I am not sure to what extent people who read presentation design blogs also have a large number of fashion design feeds in their RSS reader. I follow one: The Sartorialist, the blog of Scott Schuman who wanders around city streets with a camera, taking pictures of regular people wearing interesting creations.
Browsing through his site will show you how poor staged stock images are, and how much more emotionally powerful images of real people can be in your presentation.
To the left is a small screen shot of the web site. Photography on The Sartorialist is under copyright, so you can use the site only for inspiration. Use Flickr to search for relevant images with a creative commons license.
Update: below a mini documentary that came out just today.
A collection of sticky slides
I have frankensteined (what?) together a slide deck of around 50 slides that were used in blog posts here on Sticky Slides over the past 2.5 years. All completely unrelated, and out of context but maybe good enough for some creative inspiration.
Dropbox beats YouSendIt / Google Docs / Office Live
PowerPoint designers are struggling with big file sizes that consume storage and make it hard to email documents. I have discussed solutions such as YouSendIt and Google Docs before (here). Recently, I switched to Dropbox:
- Seamless integration with all my devices (desktop, laptop, mobile phone, tablet)
- Seamless integration with these devices' operating system (you do not notice it is there)
- Two solutions in one: 1) sharing big files 2) always access to your own files
- Nice extra 3) a service that keeps history of your files so you can roll back a version in case a file got corrupted or you made a horrible design mistake.
- Minimalist design interface
The Dropbox pitch to venture capitalists from 2007 pretty much still holds.
YouSendIt requires sign in all the time, and all the advertising and branding does not look very professional. Google Docs is still hard to integrate with Microsoft Office. Office Live does not integrate fully with the Windows operating system. It also suffers from feature overload: I do not always want to create a full virtual team room with calenders and contact lists, just sharing files is enough.
If you sign up with this link for your free 2GB account, you get 250MB of bonus space (disclosure: and I get another 500MB). You see, they know how to market as well. The regular link is here.
The last word probably has not been said about this subject, I wonder whether the conclusion still will be the same in January 2012.
A tool for exporting PPT images
I find it easier to create visuals in PowerPoint than Adobe software. However, the image export functions in PowerPoint are not very sophisticated. It is hard to set resultion/DPI, choose format, set the exact image size, and/or control the naming of the exported files.
PPT ImageExport does all of this. The software creates an add-in in your ribbon. This is not a very sophisticated piece of software, but it has proven very useful for the design of my new company web site. A full license costs $30.
PPT ImageExport does all of this. The software creates an add-in in your ribbon. This is not a very sophisticated piece of software, but it has proven very useful for the design of my new company web site. A full license costs $30.
Angry Birds fonts in PowerPoint!
Here is the post to close 2010 and wish you all the best for 2011: Angry Birds fonts in PowerPoint.
- Close PowerPoint
- Install the Feast of Flesh BB font on your computer (link here)
- Open PowerPoint
- Type a text, and set the font as Feast of Flesh
- Increase the size
- Select the text, and click "format"
- Pick a nice yellow in "text outline", set the weight to 1pt
- Staying in "format", select "text effects"
- Select "glow"
- Select "more glow options"
- Pick the black one
And you are done!
More than 400,000 work days lost with Angry Birds - every day
There is a stunning statistic in this interview with the developer of Angry Brids by Hilz Fuld: More than 200 million minutes every day is spent on playing Angry Birds. This sounds like a lot, but it is still hard to put the figure in perspective.
- Wow that's big: 200 million minutes equals to around 400,000 full time working days. Now that's sounds like a lot.
- Maybe not that big yet: if around 75% of the world population has access to some form of TV and spends 3 hours watching it, you get a far bigger number than 200 million minutes
Watch those bold fonts
When PowerPoint does not have the right bold or italic font variation installed, it tries to emulate the real thing. For example in the case of bold, it plots slightly overlapping version of the same letter next to each other to make the characters look heavier.
But when you install the correct fonts they get put in slightly random places. Look at the editing screen below (click on the images to see a larger picture). You can see where things go wrong as PowerPoint tries to fill in the missing gaps. Strangely enough in presentation mode, it displays these fonts as regular type.
Secondly it takes some tweaking to get the right font you want:
But when you install the correct fonts they get put in slightly random places. Look at the editing screen below (click on the images to see a larger picture). You can see where things go wrong as PowerPoint tries to fill in the missing gaps. Strangely enough in presentation mode, it displays these fonts as regular type.
Secondly it takes some tweaking to get the right font you want:
- A bold version of standard Helvetica Neue is the medium variation that I have installed
- To get the heavy variation (which I also bought) I need to take the medium variation and have PowerPoint set it to bold.
Fonts remain mysterious.
Going analogue with mechanical pencils
Most of my charts start with a pencil sketch. I burn literally through piles of paper when designing a presentation (a good use of those 1-sided print outs you do not need anymore). So what are my favorite pencils?
