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Mars
AN ANIMATED CHART OF 42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES An animated guide to 42 different species of butterflies. Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTED It was a fun experiment, and I wanted to make something similar from Youtube videos. I found slow-motion videos of five flying species, and mapped out specific points on the wings during one wingbeat. I ended up with 15 frames per wingbeat, and I connected every frame using imaginary curves that went through all of the 15 mapped points. THE WESTERN CONSTELLATIONS This week’s map shows every single star visible from Earth, on the darkest night with the clearest sky. The map also includes all of the brightest galaxies, nebulae, and star clusters from W.H. Finlay’s Concise Catalog of Deep-sky Objects.I illustrated the familiar Western star patterns - or asterisms - in blue and gold, as well as the scientific constellation boundaries in red.TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s post isn’t entirely scientific, but I thought I’d upload it anyway since it’s related to animals and patterns in nature. When I worked in an insect lab as an undergrad, I helped out A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF MERCURY This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet. A VISUAL COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURES Hello! My name is Eleanor and I’m a self-employed artist from Seattle. This blog post is the first installment of what will hopefully be a year-long infographic design project. A FLOWCHART OF DANGEROUS VIRUSES For this week’s infographic I made a poster about some of the most common kinds of human viruses. Viruses cause anything from the common cold to more serious diseases such as HIV, rabies, and Ebola. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO THE HUMAN BODY : THE MUSCLE EDITION It’s a 25-frame stop motion animation made mostly in Photoshop. I’ve never made an animation this complex before, and I had a ton of fun with it. I’m definitely planning on more animated infographics in the future. I might even learn After Effects, though I’ll have to see how feasible that is since my computer’s getting kind of old TABLETOP WHALETABLETOP WHALEDIGITAL SNOWFLAKESARCHIVEFAQ Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
AN ANIMATED CHART OF 42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES An animated guide to 42 different species of butterflies. Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTED It was a fun experiment, and I wanted to make something similar from Youtube videos. I found slow-motion videos of five flying species, and mapped out specific points on the wings during one wingbeat. I ended up with 15 frames per wingbeat, and I connected every frame using imaginary curves that went through all of the 15 mapped points. THE WESTERN CONSTELLATIONS This week’s map shows every single star visible from Earth, on the darkest night with the clearest sky. The map also includes all of the brightest galaxies, nebulae, and star clusters from W.H. Finlay’s Concise Catalog of Deep-sky Objects.I illustrated the familiar Western star patterns - or asterisms - in blue and gold, as well as the scientific constellation boundaries in red.TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s post isn’t entirely scientific, but I thought I’d upload it anyway since it’s related to animals and patterns in nature. When I worked in an insect lab as an undergrad, I helped out A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF MERCURY This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet. A VISUAL COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURES Hello! My name is Eleanor and I’m a self-employed artist from Seattle. This blog post is the first installment of what will hopefully be a year-long infographic design project. A FLOWCHART OF DANGEROUS VIRUSES For this week’s infographic I made a poster about some of the most common kinds of human viruses. Viruses cause anything from the common cold to more serious diseases such as HIV, rabies, and Ebola. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO THE HUMAN BODY : THE MUSCLE EDITION It’s a 25-frame stop motion animation made mostly in Photoshop. I’ve never made an animation this complex before, and I had a ton of fun with it. I’m definitely planning on more animated infographics in the future. I might even learn After Effects, though I’ll have to see how feasible that is since my computer’s getting kind of old ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
AN ORBIT MAP OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM This week’s map shows the orbits of more than 18000 asteroids in the solar system. This includes everything we know of that’s over 10km in diameter - about 10000 asteroids - as well as 8000 randomized objects of unknown size. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO BREATHING About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. EXPLAINING VENTILATORS FOR COVID-19 Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. CONSTELLATIONS FROM AROUND THE WORLD Two weeks ago I shared a map of all the stars you can see from Earth, alongside the Western constellations.But the Western constellations are only one of many patterns of stars invented by cultures around the world. This week’s map illustrates the animals, people, and objects imagined in the sky by more than 30 different civilizations. A FIELD GUIDE TO DANGEROUS BACTERIA This week I’m excited to announce a special project! During the past year and a half I’ve been working with the wonderful people at Nerdcore Medical on a set of 20 medical infographics.. Nerdcore Medical is the studio behind science communication projects like the Bacterionomicon and the Occam’s Razor card game. For this project I worked with Dr. Arun Mathews, a chief medical officer inTABLETOP WHALE
This week’s post isn’t entirely scientific, but I thought I’d upload it anyway since it’s related to animals and patterns in nature. When I worked in an insect lab as an undergrad, I helped out WHAT YOU NEED TO BUILD YOUR OWN COMPUTER About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. HALF PAST ORANGE: A RAINBOW COLOR CLOCK About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. HEARTBEATS AND MURMURS A medical infographic explaining abnormal EKG waves. This week’s Nerdcore Medical collab is a paired poster for October’s Hearbeats and heart attacks poster. The last poster showed the EKG wave patterns of 10 different heart conditions, as well as the different parts of anormal EKG wave.
