Digital Graphic Recording

Visual Storytelling for Impact

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Have you ever worked on a project for multiple weeks, months, years, even? Then when it’s time to report on your work, or a friend asks you what you’ve been up to, you have no idea where to start explaining? 

For the past year, I’ve had the pleasure of working with a team at Boston University convening a network across the country to change health care systems to better support families and children with complex medical needs. 

As you can imagine, this project is complex, full of nuance…and the core team needs to be able to show how they’ve used the funding. A multi-year pilot working with teams across the US…systems and culture change…collaborative innovation…

Yeah. It’s complicated. And it’s a story that needs to be told.

So, we sat down for 90 minutes and the core team told me their story. They told me about what they heard from families, from care providers, from partners. They shared data in the form of lived experience and from tools they developed.  

The result was messy, but the main messages had become clear. Add in a few rounds of revisions, and we had a one-page illustration that could be used to tell their unique story to funders, families, and so others could learn and improve on what they started.

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What did the team have to say?

I could cry with pride and happiness seeing our family engagement work laid out so beautifully and clearly by Karina. Well done…and many, many thanks!
— Meg Comeau, MHA; Boston University School of Social Work

What’s the story you want to share? How might you map it out visually to illuminate the impact you’re making?  

Once again, thank you from my heart and soul for your support, great senses of humor, brilliant minds, collaboration and what you're each doing to make the world a better place.

Cheers, 

Karina Signature.png



Where in the Virtual World is ConverSketch?

TREETIME: In May, I got to co-create with a brilliant group of ecologists, biologists, and other researchers preparing for a large grant proposal. The goal of the workshop was to build a network across fields of study that will explore environmental changes over different time and phenological scales. We created a massive Miro board that the group fully leveraged!

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On the River: Yes, again! Last year we got lucky and pulled a permit to raft through Dinosaur National Monument, but the trip was postponed due to the ‘rona. So we got to go this year instead! Unplugged, refreshed, and ready for June! Here’s a watercolor I made on the river a few years ago - looking forward to making some more!

What Seeds Are You Planting? A Custom Reflection for You!

The seasons are changing.

It feels miraculous every year when we see small shoots of bright green poking up through the soil. 

It also feels like we can see the light at the end of the covid tunnel here in Colorado with more and more folks getting vaccinated.

As things return to more normal, it may feel like the pace of life will pick up (or maybe it already feels fast to you as we’ve adapted to remote work and the new patterns that has brought). 

As we’re shifting seasonally, this can be a moment to think intentionally about what’s next for you. Here’s a visual template to take a few minutes to reflect, which I’ve found to be incredibly powerful as a business owner, especially when things feel like they’re moving quickly.

RIGHT CLICK ON THE IMAGE TO DOWNLOAD

Right click to download and print!

Right click to download and print!

Right click to download and print!

Right click to download and print!

If this doesn’t serve you – that’s okay too! You do you. Here are the questions:

  • What seeds do you want to plant now that will sprout and grow this year? 

  • What have your roots quietly been up to beneath the soil and frost of the winter? What are things that aren’t visible yet, but are forming who you are and want to be? What keeps you nourished or gives you strength?

  • What does it look like to nurture those roots so that as they wake up, you can bloom this year? What do you need to do for yourself?

Together, we have weathered some big storms this year. And you already know, weather patterns in spring are anything but stable – there’s bound to be another snow or cold snap this season. And as more of us are getting vaccinated and feeling more confident to see those we care about, there’s almost certainly something unexpected in our future we’ll need to shift around. 

And we know we can! 

Once again, thank you from my heart and soul for your support, great senses of humor, brilliant minds, collaboration and what you're each doing to make the world a better place.

Cheers, 

Karina Signature.png



If this reflection resonates for you, let’s connect to talk about designing custom processes and visuals for you or your team.

Where in the Virtual World is ConverSketch?

