Most Creative Infographics – Part 1

Most Creative Infographics – Part 1

Infographics are very interesting thing. You can find something interesting just looking these amazing infographic pictures with little text. Many people love them, because they are simple, but very entertainment, and fun. Also there are many of them, and I tried to find the best ones. This post will have ...


Infographics are very interesting thing. You can find something interesting just looking these amazing infographic pictures with little text. Many people love them, because they are simple, but very entertainment, and fun. Also there are many of them, and I tried to find the best ones. This post will have 3 parts, because these pictures are very big, and it takes too much time to load the page. They are collected from www.onlyinfographic.com, its a new site with lots of infographics. Ok, thats all, enjoy in these cool infographics…

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1. Fools Gold: Inside the Glenn Beck Goldline Scheme

GoldlineGlennBeck

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2. The Business Behind Facebook

Facebook-Business

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3. Fun And Interesting Facts About The White House

2x3X9

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4. Things You Didn’t Know About Death

death-page

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5. Men vs Women: Approaching a Purchase Decision

3876168790_ab3bcb8b2b_o

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6. What if Solar Power Grew as Fast as Facebook?

facebook-solar-600x799

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7. 15 Bizarre Toilet-Related Injuries & Deaths

Toilets800

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8. Body Counts for ‘The Expendables’ Cast

expendables-body-count

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9. History of the Internet

internet-history

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10. The Automated Workplace: Robots On The Rise

focus-robots

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11. The Billion Dollar SEO Company

demandMediaIPOv4

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12. Energy Savings of Low Hanging Fruit

2B031

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13. The History of Ice Cream

IceCreamHistory

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Next- Part 2 Next – Part 3

About the Author: Garlak Theodorakis

GarlakMy name is Garlak Theodorakis, I am graphic designer with almost 10 year experience in the field. Founded Tooft.com in january 2010 with idea to share my knowledge with the world.

5 Responses to “Most Creative Infographics – Part 1”

  1. Sam says:

    “Infographics” have become trendy lately, but am I the only one who thinks most of them
    are a simply a collection of illustrated factoids? Taking the Glen Beck/gold coins one as
    an example (others are worse), the actual information content consists of a couple
    paragraphs; a short email. Adding pictures of gold coins and all the other clutter adds no
    information. The ice cream one is even worse. These are typical of what people are calling
    “infographic” these days.

    Am I crazy, or aren’t the graphics supposed to contribute information or encourage understanding? There are pie charts in the one on “Demand Media,” but they’ve been cutesified and rendered so tiny relative to the fluff, their information content has been diminished.

    You don’t have to read Tufte (who is overrated, imo); just ask yourself, does this need illustration to make it more information or clearer? And if the illustration doesn’t do either, then it’s fluff.

    Grumpily,

    Sam

  2. Dave says:

    Well you see Sam, a lot of people aren’t particularly excited by reading text alone. We know
    that’s where the information is. But it is boring. So adding some related graphics, even if
    they don’t add and additional information, is a way to make the information look more
    interesting or fun and thus more entertaining to read.

    It’s the same reason that making a smiley face on a pancake using raisins makes it more
    fun for kids and then more likely they are to be interested in eating it.

    A piece of parsley on a dinner plate does the same thing for adults.

    It’s all about presentation. A paragraph of text looks boring. Adding a colorful graphic makes
    it look interesting and more likely to be read.

    You understand. You were just a bit grumpy at that moment.

    Dave

  3. Dapperfox says:

    I agree with Sam. I love infographics, but most of these really missed the mark. Take the energy savings one for example. The graphics offer nothing to add to the information being presented. For (1. What if everybody changed a lightbulb?) the artist could have presented a graphical representation of what 60 watts (60 lightbulb graphics) would look like compared to 13 watts (13 bulbs). I skipped over most of these, but the ice cream one in particular is actually kind of unreadable. The Demand Media one looks nice but is more of a professional presentation rather than one that’s meant for the average viewer to read and understand.

  4. ranfirefly says:

    That’s a great collection.
    If you would like to boost your design process in seconds, check out this info-graphic design template: http://bit.ly/World-infographic

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