TABLETOP WHALETABLETOP WHALEDIGITAL SNOWFLAKESARCHIVEFAQ Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
AN ANIMATED CHART OF 42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES An animated guide to 42 different species of butterflies. Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTED It was a fun experiment, and I wanted to make something similar from Youtube videos. I found slow-motion videos of five flying species, and mapped out specific points on the wings during one wingbeat. I ended up with 15 frames per wingbeat, and I connected every frame using imaginary curves that went through all of the 15 mapped points. THE WESTERN CONSTELLATIONS This week’s map shows every single star visible from Earth, on the darkest night with the clearest sky. The map also includes all of the brightest galaxies, nebulae, and star clusters from W.H. Finlay’s Concise Catalog of Deep-sky Objects.I illustrated the familiar Western star patterns - or asterisms - in blue and gold, as well as the scientific constellation boundaries in red.TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s post isn’t entirely scientific, but I thought I’d upload it anyway since it’s related to animals and patterns in nature. When I worked in an insect lab as an undergrad, I helped out A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF MERCURY This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet. A VISUAL COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURES Hello! My name is Eleanor and I’m a self-employed artist from Seattle. This blog post is the first installment of what will hopefully be a year-long infographic design project. A FLOWCHART OF DANGEROUS VIRUSES For this week’s infographic I made a poster about some of the most common kinds of human viruses. Viruses cause anything from the common cold to more serious diseases such as HIV, rabies, and Ebola. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO THE HUMAN BODY : THE MUSCLE EDITION It’s a 25-frame stop motion animation made mostly in Photoshop. I’ve never made an animation this complex before, and I had a ton of fun with it. I’m definitely planning on more animated infographics in the future. I might even learn After Effects, though I’ll have to see how feasible that is since my computer’s getting kind of old TABLETOP WHALETABLETOP WHALEDIGITAL SNOWFLAKESARCHIVEFAQ Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
AN ANIMATED CHART OF 42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES An animated guide to 42 different species of butterflies. Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTED It was a fun experiment, and I wanted to make something similar from Youtube videos. I found slow-motion videos of five flying species, and mapped out specific points on the wings during one wingbeat. I ended up with 15 frames per wingbeat, and I connected every frame using imaginary curves that went through all of the 15 mapped points. THE WESTERN CONSTELLATIONS This week’s map shows every single star visible from Earth, on the darkest night with the clearest sky. The map also includes all of the brightest galaxies, nebulae, and star clusters from W.H. Finlay’s Concise Catalog of Deep-sky Objects.I illustrated the familiar Western star patterns - or asterisms - in blue and gold, as well as the scientific constellation boundaries in red.TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s post isn’t entirely scientific, but I thought I’d upload it anyway since it’s related to animals and patterns in nature. When I worked in an insect lab as an undergrad, I helped out A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF MERCURY This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet. A VISUAL COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURES Hello! My name is Eleanor and I’m a self-employed artist from Seattle. This blog post is the first installment of what will hopefully be a year-long infographic design project. A FLOWCHART OF DANGEROUS VIRUSES For this week’s infographic I made a poster about some of the most common kinds of human viruses. Viruses cause anything from the common cold to more serious diseases such as HIV, rabies, and Ebola. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO THE HUMAN BODY : THE MUSCLE EDITION It’s a 25-frame stop motion animation made mostly in Photoshop. I’ve never made an animation this complex before, and I had a ton of fun with it. I’m definitely planning on more animated infographics in the future. I might even learn After Effects, though I’ll have to see how feasible that is since my computer’s getting kind of old ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
AN ORBIT MAP OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM This week’s map shows the orbits of more than 18000 asteroids in the solar system. This includes everything we know of that’s over 10km in diameter - about 10000 asteroids - as well as 8000 randomized objects of unknown size. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO BREATHING About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. EXPLAINING VENTILATORS FOR COVID-19 Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. CONSTELLATIONS FROM AROUND THE WORLD Two weeks ago I shared a map of all the stars you can see from Earth, alongside the Western constellations.But the Western constellations are only one of many patterns of stars invented by cultures around the world. This week’s map illustrates the animals, people, and objects imagined in the sky by more than 30 different civilizations. A FIELD GUIDE TO DANGEROUS BACTERIA This week I’m excited to announce a special project! During the past year and a half I’ve been working with the wonderful people at Nerdcore Medical on a set of 20 medical infographics.. Nerdcore Medical is the studio behind science communication projects like the Bacterionomicon and the Occam’s Razor card game. For this project I worked with Dr. Arun Mathews, a chief medical officer inTABLETOP WHALE
This week’s post isn’t entirely scientific, but I thought I’d upload it anyway since it’s related to animals and patterns in nature. When I worked in an insect lab as an undergrad, I helped out WHAT YOU NEED TO BUILD YOUR OWN COMPUTER About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. HALF PAST ORANGE: A RAINBOW COLOR CLOCK About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. HEARTBEATS AND MURMURS A medical infographic explaining abnormal EKG waves. This week’s Nerdcore Medical collab is a paired poster for October’s Hearbeats and heart attacks poster. The last poster showed the EKG wave patterns of 10 different heart conditions, as well as the different parts of anormal EKG wave.