Pacific Northwest Fire Science Symposium: Helping co-design and co-facilitate a 3-day symposium for Burn Bosses and other Fire Science professionals across the US Forest Service and partner organizations. We used Mural to collectively share and reflect resources and ideas throughout the week. 

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Community Outreach: With a non-profit client looking to redevelop an outdated building to better serve their own community, and the folks in the neighborhood. We used Jamboards to explore options, concerns, and build consensus around what makes sense as the project moves forward!

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Head’s Up: Time Out of the Office in Late April. I’ll be out from April 19-30 spending time in nature on rivers and will not be checking my email or phone regularly during that time. Thanks in advance for your patience on communication!

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Have You Seen this Button? How to Create a Custom Background in Jamboard

Have you hosted a virtual meeting and felt like you knew people had really good ideas, they just weren’t speaking up? 

Regardless of whether the meeting is virtual or in person, not everyone feels comfortable speaking in front of a group. Add unmuting, raising hand, distractions, etc. in virtual spaces…and it’s easy to just not say anything.

One of the simplest ways I’ve seen engagement and energy skyrocket in a virtual meeting is to create space for people to add their ideas to the conversation in a virtual whiteboard. ­

Google Jamboard is free and doesn’t require folks to log in to access it, however I was really frustrated with Jamboard because I couldn’t “lock” anything down.

Until I noticed a button and discovered a simple solution.

Now I can create custom visual templates for breakout groups and embed them as the background so participants don’t accidentally move it around and confuse the group:

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Here’s how you can embed your own image to create a branded, beautiful, or curated experience in Jamboard:

Step 1: Find the Set Background button.

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Step 2: Select your own image. 

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It’s. That. Easy! 

Okay, but maybe you’re thinking “Yeah, great Karina, you can draw up a template and embed it. What about someone who doesn’t want to/have that skill?”

I’m so glad you asked! You can embed any image as your background – your logo in the corner or an inspiring scene. It’s easy to do a Google image search right in the Set background tool. Then, once your background image is set, you can create shapes as boxes for text, and add a fill color to make them pop over the image, like this: 

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Once you’ve created the shape from the toolbar on the left, click on it so it’s highlighted. Then, this toolbar will appear at the top, and you can choose a fill color, like so:

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And, of course, if you DO want a custom visual experience for your next virtual meeting, you know where to find me

Once again, thank you from my heart and soul for your support, great senses of humor, brilliant minds, collaboration and what you're each doing to make the world a better place.

Cheers, 

Karina Signature.png




Where in the Virtual World is ConverSketch?

iMasons Global Member Summit: This year the iMasons focused on gender parity in the datacenter field, exploring equity vs. equality, how to foster inclusive spaces, and how having a more diverse workforce is better for your business.

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Client Spotlight: Check out how the National Parks Conservation Association leveraged the graphics created during a Zero Landfill Initiative retreat a few weeks ago! Major round of applause to Karen at NPCA for her creative communication for “the best meeting notes I’ve ever seen!” according to one participant. See the entire report here

Zoom, obvi: March 20th is International Day of Happiness, and Zoom asked me to illustrate what their employees (they call themselves Zoomies, which I love), said makes them happy. Here’s the image I created, and you can see the time-lapse on Zoom’s Insta and Twitter feeds!

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Pacific Northwest Fire Science Symposium: I’m currently in the midst of co-facilitating a three-day workshop with training sessions and building a deeper network in this community working on resilient landscapes across the region.

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How to Help Participants Cocreate, Connect, and Inspire at Your Multi-Day Event

The full synthesis map from five days of the virtual GCSE+Drawdown conference.

The full synthesis map from five days of the virtual GCSE+Drawdown conference.

Once again for the people in the back, you CAN have an interactive and participatory virtual conference with over 3,000 participants from all over the world! 

In early January (let’s talk about how these folks know how to start a new year!), the Global Council for Science and the Environment (GCSE), and Project Drawdown brought together researchers, leaders, and community members to learn, share, and create solutions for people and planet.  

