TELLING INFORMATION
Menu
  • Blog
    • education
    • events
    • examples
    • opinion
    • about this blog
  • Workshops
  • Reference material
  • What’s happening in 2020
    • I’m finishing my PhD
    • And running workshops
    • Full profile (LinkedIn)
Done well, infographic design clarifies, explains, reveals or adds meaning
Browse: Home » £5.5bn
What are you trying to say?

What are you trying to say?

August 22, 2012 · by lupi · in example, opinion

Infographics improve tenfold – or just remain as charts – once people get the hang of the idea that it’s better to commission a graphic when you have a story in mind, something specific you want to say, as opposed…

Search

I am Lulu Pinney. This is my blog. Hello! contact at lulupinney dot co dot uk
The majority of work featured on this blog isn't mine. They are examples of infographic design and visual journalism drawn from all over that I consider to be good*. With more and more visual infostuff out there I’m interested in curating a collection of good* work. And in this way I can further explore my definition of what good* is. That is why I blog.

*Good infographic design is…

…clear, relevant, engaging, useful, original, elegant

Most popular posts

  • Piccadilly line tube map
  • Infographics in an editorial world
  • What are you trying to say?
  • Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen
  • ‘Say what you see’
  • ONS population pyramid
  • Infographic v information design
  • Before you hit the ‘chart’ button…
  • And one more great moment…
  • All about Bloomberg Business Week

TWITTER

Tweets by @lulupinney

Categories

  • education (15)
  • event (31)
  • example (83)
  • opinion (59)
  • why (3)

Copyright © 2021 TELLING INFORMATION

Powered by WordPress and Origin