons License
Pompadour Numerals Font by Andy Mangold is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at www.andymangold.com.

It’s also worth noting that a man named Tom generously made a different set of font files for Pompadour, with a square full stop. Head on over to his blog if you get your jollies from that sort of thing.

Love & Utility: Finding Meaning in Matter


After a number of weeks of hard work, I am officially launching a new blog, Love & Utility. The website will document research and inspiration for my upcoming thesis project, and focuses on our unique relationships to special objects in our lives. It is founded on the simple principle that a perfect product is both loved, for its beauty or uniqueness, and actively used. A person’s relationship with an object is built on this consistent and affectionate use.

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Monday, December 20, 2010
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Pompadour Numeral Set (Free Download)

I have finally gotten around to wrapping up the numeral set I finished a year ago into a nice, downloadable .eps to share with the internet. I hereby dub it ‘Pompadour.’ I have licensed it under the Creative Commons, so feel free to download, use, modify, and share the numbers as you see fit, just please give props where props are due. If you end up using the numbers on something, shoot me a jpg and I’ll link you up on this post.

Download the Pompadour Numeral Set (.eps)

Creative Commons License
Pompadour Numeral Set by Andy Mangold is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

UPDATE: Pompadour now available as a font! Download available here.

 

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The Problem with “Information Graphics”

Not since I created this blog two years ago have I used it as a forum for my rants and raves, but I have grown so frustrated with the current state of “Information Graphics” and “Data Visualization” that I can no longer hold my silence. I decided to write this after finding this “information graphic” this morning on Gizmodo: (and as I am finishing up this article I noticed it got posted to GOOD Magazine as well)

I don’t even know where to start with this one. As anyone who has spent any time making a REAL information graphic or data visualization will tell you, more than half the battle is deciding what data or information you want to present. An info graphic is only as good as it’s content, and this one’s content seems to be defining data visualization with a bunch of loosely sorted buzz words. It is unclear how we are supposed to read the graphic: it appears that there are three large circles representing design, communication, and information, but how are the three other words on the outside (user interface, visual communication, and data journalism) represented in the graphic? What is the significance of the darker, concentric circles within the larger ones? The graphic provides no clarity, only confusion and the illusion that the person that created it somehow understands more the viewer.

It doesn’t help either that they lifted (by their own admission) the format for their graphic from this iA piece, (which is not without ITS problems). The format of the information should match the information itself, not be some arbitrary arrangement of colorful shapes.

Even if we play along with the ridiculous format of the graphic, the “information” to be gleaned from it is largely false and absurd. “Typography” is not part of “Visual Design,” “Logic” has nothing to do with “Design” at all, and “Concept” = “Look and Feel” + “Data” + “Objective”? Not to mention words like “Dashboard” and “Knowledge” which seem utterly out of place.

So maybe I am being a bit harsh. After all, it’s just one graphic, and we all know it’s a lot easier to sit here and pick something to pieces than it is to actually create something. The thing is though, this is far from an isolated incident. Ever since Nick Feltron brought information graphics to the main stage aesthetically, you can’t stroll through the blogosphere, or down the halls of any design school in the country, without tripping over cluttered and confounding information graphics. Many of them are strikingly beautiful; we have collectively gotten very good at making numbers and graphs look dazzling. There is nothing wrong with making things look good, but when it comes at the sacrifice of readability and communication, you sure as hell had better not call whatever you’re making an INFORMATION graphic. Call it a beautiful pile of numbers, shapes, and colors, call it Fine Art, call it “experimental”, but don’t call it an information graphic.

Here is another prime example of information graphics gone wrong, (thanks to Anthony for reminding me) from the author of a popular info graphics book nonetheless:

This graphic does appear to have an interesting data set that I would love to explore and know more about, unfortunately the information has been so convoluted in the name of aesthetics that it is near unreadable. As Tony mentioned, this information would be more digestible in a spreadsheet than in this form, and that makes this graphic a failure in my eyes.

My intent is not to complain or whine about these particular pieces; goodness knows there is no shortage of graphics just like them I could have chosen. I decided to write about this because I care, a lot, about what I do. As designers, we have a responsibility to ourselves, our clients, and our audience to do the best we can to present information as clearly and concisely as possible. Visual language is just as powerful as spoken language, if not more so. You wouldn’t give a speech to a crowd of people you hadn’t thought long and hard about, so let’s stop filling the world with information graphics that demonstrate no thought or consideration behind them. It’s not harmless; this stuff matters.

I would also encourage a re-evaluation of the term “Information Graphics”. Almost everything we design has some information to convey, right? Sometimes that information is better communicated without big numbers in a sans-serif typeface and charts and graphs.

What do you think?

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