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Also tiny tip for starting a #sketchnote - I like laying down a loose set of layout guides to build the structure inside. These are fairly abstract but I try to create a balanced set of big and small areas. Helps align things into distinct sections.
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Working more on the web security sketchnotes. The blue underlay is my lazy rough version - mostly to plan the composition and make sure itโ€™s all going to fit. Then I do final lines and neater lettering over the top These are still in progress - now learning about CSRF and XSS ๐Ÿ†˜
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Completely agree โ€“ I call my finished ones "illustrated notes," or "illustrated explanations." But sometimes revert to the term "sketchnotes" since it's such a common concept in the dev community. And find people get confused by the term "illustrated notes" without seeing them.
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Agreed, if you relate to Tiago's view of taking notes and the paper he shared earlier and see sketchnotes as a special kind of notes it makes sense to favor a wip form. Convo I had earlier with hence mention .. next question 1/2
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2/2 If we learn, we capture using sketches. How to support subsequent reflection, summarisation, deeper understanding on the same media (or not). It's an open question cf link to paper for twitter.com/fortelabs/stat Describes a process mostly for textual notes
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New free post on the Praxis blog: How To Take Smart Notes: 10 Principles to Revolutionize Your Note-Taking and Writing praxis.fortelabs.co/how-to-take-sm My summary of the most important ideas from the best book on note-taking I've read, How To Take Smart Notes by @soenke_ahrens
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1/ Agreed the term 'sketchnotes' feels like it should be reserved for the free-flow, active-thinking-process kind of drawing. I've always struggled with how performative they've become in popular practice. A party trick (or rather conference entertainment piece).
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2/ itโ€™s especially odd when you compare them to written notes - we never consider someoneโ€™s quick bullet point notes as useful as a finished, considered blog post. But with the visual version, sketchnotes are sometimes presented as the ideal explanation of a talk/book/thing.
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4/ to clarify, Iโ€™m not for / against either approach... love both for their own benefits. Just appreciate the thoughtful prompts! ๐Ÿ˜„ making me reconsider how I label this kind of work. Leaning into โ€˜illustrated notesโ€™ feels like it fits the medium better.
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the two trends coexists and are reflected in the community: very neat, well crafted ones, often the work of professional designers or graphic recorders and the artisanal, process oriented minimal style. I love both but the second interests me more
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as someone working in notes, KM & learning for the last (many) years I continuously meet this objection that people can't draw. I'm concerned that by elevating the level of performance & perfection we create even more inhibition to think visually. A topic rarely discussed openly
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