As a visual thought partner for the virtual event, I wanted create ways that graphics could support meaningful work with the huge number of participants and volume of content. There were eight Thematic Pathways with concurrent sessions, and more than 50 simultaneous Collaborative Action Groups which emerged from brainstorming sessions over the course of the week. 

How could we work together to look for patterns and themes across multiple, very full days? 

How could we make sure participants could see their ideas emerging throughout the week? 

And how do this as just one recorder? 

We needed a plan!

The organizing team and I collaborated before and during the conference to develop communication systems, like a designated note-taker in each Pathway with access to a shared Google Doc template for key ideas. I could then distill and illustrate these notes, and combine them with insights from real-time graphics of plenary panels and keynotes (these drawings were included in the final piece as well). 

Communication of key ideas? Check. 

We decided to use Miro as a virtual platform to host the emerging map. Similar to shared Google Docs or Slides, with a shared link we dropped into the chat each day, participants could view the Synthesis from start to finish throughout the week. They could zoom in to see details in graphics I had drawn real-time in plenaries, or zoom out for the overall flow, and could share it with others they thought would be interested.

Participant observation? Check!

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The result was a massive Synthesis Illustration mapping how research feeds action for climate solutions, which participants could SEE AS IT GREW throughout the week on the conference website’s gallery, as well as via the link shared frequently in the chat box throughout the conference. 

So, what emerged as key themes for science and solutions for people and planet? Explore for yourself! For me, a theme I’ve hear not only at GCSE+Drawdown, is that for these solutions to work, it comes down to one thing: people working together. 

Once again, thank you from my heart and soul for your support, great senses of humor, brilliant minds, collaboration and what you're each doing to make the world a better place.

Cheers, 

Karina Signature.png




Where in the Virtual World is ConverSketch?

Adobe Creative Campus Collaboration: Learning from creative educators and students how to nurture the “magician” in each potentially creative student. 

Adobe Creative Campus Collaboration: Learning from creative educators and students how to nurture the “magician” in each potentially creative student. 

Filming a New Drawing Connections Video: Did you know that mosquitos are not native to Hawai’i? In the newest video with the NPS, I can’t wait to take you through a journey of endangered birds, avian malaria, and climate change. 

Filming a New Drawing Connections Video: Did you know that mosquitos are not native to Hawai’i? In the newest video with the NPS, I can’t wait to take you through a journey of endangered birds, avian malaria, and climate change. 

Natural Areas Strategic Vision: I’m delighted to finally be able to share this studio illustration created last year in partnership with the City of Greeley’s Natural Areas program, showing the history of the land, input from the community, and visi…

Natural Areas Strategic Vision: I’m delighted to finally be able to share this studio illustration created last year in partnership with the City of Greeley’s Natural Areas program, showing the history of the land, input from the community, and vision for the future.

Number Nine, Feeling Fine -- Happy Birthday ConverSketch!

Happy Wednesday! Why so happy?

Yesterday was ConverSketch’s Golden Birthday, so let’s celebrate together with nine insights from NINE YEARS in business with you!

One of the best parts of being a graphic recorder is that I get to listen to fascinating conversations spanning industries and sectors. From climate science experts, to local governments working to solve community issues, to public health leaders ending the HIV epidemic, to supporting just and fair elections, to neuroregeneration science, to visual thinking in middle school classrooms. I get to listen, distill, design, and offer visuals to support these teams working on important issues around the globe. 

What can we learn from each other and apply as we move together through and beyond the pandemic? What are the things I hear over and over, regardless of the topic? 

Today, I’d like to share observations that span these sectors and might offer an insightful new perspective for you, along with process or reflection ideas for you personally, or your team. 

  1. No matter what you do, figure out how to communicate effectively. In nearly every event I graphic record or facilitate, I hear how important it is to bridge between silos or share our story with our audience. But how? 

