New skill for generating scientific infographics including: - SKILL.md with comprehensive guidelines for infographic creation - Design principles and color palette references - Scripts for AI-powered infographic generation - Support for various infographic types (statistical, process, comparison, etc.) Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>
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Infographic Design Principles
This reference covers the fundamental design principles for creating effective, professional infographics.
Visual Hierarchy
Visual hierarchy guides the viewer's eye through your infographic in a deliberate order, ensuring key information is seen first.
The Hierarchy Pyramid
-
Primary Elements (Seen First)
- Headlines and titles
- Large numbers or key statistics
- Hero images or main illustrations
- Call-to-action elements
-
Secondary Elements (Seen Second)
- Subheadings and section titles
- Charts and graphs
- Icons and visual markers
- Key supporting text
-
Tertiary Elements (Seen Last)
- Body text and descriptions
- Legends and labels
- Source citations
- Fine print and footnotes
Creating Hierarchy
Size: Larger elements attract attention first
- Headlines: 200-300% larger than body text
- Key stats: Make numbers 2-4x larger than labels
- Important icons: 1.5-2x larger than supporting icons
Color: Bright and contrasting colors draw the eye
- Use accent colors sparingly for emphasis
- Reserve the brightest color for the most important element
- Use muted colors for supporting information
Position: Top-left and center are seen first
- Place most important content at top or center
- Supporting details toward bottom or edges
- Reading flow: top-to-bottom, left-to-right (in Western cultures)
Contrast: High contrast elements stand out
- Dark on light or light on dark for key text
- Colored elements against neutral backgrounds
- Borders and shadows to lift key elements
White Space: Isolation draws attention
- Surround important elements with space
- Don't crowd key information
- Use spacing to group related items
Layout Patterns
F-Pattern Layout
Best for: Text-heavy infographics, lists, articles
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ ████████████████████████████████████│ ← Top horizontal scan
├─────────────────────────────────────┤
│ █████████████████ │ ← Second horizontal scan
├─────────────────────────────────────┤
│ █████ │
│ █████ │ ← Vertical scan down left
│ █████ │
│ █████ │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
Application:
- Place headline across full width at top
- Important subhead on second line
- Key content aligned to left
- Less critical content on right
Z-Pattern Layout
Best for: Minimal content, landing pages, single-message infographics
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ ●────────────────────────────────→ ●│ ← Start top-left, scan right
├─────────────────────────────────────┤
│ ╲ │
│ ╲ │ ← Diagonal scan
│ ╲ │
├─────────────────────────────────────┤
│ ●────────────────────────────────→ ●│ ← Bottom left to right
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
Application:
- Logo/headline top-left
- Key visual top-right
- Diagonal eye movement through center
- Call-to-action bottom-right
Single Column Layout
Best for: Mobile-friendly, scrolling content, process infographics
┌───────────────┐
│ HEADER │
├───────────────┤
│ Section 1 │
├───────────────┤
│ Section 2 │
├───────────────┤
│ Section 3 │
├───────────────┤
│ Section 4 │
├───────────────┤
│ FOOTER │
└───────────────┘
Application:
- Vertical scrolling content
- Step-by-step processes
- Timeline infographics
- Mobile-first design
Multi-Column Layout
Best for: Comparisons, feature lists, complex data
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ HEADER/TITLE │
├──────────────┬──────────────────────┤
│ Column 1 │ Column 2 │
│ -------- │ -------- │
│ Content │ Content │
│ Content │ Content │
│ Content │ Content │
├──────────────┴──────────────────────┤
│ FOOTER │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
Application:
- Side-by-side comparisons
- Pros and cons lists
- Feature matrices
- Two categories of information
Grid Layout
Best for: Multiple equal-weight items, statistics, icon grids
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ HEADER/TITLE │
├───────────┬───────────┬─────────────┤
│ Item 1 │ Item 2 │ Item 3 │
├───────────┼───────────┼─────────────┤
│ Item 4 │ Item 5 │ Item 6 │
├───────────┼───────────┼─────────────┤
│ Item 7 │ Item 8 │ Item 9 │
├───────────┴───────────┴─────────────┤
│ FOOTER │
└─────────────────────────────────────┘
Application:
- Multiple statistics (2x2, 3x3, 2x3 grids)
- Icon collections
- Feature highlights
- Team member displays
Modular/Card Layout
Best for: Varied content types, flexible information, modern designs
┌─────────────────────────────────────┐
│ HEADER/TITLE │
├───────────────────┬─────────────────┤
│ │ Card 2 │
│ Card 1 ├─────────────────┤
│ (large) │ Card 3 │
├───────────────────┼─────────────────┤
│ Card 4 │ Card 5 │
└───────────────────┴─────────────────┘
Application:
- Mixed content types
- Varied importance levels
- Modern dashboard style
- Magazine-style layouts
The 60-40 Rule
The optimal infographic balances visual and text content:
- 60% Visual Elements: Icons, charts, illustrations, images, shapes
- 40% Text Content: Headlines, labels, descriptions, data
Why This Matters
- Too much text: Feels like a document, not an infographic
- Too many visuals: Lacks substance and clarity
- Right balance: Engaging AND informative
Applying the Rule
Visual Elements (60%)
- Charts and graphs
- Icons and symbols
- Illustrations
- Photos
- Decorative shapes
- Color blocks
- Lines and connectors
Text Elements (40%)
- Headlines and titles
- Subheadings
- Data labels
- Brief descriptions
- Source citations
- Calls to action
White Space (Negative Space)
White space is the empty area between and around elements. It's not wasted space—it's a design tool.
