Archived entries for graphics

Fake is the New Real

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A glorious, beautiful collection of maps and other visualisations, created by an enigma. Above is Trace – a year of walking and biking in New York City, 4.1.05 – 3.31.06. Check it all out here.
Their delicious account is also worth an explore, it has supremely well tagged and incredible links.
via Patrick.

Some things are bigger than politics

Part of the Green Party campaign based in New Zealand.
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Great concept, useful information and very well done site.
I have always said that Kiwis are awesome people!

Logólogos

Argentineans Luna and Javier are logólogos. No logo-logos, but logólogos. They claim to be normal people and specialists in what they do, which can be mathematic for logos, or using other’s creativity to be creative, or explaining that logos turn into logos with a little help of other logos.
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They also claim to be specialists in phonetics.

Rubenslp

Rubens makes great illustrations. He has a pretty functional website too.
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Maphead

Some really sweet collages with maps and body parts. Love the concept.
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Neat Repetition

Samantha Hahn has a very diverse and beautiful collection of patterns and textures.
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One more

Ad for the campaign “Your words can work against you,” for Caja de Ruidos and their public speaking and locution lessons.
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There is also the Hugo Chávez and the Eliot Spitzer version.

Commanding life

Clever and inspiring prints by Atmostheory.
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The Graphic Imperative

Social posters are one of my biggest passions. They communicate, exhort, persuade, instruct, celebrate or warn. Their graphic message has the power to open our eyes, to make us think and perhaps to change our mind.
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The Graphic Imperative is a compilation of 121 international posters for peace, social justice and environment, created during 1965 – 2005. It is also an iconic exhibition that travels mostly all around USA.
Here you will find the itinerary and here the inspiring posters.

D-Barcode

Barcodes are continuous, discrete and certainly boring little graphics that are everywhere and that are an essential part of modern civilization. But dear people, why the lack of creativity?
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Japanese firm D-Barcode decided to finally add a little bit of esthetics to this-same-over-and-over again design. Check out some of their variations here.



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