    Internally across silos: Create a one-page illustration of your mission, vision, values, and goals for the next 1-5 years. Have each leader walk their team through it and do an exercise to help every person see how they’re contributing to the big picture. 

    Externally to your audience: Tell a story that resonates with them! Figure out how what you’re doing solves a problem, fear, pain point, or question they have, and put your audience at the center of the story you’re telling.

  2. Technology is incredible and provides so many opportunities for access and information sharing. But what is the technology supporting or driving? Human connection! It’s tempting to focus on the technology, rather than the process. Instead, define your purpose clearly, keep it front and center, and select tech, tools, and processes that support that purpose.

    Question: Is our purpose to build networks or share learning? How will we do this? What does our purpose NOT include?

  3. Say yes…and say no. Say yes to opportunities that spark energy in you, even if they take you by surprise or don’t initially seem relevant. Say no to things that fragment your attention or offer the trade-offs if you do that something else on. 

    Framing: “My team can work on this, but we’ll have to let go of this other project. Which do you want to prioritize?”

  4. Listening to a podcast recently, this struck me: “The more wrong you’re willing to be, the better your life will be.” This little sentence combined curiosity, vulnerability, and an open heart – tools we can all deploy every day to let go of defensiveness and create a culture of collaboration. I’m going to call this unconditional curiosity. 

    Question: When do you notice yourself feeling defensive? Why? How might you lean into being wrong?

  5. Stand on the shoulders of giants rather than recreating something that already exists. This ties back to communication. When researching a new project, look to different fields to see what has been successful, then adopt new strategies in your own work. 

    Question: Find an example of a company or organization that has successfully navigated a problem you’re working on. What do they do? How can you learn from them? 

  6. Trust yourself and cultivate intuition. There is more and more research showing the connection of the mind and gut through the microbiome. So when you feel something, pay attention, listen, and learn from your body.

    Question: How am I cultivating trusting intuition in myself or my team?

  7. Social and environmental justice are important to a growing population. Make your Why clear and provide opportunities for your people to engage with causes you care about. 

    Question: How do our organizational values support social or environmental work? How do we tell that story clearly to our audiences?

  8. After a powerful retreat, then what? How do you make sure all the focused work keeps momentum? Returning after an awesome meeting (virtual or not), staying focused can be the biggest hurdle. 

    Action: Figure out how to set yourself up for success, whether it’s setting a 15-minute timer, or setting out supplies for creative practice or a workout first thing, or writing down your top 3 priorities the night before so you can jump right in. 

  9. This world is filled with remarkable humans doing incredible things for others and the planet. You matter and have important gifts to share. This year has been…something. And to everyone who has struggled with loneliness, loss, carrying the weight of too many things…You are a miraculous spark of light in the world and I’m so glad you’re here. 

    Action: Give yourself a hug or quick dance break to a favorite jam – you are amazing!

Thank you from my heart and soul for making NINE YEARS possible! With deep appreciation for your support, great senses of humor, brilliant minds, collaboration and what you're each doing to make the world a better place --

Cheers, 

Karina Signature.png




Where in the Virtual World is ConverSketch?

Northwestern Health Sciences University: For the annual Homecoming conference sharing state of the science and best practice in chiropractic.

Northwestern Health Sciences University: For the annual Homecoming conference sharing state of the science and best practice in chiropractic.

Driving K-12 Innovation Summit: Working with the Consortium for School Networking where educators across the globe shared stories, trends, and ideas for the future of learning. They really know how to host online meetings – instead of panels, p…

Driving K-12 Innovation Summit: Working with the Consortium for School Networking where educators across the globe shared stories, trends, and ideas for the future of learning. They really know how to host online meetings – instead of panels, participants were treated to an interactive gameshow style virtual event!

HIV Leadership Academy: Visualizing stories of participant in this year’s Leadership Academy for community leaders working to end the HIV epidemic.