Functions of White Space
- Improves Readability: Gives eyes rest between content
- Creates Focus: Isolated elements attract attention
- Groups Content: Related items appear connected
- Adds Elegance: Premium feel to design
- Reduces Clutter: Prevents overwhelming viewers
White Space Guidelines
Margins: Space around the entire infographic
- Minimum 5-10% of width/height
- More margin = more premium feel
- Consistent on all sides
Padding: Space inside elements (boxes, cards)
- Minimum equal to text line height
- More padding for important elements
- Consistent within similar elements
Gaps: Space between elements
- Related items: Small gaps (8-16px)
- Unrelated items: Large gaps (24-48px)
- Sections: Largest gaps (48-72px)
Line Spacing: Space between lines of text
- Body text: 1.4-1.6x font size
- Headlines: 1.1-1.3x font size
- Lists: 1.5-2x font size
Typography
Font Selection
Sans-Serif Fonts (Recommended for Infographics)
- Clean, modern appearance
- Better screen readability
- Professional feel
- Examples: Arial, Helvetica, Open Sans, Roboto, Montserrat
Serif Fonts (Use Sparingly)
- Traditional, authoritative feel
- Good for headlines in formal contexts
- Examples: Georgia, Times New Roman, Playfair Display
Display Fonts (Headlines Only)
- High impact for titles
- NOT for body text
- Examples: Impact, Bebas Neue, Oswald
Font Pairing Rules
- Maximum 2-3 fonts per infographic
- Contrast is key: Pair different styles (serif + sans-serif)
- Establish roles: One for headlines, one for body, one for accents
- Maintain consistency: Same font for same purpose throughout
Safe Pairings:
- Montserrat (headlines) + Open Sans (body)
- Playfair Display (headlines) + Roboto (body)
- Bebas Neue (headlines) + Lato (body)
- Oswald (headlines) + Source Sans Pro (body)
Font Sizes
| Element | Size Range | Weight |
|---|---|---|
| Main Title | 36-72pt | Bold |
| Section Headers | 24-36pt | Bold/Semi-bold |
| Subheadings | 18-24pt | Semi-bold |
| Body Text | 12-16pt | Regular |
| Captions/Labels | 10-14pt | Regular/Light |
| Fine Print | 8-10pt | Light |
Typography Best Practices
- Left-align body text (easier to read than centered)
- Center-align headlines (for impact)
- Limit line length to 45-75 characters
- Use bold sparingly for emphasis
- Avoid all caps for body text (hard to read)
- ALL CAPS acceptable for short headlines/labels
- Maintain contrast between text and background (4.5:1 minimum)
Story Structure
Every effective infographic tells a story with three parts:
1. Introduction (Hook)
Purpose: Grab attention, establish topic
Elements:
- Compelling headline
- Eye-catching hero visual
- Key statistic or question
- Topic introduction
Best Practices:
- Make it impossible to ignore
- Promise value ("Learn how to...")
- Create curiosity
- 10-15% of total space
2. Body (Content)
Purpose: Deliver the main information
Elements:
- Data and statistics
- Step-by-step content
- Comparisons and analysis
- Supporting visuals
Best Practices:
- Logical flow (chronological, importance, or categorical)
- Clear section breaks
- Balance visuals and text
- 70-80% of total space
3. Conclusion (Takeaway)
Purpose: Summarize, call to action
Elements:
- Key takeaway or summary
- Call to action
- Source citations
- Branding/attribution
Best Practices:
- Reinforce main message
- Clear next step for viewer
- Don't introduce new information
- 10-15% of total space
Alignment and Grids
Grid Systems
Use invisible grids to align elements consistently:
Column Grid (Most Common)
- 2, 3, 4, or 6 columns
- Elements span one or more columns
- Gutters (gaps) between columns
- Creates orderly, professional look
Modular Grid
- Columns + rows = modules
- More flexibility for varied content
- Good for complex layouts
- Dashboard-style designs
Alignment Types
Left Alignment
- Most common for text
- Creates strong left edge
- Easy to scan
- Professional appearance
Center Alignment
- Good for headlines
- Creates symmetry
- Use sparingly for text
- Works for single elements
Right Alignment
- Rarely used for primary content
- Good for numbers in tables
- Can feel unusual in Western design
- Use intentionally
Alignment Best Practices
- Pick one primary alignment and stick to it
- Align related elements to the same edge or center
- Use invisible grid lines for consistency
- Avoid random placement—everything should align to something
- Create visual connections through alignment
Color Usage
Color Functions in Infographics
- Establish hierarchy: Bright colors for important items
- Group related items: Same color = same category
- Create contrast: Distinguish between elements
- Evoke emotions: Colors carry psychological meaning
- Reinforce brand: Consistent with brand identity
Color Distribution
