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graphic design

Track oil donations to presidential candidates

Submitted by John Jones on Thu, 2008-01-31 09:27. | |

information graphic oil industry contributions to U.S. presidential candidates

PriceofOil.org has posted a dynamic information graphic showing contributions from the oil industry to U.S. presidential candidates.

In the “relationship view,” the more money a politician has accepted from the oil industry, the bigger their picture is on the map. The more money they have accepted from an individual company, the thicker the line will be that connects them. Elected officials & companies are positioned by their relationships, those that are close together tend to have similar patterns of giving and receiving. In the “table view,” politicians are ranked by their total dollar amount received, together with the companies that donated them.

via Information Aesthetics

Watch out, Marty McFly

Submitted by John Jones on Mon, 2008-01-21 20:51. |

The image below, from the March, 1936, edition of Science And Mechanics, shows how you can rig up your car so that it will shock anyone who tries to hang onto the bumper to hitch a ride.

Anti-hitch kink shocks people who want a ride

Such a device would surely have prevented this tragic waste of fertilizer.

History of children’s literature illustration

Submitted by John Jones on Tue, 2007-11-27 18:20. | |

Slate has posted a slideshow on the history of the illustration of American children’s books. The slides are based on Timothy G. Young’s book, Drawn To Enchant, which explains how images for children went from orderly scenes of proper behavior, like this one by Justin H. Howard for Doings of the Alphabet (excluding, of course, the bratty mischief-makers in the background):

illustration by Justin H. Howard for Doings of the Alphabet, published in 1869

to the madcap drawings of Maurice Sendak:

illustration by Maurice Sendak for Where the Wild Things Are, published in 1963

Analysis of political campaign posters

Submitted by John Jones on Sat, 2007-11-24 10:41. | | | |

The New York Times has posted a slideshow by Ward Sutton, “Reading Tea Leaves and Campaign Logos,” analyzing the posters and bumper stickers of presidential candidates.

analysis of Bush/Cheney campaign bumper sticker

Making type taste good: Typographics

Submitted by John Jones on Sun, 2007-10-28 11:39. | | |

This short film by Boca and Ryan Uhrich provides an introduction to typography while illustrating some of the possibilities of typographic videos.


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