TABLETOP WHALETABLETOP WHALEDIGITAL SNOWFLAKESARCHIVEFAQ Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s map is a topographic map of Mars! I already shared the code to make these topographic maps a few weeks ago, so for this blog post I decided to write a better description of how I illustrated the ornamental borders and decided on a design style for the map collection. Although style design was the least technical part of the project, I think it actually took just as much time - if AN ANIMATED CHART OF 42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES Hi Pat, thanks so much for the links! The measurements on the infographic actually point to the scale bar just above it. For example, the 2cm bar for the Eastern Tiger Swallowtail is about a fifth of the length of the entire butterfly. Deb Henning • 6 yearsago. I
FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTED It was a fun experiment, and I wanted to make something similar from Youtube videos. I found slow-motion videos of five flying species, and mapped out specific points on the wings during one wingbeat. I ended up with 15 frames per wingbeat, and I connected every frame using imaginary curves that went through all of the 15 mapped points. HOW TO BUILD A HUMAN In the beginning, when talking fertilized egg to blastocyst and implantation, the weeks you list are accurate. However, later on, you list 24 weeks as >50% survival if born. 24 weeks post fertilization is 26 weeks gestation, which is more like 80-90% chance of survival. 24 weeks gestation (or 22 weeks post-fertilization) is closer to 50% AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO BREATHING As promised, this month’s infographic is packed with actual science. I decided to illustrate how different animals breathe, and I picked three species that I thought were particularly awesome. AN ORBIT MAP OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM This week’s map shows the orbits of more than 18000 asteroids in the solar system. This includes everything we know of that’s over 10km in diameter - about 10000 asteroids - as well as 8000 randomized objects of unknown size. A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF MERCURY This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet. A VISUAL COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURES Hello! My name is Eleanor and I’m a self-employed artist from Seattle. This blog post is the first installment of what will hopefully be a year-long infographic design project. TABLETOP WHALETABLETOP WHALEDIGITAL SNOWFLAKESARCHIVEFAQ Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s map is a topographic map of Mars! I already shared the code to make these topographic maps a few weeks ago, so for this blog post I decided to write a better description of how I illustrated the ornamental borders and decided on a design style for the map collection. Although style design was the least technical part of the project, I think it actually took just as much time - if AN ANIMATED CHART OF 42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES Hi Pat, thanks so much for the links! The measurements on the infographic actually point to the scale bar just above it. For example, the 2cm bar for the Eastern Tiger Swallowtail is about a fifth of the length of the entire butterfly. Deb Henning • 6 yearsago. I
FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTED It was a fun experiment, and I wanted to make something similar from Youtube videos. I found slow-motion videos of five flying species, and mapped out specific points on the wings during one wingbeat. I ended up with 15 frames per wingbeat, and I connected every frame using imaginary curves that went through all of the 15 mapped points. HOW TO BUILD A HUMAN In the beginning, when talking fertilized egg to blastocyst and implantation, the weeks you list are accurate. However, later on, you list 24 weeks as >50% survival if born. 24 weeks post fertilization is 26 weeks gestation, which is more like 80-90% chance of survival. 24 weeks gestation (or 22 weeks post-fertilization) is closer to 50% AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO BREATHING As promised, this month’s infographic is packed with actual science. I decided to illustrate how different animals breathe, and I picked three species that I thought were particularly awesome. AN ORBIT MAP OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM This week’s map shows the orbits of more than 18000 asteroids in the solar system. This includes everything we know of that’s over 10km in diameter - about 10000 asteroids - as well as 8000 randomized objects of unknown size. A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF MERCURY This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet. A VISUAL COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURES Hello! My name is Eleanor and I’m a self-employed artist from Seattle. This blog post is the first installment of what will hopefully be a year-long infographic design project.TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s map is a topographic map of Mars! I already shared the code to make these topographic maps a few weeks ago, so for this blog post I decided to write a better description of how I illustrated the ornamental borders and decided on a design style for the map collection. Although style design was the least technical part of the project, I think it actually took just as much time - ifTABLETOP WHALE
This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet. AN ANIMATED MAP OF THE EARTH July 8 2019 · Link to the Open-Source Code. This is one of the very few animated maps I made for my space cartography project! NASA publishes many Earth datasets at monthly time scales, and this GIF uses one frame per month to show the fluctuating seasons. The animation focuses mainly on data about Arctic sea ice and vegetation,but it was
TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s post isn’t entirely scientific, but I thought I’d upload it anyway since it’s related to animals and patterns in nature. When I worked in an insect lab as an undergrad, I helped outTABLETOP WHALE
Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. I checked out six butterfly field guides from the library and picked out some of the species I thought were the most unique and beautiful. CONSTELLATIONS FROM AROUND THE WORLD Two weeks ago I shared a map of all the stars you can see from Earth, alongside the Western constellations.But the Western constellations are only one of many patterns of stars invented by cultures around the world. This week’s map illustrates the animals, people, and objects imagined in the sky by more than 30 different civilizations. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO THE HUMAN BODY : THE MUSCLE EDITION It’s a 25-frame stop motion animation made mostly in Photoshop. I’ve never made an animation this complex before, and I had a ton of fun with it. I’m definitely planning on more animated infographics in the future. I might even learn After Effects, though I’ll have to see how feasible that is since my computer’s getting kind of old AN ORBIT MAP OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM This week’s map shows the orbits of more than 18000 asteroids in the solar system. This includes everything we know of that’s over 10km in diameter - about 10000 asteroids - as well as 8000 randomized objects of unknown size. HOW TO BUILD A HUMAN II A medical infographic explaining human embryo development. This week’s infographic is a new, improved version of my old How to build a human design. My goal for this project was to explain human embryo development in an engaging and informative way. PLANET EARTH CONTROL DECK January 26 2015. It’s January already, which means it’s tax season! This year I decided to make an infographic celebrating NASA, one of my favorite tax-funded programs in America. I wanted to show what Earth’s control panel might look like if it was a spaceship piloted by humans. It’s a bit too busy with all the flashing lights,but I
TABLETOP WHALETABLETOP WHALEDIGITAL SNOWFLAKESARCHIVEFAQ Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s map is a topographic map of Mars! I already shared the code to make these topographic maps a few weeks ago, so for this blog post I decided to write a better description of how I illustrated the ornamental borders and decided on a design style for the map collection. Although style design was the least technical part of the project, I think it actually took just as much time - if AN ANIMATED CHART OF 42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES Hi Pat, thanks so much for the links! The measurements on the infographic actually point to the scale bar just above it. For example, the 2cm bar for the Eastern Tiger Swallowtail is about a fifth of the length of the entire butterfly. Deb Henning • 6 yearsago. I
FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTED It was a fun experiment, and I wanted to make something similar from Youtube videos. I found slow-motion videos of five flying species, and mapped out specific points on the wings during one wingbeat. I ended up with 15 frames per wingbeat, and I connected every frame using imaginary curves that went through all of the 15 mapped points. HOW TO BUILD A HUMAN In the beginning, when talking fertilized egg to blastocyst and implantation, the weeks you list are accurate. However, later on, you list 24 weeks as >50% survival if born. 24 weeks post fertilization is 26 weeks gestation, which is more like 80-90% chance of survival. 24 weeks gestation (or 22 weeks post-fertilization) is closer to 50% AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO BREATHING About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. AN ORBIT MAP OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM This week’s map shows the orbits of more than 18000 asteroids in the solar system. This includes everything we know of that’s over 10km in diameter - about 10000 asteroids - as well as 8000 randomized objects of unknown size. A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF MERCURY This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet. A VISUAL COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURES Hello! My name is Eleanor and I’m a self-employed artist from Seattle. This blog post is the first installment of what will hopefully be a year-long infographic design project. TABLETOP WHALETABLETOP WHALEDIGITAL SNOWFLAKESARCHIVEFAQ Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s map is a topographic map of Mars! I already shared the code to make these topographic maps a few weeks ago, so for this blog post I decided to write a better description of how I illustrated the ornamental borders and decided on a design style for the map collection. Although style design was the least technical part of the project, I think it actually took just as much time - if AN ANIMATED CHART OF 42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES Hi Pat, thanks so much for the links! The measurements on the infographic actually point to the scale bar just above it. For example, the 2cm bar for the Eastern Tiger Swallowtail is about a fifth of the length of the entire butterfly. Deb Henning • 6 yearsago. I
FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTED It was a fun experiment, and I wanted to make something similar from Youtube videos. I found slow-motion videos of five flying species, and mapped out specific points on the wings during one wingbeat. I ended up with 15 frames per wingbeat, and I connected every frame using imaginary curves that went through all of the 15 mapped points. HOW TO BUILD A HUMAN In the beginning, when talking fertilized egg to blastocyst and implantation, the weeks you list are accurate. However, later on, you list 24 weeks as >50% survival if born. 24 weeks post fertilization is 26 weeks gestation, which is more like 80-90% chance of survival. 24 weeks gestation (or 22 weeks post-fertilization) is closer to 50% AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO BREATHING About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. AN ORBIT MAP OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM This week’s map shows the orbits of more than 18000 asteroids in the solar system. This includes everything we know of that’s over 10km in diameter - about 10000 asteroids - as well as 8000 randomized objects of unknown size. A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF MERCURY This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet. A VISUAL COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURES Hello! My name is Eleanor and I’m a self-employed artist from Seattle. This blog post is the first installment of what will hopefully be a year-long infographic design project.TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s map is a topographic map of Mars! I already shared the code to make these topographic maps a few weeks ago, so for this blog post I decided to write a better description of how I illustrated the ornamental borders and decided on a design style for the map collection. Although style design was the least technical part of the project, I think it actually took just as much time - ifTABLETOP WHALE
This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet. AN ANIMATED MAP OF THE EARTH July 8 2019 · Link to the Open-Source Code. This is one of the very few animated maps I made for my space cartography project! NASA publishes many Earth datasets at monthly time scales, and this GIF uses one frame per month to show the fluctuating seasons. The animation focuses mainly on data about Arctic sea ice and vegetation,but it was
TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s post isn’t entirely scientific, but I thought I’d upload it anyway since it’s related to animals and patterns in nature. When I worked in an insect lab as an undergrad, I helped outTABLETOP WHALE
Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. I checked out six butterfly field guides from the library and picked out some of the species I thought were the most unique and beautiful. AN ORBIT MAP OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM This week’s map shows the orbits of more than 18000 asteroids in the solar system. This includes everything we know of that’s over 10km in diameter - about 10000 asteroids - as well as 8000 randomized objects of unknown size. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO THE HUMAN BODY : THE MUSCLE EDITION It’s a 25-frame stop motion animation made mostly in Photoshop. I’ve never made an animation this complex before, and I had a ton of fun with it. I’m definitely planning on more animated infographics in the future. I might even learn After Effects, though I’ll have to see how feasible that is since my computer’s getting kind of old CONSTELLATIONS FROM AROUND THE WORLD Two weeks ago I shared a map of all the stars you can see from Earth, alongside the Western constellations.But the Western constellations are only one of many patterns of stars invented by cultures around the world. This week’s map illustrates the animals, people, and objects imagined in the sky by more than 30 different civilizations. HOW TO BUILD A HUMAN II A medical infographic explaining human embryo development. This week’s infographic is a new, improved version of my old How to build a human design. My goal for this project was to explain human embryo development in an engaging and informative way. PLANET EARTH CONTROL DECK January 26 2015. It’s January already, which means it’s tax season! This year I decided to make an infographic celebrating NASA, one of my favorite tax-funded programs in America. I wanted to show what Earth’s control panel might look like if it was a spaceship piloted by humans. It’s a bit too busy with all the flashing lights,but I
TABLETOP WHALETABLETOP WHALEDIGITAL SNOWFLAKESARCHIVEFAQ Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
AN ANIMATED CHART OF 42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES An animated guide to 42 different species of butterflies. Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTED About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. THE WESTERN CONSTELLATIONS This week’s map shows every single star visible from Earth, on the darkest night with the clearest sky. The map also includes all of the brightest galaxies, nebulae, and star clusters from W.H. Finlay’s Concise Catalog of Deep-sky Objects.I illustrated the familiar Western star patterns - or asterisms - in blue and gold, as well as the scientific constellation boundaries in red.TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s post isn’t entirely scientific, but I thought I’d upload it anyway since it’s related to animals and patterns in nature. When I worked in an insect lab as an undergrad, I helped out A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF MERCURY This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO THE HUMAN BODY : THE MUSCLE EDITION About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. A FLOWCHART OF DANGEROUS VIRUSES For this week’s infographic I made a poster about some of the most common kinds of human viruses. Viruses cause anything from the common cold to more serious diseases such as HIV, rabies, and Ebola. A VISUAL COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURES Hello! My name is Eleanor and I’m a self-employed artist from Seattle. This blog post is the first installment of what will hopefully be a year-long infographic design project. TABLETOP WHALETABLETOP WHALEDIGITAL SNOWFLAKESARCHIVEFAQ Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
