DESARROLLO DE LA PROPUESTA
En esta infografía/póster os presento el desarrollo del proyecto “Expediciones por el Sistema Solar” para 5º de E.P. #PropuestasTIC @anaperezescoda
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from China
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seen from Romania
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from Canada

seen from Canada
seen from China

seen from Australia
seen from China
seen from Canada
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seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from Canada
DESARROLLO DE LA PROPUESTA
En esta infografía/póster os presento el desarrollo del proyecto “Expediciones por el Sistema Solar” para 5º de E.P. #PropuestasTIC @anaperezescoda
Tools & Webapps for Creating your own Infographics
Infographics have become all the rage with Internet lovers. They provide quick & easy factual information related to a certain topic. I have always loved the idea but never thought it would catch on so quickly. Looking over Google you can find so many examples of refined infographics on nearly any subject. But there are also many designers who want to get into the craft. Making your own infographic is very hard work, since you’ll need to do research on topics to gather statistics & data. But if you are fairly well-versed in a subject then it is obviously worthwhile trying your hand at some different graphics. Check out these online resources and see if you can learn anything new about the art of infographic design. Piktochart First up we have Piktochart which is an online webapp for creating infographics. The website is seriously fantastic and it provides a lot of staple features you would expect such as templates and graphic icons. There are some other premium account plans which offer better templates and no watermark branding. However when just getting started I think Piktochart is a fun application to play with. You can study how other designers are making charts in the user showcase. By practicing with some of your own ideas it can be really easy to generate quality infographics with a bit of practice. easel.ly To compare another online infographics builder, the website Easelly is beautiful with its own full showcase gallery. Designers may publish their full infographics or templates onto the website and share them with the world. But you can also edit these infographic templates to setup any data formats you like! It is really easy and certainly the best tool for newbies. My favorite part about Easel.ly is the large user-contributed showcase. This contains many template files which you can revamp to look like your own custom infographic. But there are also many fully-completed GUI sets which are submitted for inspiration. Their online visual editor tools are not difficult and they grow on you quickly, with a bit of practice. Plus you can get started without even signing up for an account. Infogram The new startup Infogram provides another beautiful interface to mockup your own infographics online. The website is currently in beta, yet does allow for open signups from anyone. There are a number of pre-formatted templates which you can build upon. Also you can organize creations into various libraries for sharing. With a pro plan you can even download infographics as full PNG/PDF files. Infogram comes across like a more advanced web application for designers who want a premier infographics editing suite. The pro plan runs at $18/month or $180/year which may not be feasible for everyone. But even their free online editor is worth playing around to see what kind of tools are at your disposal. Visually What infographics resource article could be complete without mentioning Visually? This site has grown very quickly to include a number of dedicated members who design, gather data, and publish content online. Visually isn’t just a sharing network for data visualisations. It is a meeting ground where you can work with others to create your own infographics. The website has a marvelous online gallery which includes hundreds if not thousands of different examples. These infographics are often shared elsewhere on the web, but get republished into Visually as an archive. It can be fun going through all the categories to see what designers have created. But as I mentioned earlier, Visually really offers some quality services for creating infographics. You do not need to be a designer or a researcher to put together all the sources. Check out the Visually marketplace for some detailed price guidelines. Even smaller projects may end up costing over $1,000 so it’s not exactly cheap, but glossing over their past examples it is safe to assume you will get what you pay for. Vizualize.me Here we have another web application in beta called Vizualize.me. The site is dedicated more towards online resumes than infographics. But the design styles are formatted just like you would expect to see in an infographic – stats, organized data, charts, and other such graphical elements. I think Vizualize is opening into a new market which hasn’t really been needed until recently. Resume’s have usually been created in a word processor with static text. It is only recently with the popularity of the Internet have we seen a rise in graphically-enhanced resumes. The site is still very small but it’s growing fast, and certainly worth paying attention to see what else the team has planned for the future. Freebie Resources Along with these online web applications it is worthwhile to mention some freebies you can download. All of these resources are PSD or AI files which contain infographic templates & common interface items. The GUI kits are fantastic because you can play with shapes and graphs to learn how you might design your own. Infographic Vector Elements MediaLoot Vector Infographic Kit Oil Theme Business Infographic Vector Elements of Food Infographics Vector Closing There are likely many other freebies to be found elsewhere online. This collection is a great way to get started practicing your own ideas with other designer’s GUI kits. I would highly recommend skimming the other resources listed here since most are devoted to online infographic design. Also if you know of similar resources I may have missed, please feel free to share with us in the post discussion area below. Read More at Tools & Webapps for Creating your own Infographics http://dlvr.it/CJB013 www.regulardomainname.com
I made a new shop where you can buy and/or rent my art prints: https://www.easelyapp.com/artists/cecilie-karoline
Easel.ly is a simple web tool that empowers anyone to create and share powerful visuals (infographics, posters)... no design experience needed! We provide the canvas, you provide the creativity.
Tengo que probarlo parece un Corel Draw online sencillo.
Artist Talk: Matthew Burrows
Just Another One Of Our Golden Girls by Matthew Burrows, find the original here.
1. What inspired you to create this piece?
When I am not creating a work I spend my time constantly researching the topics that interest me. I do a lot of reading on topics such as climate change and environmentalism, as well as technological innovation and globalization. I research cultures and trends and how they are affected by the ever changing fast paced world we live in. I had been wanting to make a large work about environmentalism and how technology and globalization has affected the natural world and humans. This piece was inspired by a single idea that we are losing touch with our connection to the natural world, as if we are something separate from it. So the work aims to connect many subjects around that idea to create an open-ended narrative about the subject matters for
people to visually explore.
2. Can you tell me about the creation process that went into it?
In regards to the process, as I said, a lot of research is the first step. Exploring information leads to ideas for imagery. Then, acquiring imagery leads to a loose idea of the piece, which is never all planned from the start. I start in one corner and let the work evolve as I piece ideas and my own social commentary together. There is some pencil sketching first, then the finalizing of imagery with ink and finally the color.
3. What’s one or two interesting things you think we ought to know about this piece?
The large human/robot with the drill on the bottom left side of the piece represents the industries that plunder our environment without a care. Profit is the only goal, and the consequences are left out of their thought. But it is also about the workers, who carry out the work and how they are mentally affected by it. The wolf biting his shoulder is a prediction that nature will fight back. We are silly to presume it is unaware of how we are changing it.
Second, if you look in the top left corner you see a person wearing a orange and blue hat with a mask on their face, intertwined with a cargo plane taking off. That is me. I rarely include myself in my work but I felt appropriate in this piece. It represents my desire to travel to places where the ideas behind this place are unfolding and perhaps acquire vast amount of research for new work as well as raise social awareness behind the issues involved.
One more interesting fact is that, including research and actual work time, this piece took approximately 7 months to complete. It was the largest and most complicated artistic undertaking I have taken on to date.
Artist Talk: Aniqa Fatima
Transcendence by Aniqa Fatima, find the original here.
1. What inspired you to create this piece?
My inspiration are from Sufi thoughts to understand being through intuition, meditation and knowledge based upon the subject of being and knowing. My idea is to make the work which stimulates thinking.
2. Can you tell me about the creation process that went into it?
In the painting, I have used the shadows of different objects at different times of sunlight. Forms that inspire me that are outside of material concern.
3. What’s one or two interesting things you think we ought to know about this piece?
My idea in this painting is... rise your thoughts or transcend yourself from the aspect of material. Think beyond matter.