1 dataset. 100 visualizations.
The same small dataset visualised in a hundred different ways, with notes on the strengths and weaknesses of each one.
The same small dataset visualised in a hundred different ways, with notes on the strengths and weaknesses of each one.
A fascinating four-part series by Lisa Charlotte Muth on colour in data visualisations:
Download this PDF to see 100 beautiful literary visualisations.
The next best thing to having Kurt Vonnegut at the blackboard.
A timeline showing the history of non-digital dataviz.
I’m finding this tool to be very useful for the kind of chaotic mind-mapping I do when I’m preparing a conference talk.
A cornucopia of interactive visualisations. You control the horizontal. You control the vertical. Networks, flocking, emergence, diffusion …it’s all here.
Typography meets astronomy in 16th century books like the Astronomicum Caesareum.
It is arguably the most typographically impressive scientific manual of the sixteenth century. Owen Gingerich claimed it, “the most spectacular contribution of the book-maker’s art to sixteenth-century science.”
Tutorials for recreating classics of generative art with JavaScript and canvas.
A social network for snippets of JavaScript effects in canvas, written in 140 characters or fewer. Impressive!
These lovely visualisations of geotagged photos and tweets are almost indistinguishable from aerial views of cities at night.