AN ANIMATED CHART OF 42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES An animated guide to 42 different species of butterflies. Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTED About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. THE WESTERN CONSTELLATIONS This week’s map shows every single star visible from Earth, on the darkest night with the clearest sky. The map also includes all of the brightest galaxies, nebulae, and star clusters from W.H. Finlay’s Concise Catalog of Deep-sky Objects.I illustrated the familiar Western star patterns - or asterisms - in blue and gold, as well as the scientific constellation boundaries in red.TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s post isn’t entirely scientific, but I thought I’d upload it anyway since it’s related to animals and patterns in nature. When I worked in an insect lab as an undergrad, I helped out A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF MERCURY This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO THE HUMAN BODY : THE MUSCLE EDITION About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. A FLOWCHART OF DANGEROUS VIRUSES For this week’s infographic I made a poster about some of the most common kinds of human viruses. Viruses cause anything from the common cold to more serious diseases such as HIV, rabies, and Ebola. A VISUAL COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURES Hello! My name is Eleanor and I’m a self-employed artist from Seattle. This blog post is the first installment of what will hopefully be a year-long infographic design project.TABLETOP WHALE
This week’s post isn’t entirely scientific, but I thought I’d upload it anyway since it’s related to animals and patterns in nature. When I worked in an insect lab as an undergrad, I helped out FAQ - TABLETOP WHALE The Author. Hi! My name's Eleanor Lutz and I write this blog. I'm an information designer specializing in science communication. Right now I work at the New York Times in the graphics department, as part of this year's fellowship cohort.Before that I researched disease mosquitoes for my PhD inTABLETOP WHALE
Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. I checked out six butterfly field guides from the library and picked out some of the species I thought were the most unique and beautiful. THE GEOLOGY OF THE MOON This map was one of my favorites, so I’m excited to share the code tutorial for a geologic map of the Moon! Although I already made a geologic map of Mars, this Moon map was much more difficult because the geologic data was split into six different datasets.Each dataset had unique labels (and sometimes different data formats) so I spent a lot of time piecing the data together to create a AN ORBIT MAP OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM This week’s map shows the orbits of more than 18000 asteroids in the solar system. This includes everything we know of that’s over 10km in diameter - about 10000 asteroids - as well as 8000 randomized objects of unknown size. A FIELD GUIDE TO DANGEROUS BACTERIA This week I’m excited to announce a special project! During the past year and a half I’ve been working with the wonderful people at Nerdcore Medical on a set of 20 medical infographics.. Nerdcore Medical is the studio behind science communication projects like the Bacterionomicon and the Occam’s Razor card game. For this project I worked with Dr. Arun Mathews, a chief medical officer in WHAT YOU NEED TO BUILD YOUR OWN COMPUTER About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. HOW TO BUILD A HUMAN II A medical infographic explaining human embryo development. This week’s infographic is a new, improved version of my old How to build a human design. My goal for this project was to explain human embryo development in an engaging and informative way.IMMUNOLOGY POP ART
This week’s collaboration with Nerdcore Medical was inspired by a mashup of Japanese pop art and the old-school gamer style of Designer’s Republic.Pop art is usually a little too bright for me, but I ended up really liking the style when mixed with science and a 80’s video game vibe. HEARTBEATS AND MURMURS A medical infographic explaining abnormal EKG waves. This week’s Nerdcore Medical collab is a paired poster for October’s Hearbeats and heart attacks poster. The last poster showed the EKG wave patterns of 10 different heart conditions, as well as the different parts of anormal EKG wave.
TABLETOP WHALETABLETOP WHALEDIGITAL SNOWFLAKESARCHIVEFAQ Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTED It was a fun experiment, and I wanted to make something similar from Youtube videos. I found slow-motion videos of five flying species, and mapped out specific points on the wings during one wingbeat. I ended up with 15 frames per wingbeat, and I connected every frame using imaginary curves that went through all of the 15 mapped points. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO BREATHING About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration.LEVELING UP
A medical infographic explaining early childhood development. This week’s infographic is a design about child development. I wanted to create a easy-to-read guide that would be helpful for both medical students and new parents. AN ANIMATED CHART OF 42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES August 27 2014. Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. I checked out six butterfly field guides from the library and picked out some of the species I thought were the most unique and beautiful. It’s meant as a chart of decorative species illustrations rather than an A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF MERCURY This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet.TABLETOP WHALE
Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. I checked out six butterfly field guides from the library and picked out some of the species I thought were the most unique and beautiful. A VISUAL COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURES Hello! My name is Eleanor and I’m a self-employed artist from Seattle. This blog post is the first installment of what will hopefully be a year-long infographic design project. A FLOWCHART OF DANGEROUS VIRUSES For this week’s infographic I made a poster about some of the most common kinds of human viruses. Viruses cause anything from the common cold to more serious diseases such as HIV, rabies, and Ebola. TABLETOP WHALETABLETOP WHALEDIGITAL SNOWFLAKESARCHIVEFAQ Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTED It was a fun experiment, and I wanted to make something similar from Youtube videos. I found slow-motion videos of five flying species, and mapped out specific points on the wings during one wingbeat. I ended up with 15 frames per wingbeat, and I connected every frame using imaginary curves that went through all of the 15 mapped points. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO BREATHING About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration.LEVELING UP
A medical infographic explaining early childhood development. This week’s infographic is a design about child development. I wanted to create a easy-to-read guide that would be helpful for both medical students and new parents. AN ANIMATED CHART OF 42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES August 27 2014. Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. I checked out six butterfly field guides from the library and picked out some of the species I thought were the most unique and beautiful. It’s meant as a chart of decorative species illustrations rather than an A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF MERCURY This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet.TABLETOP WHALE
Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. I checked out six butterfly field guides from the library and picked out some of the species I thought were the most unique and beautiful. A VISUAL COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURES Hello! My name is Eleanor and I’m a self-employed artist from Seattle. This blog post is the first installment of what will hopefully be a year-long infographic design project. A FLOWCHART OF DANGEROUS VIRUSES For this week’s infographic I made a poster about some of the most common kinds of human viruses. Viruses cause anything from the common cold to more serious diseases such as HIV, rabies, and Ebola.TABLETOP WHALE
Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. I checked out six butterfly field guides from the library and picked out some of the species I thought were the most unique and beautiful.TABLETOP WHALE
This new poster shows the PCG patterns of 11 more heart-related diseases. EKG waves (also called an ECG) shows the heart’s electrical activity, while a PCG uses a phonocardiograph to plot the sounds produced by the heart. So even though these two posters are made with similar design styles and fonts, the waves look completelydifferent.
