Shall I draw you a picture?

The greatest value of a picture is when it forces us to notice what we never expected to see.

John Wilder Tukey

I’m fascinated with diagrams, schematics, charts and sketches since I don’t know when, maybe when I discovered my dad’s normograph templates, as a toddler. Of course I wasn’t allowed to use his China ink and ruling pens, but eventually I could use an old micrograph mechanic pencil.

I grew up surrounded by drawings, technical or not. When I was in first grade, my parents were called by the principal because I made a schematic of the battle of Aljubarrota, instead of a writing essay, and that wasn’t acceptable, no sir!
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One of the key benefits of visual explanations is that they can help people quickly grasp the overall structure and relationships between different pieces of information. For example, a flowchart can illustrate the steps in a process, while a tree diagram can show the hierarchical relationships between different categories of information. Similarly, a bar chart or pie chart can provide a visual representation of quantitative data, making it easier to see patterns and trends that might not be immediately obvious from looking at raw numbers.

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