Anaptár 2010

Anaptár 2010 is an experimental calendar for the year 2010 by Anna Farkas of Anagraphic.hu. The calendar is based on a radial system and incorporates sun and moon data in addition to the common days, weeks and months. Read more

Anaptár 2010 is an experimental calendar for the year 2010 by Anna Farkas of Anagraphic.hu. The calendar is based on a radial system and incorporates sun and moon data in addition to the common days, weeks and months. Read more

The Visual History of the American Presidency is a new poster by Nathaniel Pearlman of Timeplots, displaying the progress and development of the U.S. executive over time. Read more

The people behind ghin took a different approach to design a calendar due to the frustration of having to look at dates in units of 7 or 31 days – here's their radial calendar 2010. Read more

Finally we can follow the football results in a visually pleasing way: Martin Oberhäuser has created this beautiful playing schedule for the FIFA World Cup 2010 in South Africa. Read more

Recently I've spotted a beautifully designed study of The Four Seasons by Antonio Vivaldi. It's the work by Laia Clos' studio mot. Read more

The Afghan Conflict - A Map of Possible Scenarios is the collaboration work of Pierre la Baume, Karen Hentschel and Marc Tiedemann. It was initiated by the lecture Politikvisualisierung in winter 2009/2010 at the Fachhochschule Potsdam. Read more

Matt Robinson & Tom Wrigglesworth have created a visualization about the ink usage of different typecases. The brilliancy here lies in the method on how the data is representated: the ink itself! Read more

The portfolio of Peter Crnokrak contains some imressive visualizations with a strong focus on reduction, typography and visual aesthetics. Read more

Sep Kamvar and Jonathan Harris have taken their interactive application "We Feel Fine" to another level—or should I say they taken it to a more basic level? In addition to the playful visualization they released a beatifully designed book entitled We Feel Fine: An Almanac of Human Emotion. Read more

Stuff You’ve Forgotten, Things You Never Thought You Knew and Lessons You Didn’t Quite Get Around to Learning — visualized in a fun and understandable manner. Read more

The Life Cycle of the British Government is part of a statistical investigation into the British Government since 1979. It focuses on the Conservative Government under Thatcher and Major, and the current New Labour Government. Read more

Prof. Michael Stoll has uploaded a great amount of pages from Willard Cope Brinton's second book "Graphic Presentation". The set features some excellent vintage visualizations all dated before 1939. Read more
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