When I started at McKinsey, the Pentel P205
was my initial favorite. Per pencil, it is actually very cheap. That was exactly the problem, people considered it cheap enough to borrow it all the time. I kept on buying new ones.
I experimented with various much more expensive pencils only to discover that these are actually pieces of jewelry rather than sketching instruments. Beautiful to look at, but not very useful. Check out the site of Joon Pens in New York to see some examples.
Recently I discovered Lamy pencils as the perfect in-between. Two pencils are my favorite. First there is the classic Lamy 2000
. Designed at the end of the sixties, and still in production pretty much unchanged. A beautiful minimalist look, very light and a nice, almost wood-like feel. People say that over time the mat finish will wear off at those spots where you hold the pencil though.
I use a 0.7mm pencil for regular writing. But when it comes to sketching a wider pencil is much better. The Lamy Scribble
comes in a version with a 3.15mm fill. It has a very nice grip and is beautiful to let your creativity go.
(All links to Amazon are affiliate links).
When I started at McKinsey, the Pentel P205
I experimented with various much more expensive pencils only to discover that these are actually pieces of jewelry rather than sketching instruments. Beautiful to look at, but not very useful. Check out the site of Joon Pens in New York to see some examples.
Recently I discovered Lamy pencils as the perfect in-between. Two pencils are my favorite. First there is the classic Lamy 2000
I use a 0.7mm pencil for regular writing. But when it comes to sketching a wider pencil is much better. The Lamy Scribble
comes in a version with a 3.15mm fill. It has a very nice grip and is beautiful to let your creativity go.
(All links to Amazon are affiliate links).
My top 10: most popular posts of the year
Here are the blog posts written in 2010 that were most popular in 2010 according to Google Analytics:
1. First thoughts on the iPad and presentations
2. A turning mask optical illusion
3. In defense of the US Army spaghetti chart
4. A presentation about Steve Jobs
5. How to make semi-transparent text fills in PPT
6. What really matters in PowerPoint template design
7. Creating McKinsey-style waterfalls (re-post)
8. Making photo cut outs in PPT
9. Book review: Presentation secrets of Steve Jobs
10. CVs are coming to PowerPoint
1. First thoughts on the iPad and presentations
2. A turning mask optical illusion
3. In defense of the US Army spaghetti chart
4. A presentation about Steve Jobs
The Presentation Secrets Of Steve Jobs
View more presentations from Peter Walker.
5. How to make semi-transparent text fills in PPT
6. What really matters in PowerPoint template design
7. Creating McKinsey-style waterfalls (re-post)
8. Making photo cut outs in PPT
9. Book review: Presentation secrets of Steve Jobs
10. CVs are coming to PowerPoint
Happy holidays
Here is a picture taken from my window on December 23, you see that winter has not really arrived in Tel Aviv yet. A wonderful holiday to all of you.
The about slide
Many presentations start with the about slide. It is useful to give the audience some background about who you are, where you are from, when you were founded, and what your company does (more or less), that your company is financially stable and not about to go bankrupt. But don't overdo it:
- There is no need to tell the entire story at the about page, tell it again in the presentation body, and summarize it again on the conclusion page
- The audience needs to warm up before it is ready to receive your message (see my post from a few days ago)
- The presentation should be about something that is interesting for the audience, and listening to you talking about yourself is probably not the best use of their time
U-turning on custom fonts
I used to recommend to stick to standard Windows fonts in order to avoid compatibility issues when presenting on other computers than your own. I am changing my mind, the risk of technical issues is still there, but the benefits of custom fonts is much greater.
Standard PC fonts (Times roman, Calibri, Arial, etc.) just do not look good. In dense body text, this is not such a big deal. But as PowerPoint slides get fewer and fewer text, their design start to look more like a poster with big headlines. And in posters, typography is a huge deal.
This post on the PowerPoint Ninja blog explains how to overcome compatibility issues by embedding your custom font inside the presentation. When you send it to someone else, she will see the correct font.
You can find your inspiration for fonts on one of the many fonts web sites, paying close attention to the small prints in books (they often mention which font was used) or through books like this one that I picked up in a Tel Aviv book store: 1000 Fonts
(affiliate link).
Standard PC fonts (Times roman, Calibri, Arial, etc.) just do not look good. In dense body text, this is not such a big deal. But as PowerPoint slides get fewer and fewer text, their design start to look more like a poster with big headlines. And in posters, typography is a huge deal.
This post on the PowerPoint Ninja blog explains how to overcome compatibility issues by embedding your custom font inside the presentation. When you send it to someone else, she will see the correct font.
You can find your inspiration for fonts on one of the many fonts web sites, paying close attention to the small prints in books (they often mention which font was used) or through books like this one that I picked up in a Tel Aviv book store: 1000 Fonts
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