60-30-10 Rule:
- 60% Dominant color (background, large areas)
- 30% Secondary color (supporting elements)
- 10% Accent color (highlights, CTAs)
Color Psychology
| Color | Association | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Blue | Trust, professionalism, calm | Corporate, tech, healthcare |
| Green | Growth, nature, money | Environmental, finance, health |
| Red | Urgency, energy, passion | Alerts, sales, food |
| Orange | Friendly, confident, creative | CTAs, youth brands |
| Yellow | Optimism, caution, attention | Highlights, warnings |
| Purple | Luxury, creativity, wisdom | Premium brands, education |
| Black | Sophistication, power, elegance | Luxury, formal |
| White | Clean, simple, space | Backgrounds, breathing room |
Contrast Requirements
For accessibility (WCAG 2.1 AA):
- Normal text: 4.5:1 contrast ratio minimum
- Large text (18pt+): 3:1 contrast ratio minimum
- Graphics and UI: 3:1 contrast ratio minimum
Tools to check contrast:
- WebAIM Contrast Checker
- Coolors Contrast Checker
- Adobe Color Accessibility Tools
Icon Usage
Icon Styles
Line Icons (Outline)
- Clean, modern look
- Work well at small sizes
- Best for minimal designs
- Consistent line weight important
Filled Icons (Solid)
- Bolder visual impact
- Good for quick recognition
- Work well as focal points
- More accessible at small sizes
Illustrated Icons
- More personality and uniqueness
- Higher visual weight
- Best for playful designs
- May not scale well
Icon Best Practices
- Use one style consistently throughout the infographic
- Ensure recognizability—icons should be immediately understood
- Maintain consistent size for icons at the same hierarchy level
- Add labels when icon meaning isn't 100% clear
- Match visual weight of icons to surrounding elements
- Consider color carefully—single color often cleaner
- Avoid icon overload—not everything needs an icon
Icon Size Guidelines
| Context | Recommended Size |
|---|---|
| Hero/Feature icon | 64-128px |
| Section icon | 32-48px |
| List item icon | 24-32px |
| Inline icon | 16-24px |
Data Visualization Best Practices
Choosing Chart Types
| Data Type | Best Chart |
|---|---|
| Comparison (few items) | Bar chart |
| Comparison (many items) | Horizontal bar |
| Parts of a whole | Pie/donut chart |
| Trend over time | Line chart |
| Distribution | Histogram |
| Relationship | Scatter plot |
| Geographic | Map/choropleth |
| Hierarchy | Treemap |
| Flow/process | Sankey diagram |
Chart Best Practices
- Label everything: Axes, data points, legends
- Start Y-axis at zero for bar charts (avoid misleading)
- Limit pie slices to 5-7 maximum
- Use consistent colors for same categories across charts
- Remove chart junk: No 3D effects, minimal gridlines
- Highlight key data: Use color to emphasize important points
Number Presentation
- Large numbers: Use abbreviations (1.2M, not 1,200,000)
- Percentages: Include % symbol, one decimal max
- Comparisons: Use consistent units and precision
- Context: Always provide reference points ("2x industry average")
Accessibility Considerations
Visual Accessibility
-
Color alone shouldn't convey meaning
- Add patterns, labels, or shapes
- Works for colorblind users
-
Sufficient contrast
- 4.5:1 for normal text
- 3:1 for large text and graphics
-
Text size
- Minimum 10pt for print
- Minimum 12px for digital
-
Don't rely on color legends
- Label data directly when possible
Colorblind-Safe Design
- Use colorblind-safe palettes (see color_palettes.md)
- Test with colorblindness simulators
- Add patterns or textures for differentiation
- Use labels and direct annotation
Reading Accessibility
- Clear hierarchy and flow
- Concise text
- Simple language
- Adequate spacing
- Logical reading order
Quality Checklist
Before finalizing your infographic, verify:
Layout
- Clear visual hierarchy
- Consistent alignment (grid-based)
- Adequate white space
- Logical reading flow
- Balanced composition
Typography
- Maximum 2-3 fonts used
- Readable font sizes
- Sufficient text contrast
- Consistent styling for same elements
- Left-aligned body text
Color
- 60-30-10 distribution
- Colorblind-safe palette
- Sufficient contrast (4.5:1 text)
- Consistent color meanings
- Not overwhelming
Content
- Clear story structure (intro, body, conclusion)
- 60% visuals, 40% text (approximately)
- Key message is prominent
- Data is accurate and sourced
- Call to action included
Icons and Graphics
- Consistent icon style
- Appropriate sizes
- Recognizable meanings
- Not overused
Accessibility
- Works in grayscale
- Patterns/labels supplement color
- Readable at intended size
- Logical flow without visual cues
Use these principles as a foundation, adapting as needed for your specific content and audience.