FAQ - TABLETOP WHALE The Author. Hi! My name's Eleanor Lutz and I write this blog. I'm an information designer specializing in science communication. Right now I work at the New York Times in the graphics department, as part of this year's fellowship cohort.Before that I researched disease mosquitoes for my PhD inTABLETOP WHALE
This week’s infographic is a metabolic map - a diagram of the chemical reactions that turns food into energy. The “galaxy of molecules” illustrates only a small fraction of the full metabolic map, but it includes some of the most common pathways taught in undergrad biochemistry or medical school.The project brief was to collect each of these major pathways into one resource that couldTABLETOP WHALE
This week’s post isn’t entirely scientific, but I thought I’d upload it anyway since it’s related to animals and patterns in nature. When I worked in an insect lab as an undergrad, I helped out A FLOWCHART OF DANGEROUS VIRUSES For this week’s infographic I made a poster about some of the most common kinds of human viruses. Viruses cause anything from the common cold to more serious diseases such as HIV, rabies, and Ebola.TABLETOP WHALE
Although I’m not an astronomer, I love reading about Mars missions and looking through the free data released by NASA. This month I decided to create a map to showcase the wealth of knowledge scientists have accumulated over the past few decades. HOW TO BUILD A HUMAN HEART This week’s infographic is my 2nd collaboration with Nerdcore Medical.The poster explains how a baby’s heart develops while in the womb. It’s a bit of a hodgepodge of different elements - there are anatomical changes, molecular changes, and also some sections on basicanatomy.
HOW TO BUILD A HUMAN II A medical infographic explaining human embryo development. This week’s infographic is a new, improved version of my old How to build a human design. My goal for this project was to explain human embryo development in an engaging and informative way. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO THE HUMAN BODY : THE MUSCLE EDITION It’s a 25-frame stop motion animation made mostly in Photoshop. I’ve never made an animation this complex before, and I had a ton of fun with it. I’m definitely planning on more animated infographics in the future. I might even learn After Effects, though I’ll have to see how feasible that is since my computer’s getting kind of old TABLETOP WHALETABLETOP WHALEDIGITAL SNOWFLAKESARCHIVEFAQTABLETOP WHALETABLETOP SCIENCE LABSTABLETOP SCIENCE UMUCWHALE END TABLEWHALE TABLE DECORWOODEN WHALE CARVINGS Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTED It was a fun experiment, and I wanted to make something similar from Youtube videos. I found slow-motion videos of five flying species, and mapped out specific points on the wings during one wingbeat. I ended up with 15 frames per wingbeat, and I connected every frame using imaginary curves that went through all of the 15 mapped points. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO BREATHING About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration.LEVELING UP
A medical infographic explaining early childhood development. This week’s infographic is a design about child development. I wanted to create a easy-to-read guide that would be helpful for both medical students and new parents. AN ANIMATED CHART OF 42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES August 27 2014. Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. I checked out six butterfly field guides from the library and picked out some of the species I thought were the most unique and beautiful. It’s meant as a chart of decorative species illustrations rather than an A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF MERCURY This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet.TABLETOP WHALE
Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. I checked out six butterfly field guides from the library and picked out some of the species I thought were the most unique and beautiful. A VISUAL COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURES Hello! My name is Eleanor and I’m a self-employed artist from Seattle. This blog post is the first installment of what will hopefully be a year-long infographic design project. A FLOWCHART OF DANGEROUS VIRUSES For this week’s infographic I made a poster about some of the most common kinds of human viruses. Viruses cause anything from the common cold to more serious diseases such as HIV, rabies, and Ebola. TABLETOP WHALETABLETOP WHALEDIGITAL SNOWFLAKESARCHIVEFAQTABLETOP WHALETABLETOP SCIENCE LABSTABLETOP SCIENCE UMUCWHALE END TABLEWHALE TABLE DECORWOODEN WHALE CARVINGS Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. ARCHIVE - TABLETOP WHALE April 2020. 1st – Explaining ventilators for COVID-19 August 2019. 26th – The Geology of the Moon 19th – A Topographic Map of the Moon 2nd – An Animated Sketch of Jupiter July 2019. 29th – Constellations from Around the World 22nd – A Topographic Map ofMars
FLIGHT VIDEOS DECONSTRUCTED It was a fun experiment, and I wanted to make something similar from Youtube videos. I found slow-motion videos of five flying species, and mapped out specific points on the wings during one wingbeat. I ended up with 15 frames per wingbeat, and I connected every frame using imaginary curves that went through all of the 15 mapped points. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO BREATHING About Tabletop Whale . Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration.LEVELING UP
A medical infographic explaining early childhood development. This week’s infographic is a design about child development. I wanted to create a easy-to-read guide that would be helpful for both medical students and new parents. AN ANIMATED CHART OF 42 NORTH AMERICAN BUTTERFLIES August 27 2014. Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. I checked out six butterfly field guides from the library and picked out some of the species I thought were the most unique and beautiful. It’s meant as a chart of decorative species illustrations rather than an A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF MERCURY This week’s blog post is a topographic map of the planet Mercury - the smallest planet and the one closest to the sun. I wanted to map each of the rocky planets in the same style, so this week’s code tutorial actually also includes code for mapping Mars, Venus, and the Moon.. Although Mercury has very few labeled features, I really liked the IAU naming theme for the planet.TABLETOP WHALE
Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. I checked out six butterfly field guides from the library and picked out some of the species I thought were the most unique and beautiful. A VISUAL COMPENDIUM OF GLOWING CREATURES Hello! My name is Eleanor and I’m a self-employed artist from Seattle. This blog post is the first installment of what will hopefully be a year-long infographic design project. A FLOWCHART OF DANGEROUS VIRUSES For this week’s infographic I made a poster about some of the most common kinds of human viruses. Viruses cause anything from the common cold to more serious diseases such as HIV, rabies, and Ebola.TABLETOP WHALE
Last week’s infographic was pretty science intensive, so this one is a bit more frivolous for a change. I checked out six butterfly field guides from the library and picked out some of the species I thought were the most unique and beautiful.TABLETOP WHALE
This new poster shows the PCG patterns of 11 more heart-related diseases. EKG waves (also called an ECG) shows the heart’s electrical activity, while a PCG uses a phonocardiograph to plot the sounds produced by the heart. So even though these two posters are made with similar design styles and fonts, the waves look completelydifferent.
