Before&After: Draw Great Visual Instructions
Have something to demonstrate or explain? Don’t say it; show it!
Even written in plain English, manuals, assembly instructions, and directions are too darn verbal. We live in a visual world. To convey directions intuitively (not to mention globally), we need to use visual language. We need to speak in pictures. This 12-page article from issue 49 of Before&After Magazine encourages you to use images—not words!—when you have something to demonstrate or explain.

Key to easy production is to draw from snapshots. Drawing allows you to arrange and rearrange the action quickly with no regard for details. Once a snapshot is made, you are immediately free to pick out important parts, change positions, exaggerate key actions and so forth to make the message clear.

© John McWade/Before&After Magazine, courtesy of Gaye Anne McWade.
Commenting is easier and faster when you're logged in!
Recommended for you
Before&After: How to Align Images by Eye
How do you line up irrregularly shaped objects and size and space them just so?
AI in Ai
Improve your vector art workflow with new artificial intelligence features in Ad...
