Graphics – Part1. Why use graphics u Different learning styles u Many things are hard to explain in text u Provides interest u Relationships are visual.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
YEARBOOK Layout and Design.
Advertisements

Chapter 3 Creating a Business Letter with a Letterhead and Table
Your title here: Maybe add some pictures and/or school logo on the left and right authors and affiliation (First names of authors increase interaction.
Making effective plots: 1.Don’t use default Excel plots! 2.Figure should highlight the key relationships in the data. 3.Should be clear - no extraneous.
Lesson 2 — Working with Text
Graphics Graphics will help you achieve: conciseness – large amounts of information in a small space clarity – clarify complex information Trends in line.
This would be the area for your title Authors, authors authors Department of XXXXXXXXXXXX, University of North Dakota School of Medicine & Health Sciences.
Presenting your paper with PowerPoint: Module 8. Why write with PowerPoint? To supplement an oral presentation To incorporate visual and audio media into.
Petrophase 2008 Poster Presentation Title
Layout and design of tabloids and broadsheets..  Some designers are daunted when facing the seemingly enormous expanse of white space available in a.
Multimedia Design Adam Huntington ETE 261 1/30/09.
About this template This template was designed to produce a 48x36 poster. You can modify it as needed for your presentation. By using this.
Example layout for an A1 poster presentation
Abstract # 0000 Make the Main Title with Large Bold Type Your Name Here Your Department Here Texas A&M Health Science Center Make the Main Title with Large.
1 The Structure of a Web Table beginning of the table structure first row of three in the table end of the table structure table cells You do not need.
Lesson 17 Enhancing Presentations with Multimedia Effects
Use a Large Bold Type for the Main Title Use Smaller Type for the Subtitle. Above type is 96 pt, this type is 66 pt Make Authors’ names smaller. This is.
Make the Main Title with Large Bold Type Your Name and Title Here Your Department Here Texas A&M Health Science Center Make the Main Title with Large Bold.
CO1552 – Web Application Development Lists, Special Characters, and Tables.
Unit E. Image Measurements The size of an image can be measured 2 ways: Dimensions: the height and width, measured in pixels. File Size: measured in Kilobytes.
Copyright © 2002 by Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers. All rights reserved. Chapter 9 Illustrations Professional Communication:
Abstract # 0000 Make the Main Title with Large Bold Type Use Smaller Type for the Subtitle. Above Type is 105pt. This Type is 70pt. Make authors’ names.
This would be the area for your title, which should be at least 72 ppi tall, which is equal to one inch (this is 87 point). This font is 72 ppi. If you.
© 2003 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers. 1 Chapter 14 Designing Visuals Technical Communication, 9/e John M. Lannon PowerPoint.
Newspaper Design.
Instructions Usable instructions IDG's Dummies guides reveals how most of us feel when we read instructions: like dummies. We read and reread complex.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Chapter 4 Working with Frames. Align and distribute objects on a page Stack and layer objects Work with graphics frames Work with text frames Chapter.
14-1 © 2014 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or distribution in any.
A BCDE.
Using COLOR Bristol Community College Bristol Community College Business Creativity Sources: Non Designers Design Book.
© 2011 Delmar, Cengage Learning Chapter 4 Working with Frames.
Abadan Faculty of Petroleum Engineering Petroleum University of Technology Petroleum University of Technology │ About this template This.
JRN 302: Introduction to Graphics &Visual Communication - Newsletters Thursday,
VISUAL RHETORIC All the C.R.A.P. you need to know… The Purdue Writing Lab.
Design and Typographic Principles. The Joshua Tree Principle Joshua Tree story example The four basic principles Contrast Repetition Alignment Proximity.
JRN 302: Introduction to Graphics and Visual Communication - Proximity, contrast Tuesday, 11/9/15.
Design Principles 3.02 Understand business publications Slide 1.
Graphics – Day 2. Gestalt u early 1990 psychology theory u based on groupings and how people perceive information.
Design Principles 5.01 Understand business publications Slide 1.
Chapter 3 Color Objectives Identify the color systems and resolution Clarify category of colors.
Adobe ® Photoshop ® CS6 Chapter 1 Editing a Photo.
Desktop Publishing Lesson 2 — Working with Text. Lesson 2 – Working with Text2 Objectives  Create a blank document.  Work with text boxes.  Work with.
Make the Main Title with Large Bold Type Use Smaller Type for the Subtitle. Above Type is 110pt. This Type is 80pt. Make authors’ names smaller. This is.
Professional Template for a 48x36 poster presentation
Permeability (% of Control)
Permeability (% of Control)
Chapter 15 : Communicating Evidence Visually
Graphics – Day 1.
Basic Principles of Layout
Professional Template for a 48x36 poster presentation
This would be the area for your title, which should be at least 72 ppi tall, which is equal to one inch (this is 87 points). This font is 72 ppi. If you.
This would be the area for your title Authors, authors authors Department of XXXXXXXXXXXX, University of North Dakota School of Medicine & Health Sciences.
Professional Template for a 48x36 poster presentation
Chapter 1 Editing a Photo
Proposal: Preliminary Results and Discussion
This would be the area for your title, (this is 50 points).
This would be the area for your title, which should be at least 72 ppi tall, which is equal to one inch (this is 100 points). This font is 72 ppi. If.
Professional Template for a 80(width) x 100(height) cm2 poster presentation Your name and the names of the people who have contributed to this presentation.
Use a Large Bold Type for the Main Title (80 pt):
Permeability (% of Control)
Use a Large Bold Type for the Main Title (80 pt):
Use a Large Bold Type for the Main Title (70 pt):
Permeability (% of Control)
This would be the area for your title Authors, authors authors Department of XXXXXXXXXXXX, University of North Dakota School of Medicine & Health Sciences.
This template is UND branded
This template is UND branded
This template is UND branded
This would be the area for your title, which should be at least 72 ppi tall, which is equal to one inch (this is 100 points). This font is 72 ppi. If.
This template is UND branded. It is built 36”x20
Presentation transcript:

Graphics – Part1

Why use graphics u Different learning styles u Many things are hard to explain in text u Provides interest u Relationships are visual

Use relevant graphics u Graphic draws the eye First thing the reader will see on a page u Choose graphics that support and expand upon the text u Give the graphics the same look & feel u Use graphics appropriate to the audience

How relevant u Questions to ask is: –What does the graphic add? –Why bother? –How does this enhance the material? u Large, but not relevant graphics are distracting. The reader tries to make sense of it.

Same look & feel u Give the graphics the same look & feel

All images are similar

Inserting graphics into text u Place after first text reference u Always use a caption Figure captions go below Table captions go above u Don’t leave excess white space either before or within the graphic u Minimize use of boxes or lines around the graphic

Placement on the page u Graphic draws the eye First thing the reader will see on a page u A graphic is placed too low on the page, it pulls the eye to it and causes skipping of the material above it. u Photographs of people are always the first thing noticed. If you have one, it must contribute to the communication.

Graphic numbering u Figures and tables are numbered separately (If it’s not a table, then it’s a figure) u Start both at 1 and continue to end of document u Folio numbering (1.3, 4.2) are only used when the document contains chapters

White space around graphic

Figures fit within the margins

What is perception difference?

Use of graphs

Avoid 3D graphs

2D versus 3D

Bar versus line graphs u Bar Discrete data u Line Continuous data u Not interchangeable u Not what looks best to you

Avoid overly large simple graphs

Use true scales (start at zero)

Time scales left to right

Use entire graph

Have scale make sense

Data with ranges What if this was data from a customer satisfaction survey from each of your 52 stores. Overall customer satisfaction has not changed much (although the left hand graph uses poor scaling to make it seem it has. But the ranges between stores is much greater than the change in the average. Business decisions often need to focus on how to tighten up that range.

Same info. Different scale. Are they the same?

Putting graphs side by side Sales Revenue in US from Sales Revenue Outside US from

Text and graph support each other u During the past four years the number of pages produced monthly by each writer has increased. In 1991, we produced 40 pages per month, in 1992 the production was 44 pages, in 1993 it was 55 pages, in 1994 it jumped to 58 pages, and in 1995 production was 60 pages per month. Figure 1 shows this change. u Text just repeats the graph

Text and graph support each other u Figure 1 reveals a steady increase in page production. During the past four years the number of pages produced monthly by each writer has continued to increase at a rate of about 2 pages per year. Growing from 40 pages per month in 1991 to 60 pages per month in The jump between 1992 and 1993 occurred when we switched to Frame. u Text interprets the graph

Color

Color in graphics u Web has lots of colored figures, but most technical documents are produced in black and white. u Loss of color can create a gray blob. u Convert the graphic to BW with a image program, do not let the copier do it.

Gray scale u 9 steps of gray u Eye is best at lighter shades of gray u False color is really gray scale –Grays are converted to color –Easier for eye to see/compare colors

Color and BW graphic

Changing images to grayscale

Color in printing u Each color requires a separate printing step u 2 colors doubles the cost u Full color –Uses 4 inks –Most expensive printing process u Crisp color requires coated paper (more $$$)

Color touching color u Eye is very good at comparing two colors when they are close u Very poor at subtle differences when it cannot see the them or they are separated u Touching colors can be almost the same u The more separation, the more contrast the color needs to be distinguished u If not seen at same time, use different colors

Color contrast illusion u Horizontal rows are the same color

Color blindness u About 10% of male audience is colorblind u Must watch the color choices, especially on graphs Normal Red-greenBlue-yellow

Line drawing vs. photos

Line drawing or photo u Line drawing –Emphasis on specific parts –Can remove extra material –Some things are too big to photograph u Photo –Gives better overall image –Contains lots of extra material

Power window switch

FedEx sort facility

Line drawings

Ethernet card images u Note how shading helps in the drawing

Bitmapped graphics u Word uses graphics that are bitmapped. You can reduce, but not enlarge them without losing clarity. u Bitmapped means they are made of lots of little pixels, with each pixel being one color.

Enlarged bitmapped graphic

Resizing u Programs can resize proportionally or not. Means both dimensions change equally. u In essentially all Windows-based programs, use the corner handle bars. u Shift-corner handle bars should cause a proportional resize

Resize example

End