FAQ - TABLETOP WHALE The Author. Hi! My name's Eleanor Lutz and I write this blog. I'm an information designer specializing in science communication. Right now I work at the New York Times in the graphics department, as part of this year's fellowship cohort.Before that I researched disease mosquitoes for my PhD inTABLETOP WHALE
This week’s infographic is a metabolic map - a diagram of the chemical reactions that turns food into energy. The “galaxy of molecules” illustrates only a small fraction of the full metabolic map, but it includes some of the most common pathways taught in undergrad biochemistry or medical school.The project brief was to collect each of these major pathways into one resource that couldTABLETOP WHALE
This week’s post isn’t entirely scientific, but I thought I’d upload it anyway since it’s related to animals and patterns in nature. When I worked in an insect lab as an undergrad, I helped out A FLOWCHART OF DANGEROUS VIRUSES For this week’s infographic I made a poster about some of the most common kinds of human viruses. Viruses cause anything from the common cold to more serious diseases such as HIV, rabies, and Ebola.TABLETOP WHALE
Although I’m not an astronomer, I love reading about Mars missions and looking through the free data released by NASA. This month I decided to create a map to showcase the wealth of knowledge scientists have accumulated over the past few decades. HOW TO BUILD A HUMAN HEART This week’s infographic is my 2nd collaboration with Nerdcore Medical.The poster explains how a baby’s heart develops while in the womb. It’s a bit of a hodgepodge of different elements - there are anatomical changes, molecular changes, and also some sections on basicanatomy.
HOW TO BUILD A HUMAN II A medical infographic explaining human embryo development. This week’s infographic is a new, improved version of my old How to build a human design. My goal for this project was to explain human embryo development in an engaging and informative way. AN ANIMATED GUIDE TO THE HUMAN BODY : THE MUSCLE EDITION It’s a 25-frame stop motion animation made mostly in Photoshop. I’ve never made an animation this complex before, and I had a ton of fun with it. I’m definitely planning on more animated infographics in the future. I might even learn After Effects, though I’ll have to see how feasible that is since my computer’s getting kind of oldTABLETOP WHALE
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TABLETOP WHALE IS AN ORIGINAL SCIENCE ILLUSTRATION BLOG. MADE WITH LOVE BY AN INFORMATION DESIGNER IN NEW YORK CITY. CHARTS, INFOGRAPHICS, & ANIMATIONS ABOUT ANY AND ALL THINGS SCIENCE. EXPLAINING VENTILATORS FOR COVID-19 April 1 2020 · CoVent-19 ------------------------- Last week I collaborated with Dr. Sarah Low to explain ventilators in a series of animations. Sarah is an anesthesiology resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a leader of CoVent-19 - one of many efforts to address the ventilator shortage during the Covid-19 outbreak. The CoVent-19 organization is run by a team of thirteen medical doctors, including Sarah. Their goal is to teach engineers the basics of medical ventilation, in the hopes that new ventilation solutions can be engineered from existing equipment or repurposed supplies. Please take a look at the CoVent-19 website for more information! I’m also sharing all of these ventilation graphics to the public domain, so
you’re free to use them however you like . But please note that I only illustrated the simplified circuits that Sarah needed (this isn’t a comprehensive explanation of ventilators). BIOLOGY OF VENTILATION Air moves from our lungs into the bloodstream through tiny, air-filled sacs called alveoli. OPEN CIRCUIT VENTILATORS This is a very simple version of a ventilator where waste gas is expelled from the system without recycling. CLOSED CIRCUIT VENTILATORS This diagram is more like a modern medical ventilator. A CO2 filter recycles air to reduce waste. An outflow valve controlled by the ventilator releases pressure that builds up as more and more fresh air is added to the closed system. BIOLOGY OF VENTILATION Air moves from our lungs into the bloodstream through tiny, air-filled sacs called alveoli. OPEN CIRCUIT VENTILATORS This is a very simple version of a ventilator where waste gas is expelled from the system without recycling. CLOSED CIRCUIT VENTILATORS This diagram is more like a modern medical ventilator. A CO2 filter recycles air to reduce waste. An outflow valve controlled by the ventilator releases pressure that builds up as more and more fresh air is added to the closed system.Covent-19
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THE GEOLOGY OF THE MOON August 26 2019 · Link to the Open-Source Code ------------------------- This map was one of my favorites, so I’m excited to share the codetutorial
for a geologic map of the Moon! Although I already made a geologic mapof Mars
,
this Moon map was much more difficult because the geologic data was split into six different datasets. Each dataset had unique labels (and sometimes different data formats) so I spent a lot of time piecing the data together to create a cohesive map. One complication with having six datasets instead of one was that some geologic categories were described differently in each dataset, like “_Basin Material, Rugged_” vs. “_Material of Rugged Basin Terrain_”. So I decided to combine closely related terms into asingle color.
