2.0 KiB
2.0 KiB
Visual style: data-journalism
Bloomberg / Economist news-infographic — publication-grade information density: multi-column grids, inline micro-charts, data tables, editorial sidebars, source lines. Cool and restrained, read like a financial long-read rather than a keynote. For finance, market reviews, research, annual data reports, data-driven explainers.
1. Shape & decoration
- Shape language: a dense multi-column grid carrying many small charts and data tables inline; editorial sidebars and pull-stats; hairline dividers; hero numbers; a running source / footnote line. Information density is the look — kept legible by a rigorous grid.
- Decoration: minimal beyond the data — a single accent rule, sparing annotation. Charts and numbers are the visual interest, not ornament.
- Whitespace: tight but structured; the grid earns density without clutter.
2. Typography character
- Serif headline / hero-number for authority × a clean sans or monospace for numeric precision in tables and chart labels. Small captions and source lines; tight, deliberate hierarchy.
Families are chosen at confirmation
g; this style asks for a serif-headline × precise-sans/mono-data character.
3. Using the deck's colors
- A restrained field — light publication paper or dark graphite both fit (Economist vs Bloomberg-terminal); the deck's accent marks risk / key figures, an optional secondary distinguishes a second series; charts use tints of the same family, never a rainbow.
- Numbers are colored to mean (up / down / risk / focus), not to decorate.
HEX values come from confirmation
e; this style only governs the restrained-field, meaning-coded-data discipline — it names no colors. (Dark-field legibility, if dark:shared-standards.md §6.)
4. Texture / elevation
- Flat, publication-grade — hairline rules over heavy cards; optional scrim on any image; no glow, no decorative shadow.
5. Paired image-rendering
editorial — magazine-style infographic imagery sharing the data-publication aesthetic.