This Moon data was also challenging because the geologic timescales weren’t very precise. Some areas were described with uncertainty - like plains from the “_Imbrian or Nectarian_” era. And some geologic categories combined many time periods, like craters from “_Imbrian, Nectarian, and pre-Nectarian_” time periods. I thought it was too complicated to show all these uncertain aggregations in one map, so I decided to omit timescale data entirely. The map features are colored only by geologic category (craters, basins, etc.) and notby age.
The original maps were originally published in the 70’s, and I loved the bright neon color schemes in these historical maps. I tried to keep as many of the same colors as possible, though I re-arranged to save the more extreme colors for smaller or more unusual geologicformations.
The end result is a summarized geologic map rather than a precise replication of the original data. But even though I combined geologic features and didn’t include precise scientific labels, I think the map still works in its limited role as a condensed overview of Moongeology.
Some of the distinctive locations on the Moon. 1: Mare Orientale, a huge impact crater on the far side of the moon. 2: Mare Tranquillitatis, the landing site of Apollo 11 - the first manned landing on the Moon. 3: The far side of the moon. 4: Fra Mauro crater (at center, next to the neon green Fra Mauro highlands), the landing site of Apollo 14 in 1971. This map is actually the last installment in the Atlas of Space series. I love working with astronomy data and I’m sure I’ll make more maps in the future, but for now I’m taking a break to try and finish my last PhD research project. Thanks for all of your comments and suggestions this summer - I really enjoyed getting to share these maps with you! For those of you going to NACIS meeting this fall, I’m looking forward to talking more about these maps at the conference in the Using Open Data panel. Hopefully I’ll see some of you there!*
SOURCES
* DATA: Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature , International Astronomical Union (IAU). © 2019 Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN). Planetary Symbology Mapping Guidelines, Federal
Geographic Data Committee. LRO LOLA Elevation Model 118m (LDEM GDR).
2018 NASA PDS and Derived Products Annex. LOLA Science Team. Lunar 5M Geologic Map Renovation.
NASA PDS and Derived Products Annex. © 2016 USGS Astrogeology Science Center. Missions to the Moon.
2019 The Planetary Society. REFERENCE TEXTS: Astronomy , Andrew Fraknoi, David Morrison, Sidney C. Wolff et al. © 2016 OpenStax. FONTS: The labels on this map are typeset in Moon by Jack Harvatt. The titlefont is RedFlower
by Type & Studio. ADVICE: Thank you to Henrik Hargitai, Oliver Fraser, Michael Ruxton, Chloe Pursey, and Leah Willey for their helpful advicein making this map.
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A TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF THE MOON August 19 2019 · Link to the Open-Source Code ------------------------- My next two maps in the Atlas of Space series show the topography and geology of the Moon. These were some of my favorite datasets in the project - the Moon is our closest celestial neighbor, and we know a lot more about the Moon than about our neighboring planets. The Apollo missions even returned several hundred kilograms of lunar rock to the Earth for detailed analysis. The moon is tidally locked to the Earth, which means that it completes one rotation around its axis in exactly the same time that it takes to circle around the Earth. Because of this, the far side of the moon is never visible from the Earth’s surface. This topographic map shows the near side of the moon in the large central map, as well as the North pole, South pole, far side, and interior in the four surroundingmaps.
People have been fascinated by the moon for thousands of years, and lunar events like the full moon or an eclipse are tied to ancient calendars, myths, and celebrations. The lunar cycle can even be seen today in the pattern of Google searches for the word “moon,” which peaks predictably during every full moon. 1: Data layers used to design this map. 2: Google search frequency for the word “moon” in the United States (data from Moon phase dates and Google Trends). Each yellow
line shows one lunar cycle in 2018, normalized to the highest and lowest value within each lunar cycle. The turquoise line shows theoverall mean.
*
SOURCES
* DATA: Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature , International Astronomical Union (IAU). © 2019 Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN). Earth's Moon In Depth. © 2019
NASA Science Solar System Exploration. LRO LOLA Elevation Model 118m(LDEM GDR)
.
2018 NASA PDS and Derived Products Annex. LOLA Science Team. REFERENCE TEXTS: Astronomy , Andrew Fraknoi, David Morrison, Sidney C. Wolff et al. © 2016 OpenStax. FONTS: The labels on this map are typeset in Moon by Jack Harvatt. The titlefont is RedFlower
by Type & Studio. ADVICE: Thank you to Oliver Fraser, Henrik Hargitai, Chloe Pursey, and Leah Willey for their helpful advice in making thismap.
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ABOUT TABLETOP WHALE Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. Right now the blog is on hiatus while Eleanor spends a year working at the New York Times._ _ _ _ _ _
SAY HI!
Questions? Comments? Feel free to shoot me an email. If you have a tip for a news story or feedback about my work at the Times, please email me at my work email instead. 2014~2020 Eleanor LutzABOUT
Tabletop Whale is a tiny blog run by Eleanor Lutz. It's updated occasionally with a science themed infographic, dataviz project, or illustration. Right now the blog is on hiatus while Eleanor spends a year working at the New York Times.SAY HI!
Questions? Comments? Feel free to shoot me an email. If you have a tip for a news story or feedback about my work at the Times, please email me at my work email instead._ _ _ _ _ _
2014~2020 Eleanor LutzDetails
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