HIV Leadership Academy: Visualizing stories of participant in this year’s Leadership Academy for community leaders working to end the HIV epidemic.

Michigan Climate Action Network: Creating a thank you graphic for Governor Whitmer for her forward-thinking agenda and legislation to protect Michigan’s clean water and climate for the future! 

Michigan Climate Action Network: Creating a thank you graphic for Governor Whitmer for her forward-thinking agenda and legislation to protect Michigan’s clean water and climate for the future! 

Research to Action: What Any Sector Can Learn from GCSE+Drawdown

Why, yes, you CAN have an interactive and participatory virtual conference with over 3,000 participants from all over the world!

Earlier this month, the Global Council for Science and the Environment (GCSE), and Project Drawdown brought together researchers, leaders, and community members to learn, share, and create solutions for people and planet.  

Some of the most powerful insights can be translated to any sector, so no matter who you are, here are a few snapshots from graphics showing what resonated most with the participants over the course of the week: 

Effective communication is more important than ever. To do so, we need to meet people where they are. 

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Listening to and elevating diverse voices we haven’t in the past. At GCSE+Drawdown, there were several Indigenous presenters who openly shared their research and perspectives.

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Networks and partnerships are needed do the incredible things we are called to do. Working together we can fill in one another’s gaps, offer new perspectives, and share resources.

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Complex challenges require creative solutions, which means looking for systems and across disciplines.

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GCSE always does an excellent job leveraging the graphics I create with them. Last year they created a stunning Global Sights and Sounds page to share the graphics and highlights from the conference. This year we collaborated to create visuals for social media posts before, during, and after the conference. I also made a massive Conference Synthesis map created over the course of the five-day conference. Scroll to the right and zoom out to see the entire thing! 

Once again, thank you from my heart and soul for your support, great senses of humor, brilliant minds, collaboration and what you're each doing to make the world a better place.

Cheers, 

Karina Signature.png

Where in the Virtual World is ConverSketch?

Middle School: Facilitating a series of professional development sessions on using Adobe Fresco with their students as a creative thinking tool. 

Middle School: Facilitating a series of professional development sessions on using Adobe Fresco with their students as a creative thinking tool. 

US Fish and Wildlife Service:  Graphically facilitating a session with regional leaders to analyze how to create an internship system that is inclusive and supports hiring a more diverse and representative workforce. The outcomes will be r…

US Fish and Wildlife Service:  Graphically facilitating a session with regional leaders to analyze how to create an internship system that is inclusive and supports hiring a more diverse and representative workforce. The outcomes will be refined into a strategic illustration which can be used in tandem with the Hiring Barriers and Biases illustration I created last year. 

Strategic Planning:  With a non-profit focused on supporting our democratic process through data-driven approaches. I can’t share the whole graphic, but here’s a snapshot of the title of a session that really elevated the energy levels dur…

Strategic Planning:  With a non-profit focused on supporting our democratic process through data-driven approaches. I can’t share the whole graphic, but here’s a snapshot of the title of a session that really elevated the energy levels during a remote retreat. Remember to celebrate accomplishments and share kudos for your team! 

Brighten your Day with an Appreciation Map

This time of year in the US many of us think about what we appreciate as the holiday season begins. Even with covid, especially with covid, I have found that cultivating a practice of appreciation boosts my mood and energy.

Appreciation helps me put things into perspective, remember my privilege, and slow down to recognize all the beautiful things happening around us every day. 

To really cement this practice, shockingly, I like to map out visually what I appreciate

Even if you’re not “artistic” – there are simple ways to use size, color, and layout to make your notes more visual.

Last week I gave a brief overview of these tips in my Digital Visual Notes workshop as a “watch party” from the session hosted at ShapingEDU’s LearningHuman last summer. 

Here’s the link to the free one-hour session packed with ideas and tips to make your digital and analog notes more visual!

Why take the extra visual step? To boost memory, helping manage overwhelm, create deeper understanding, and for seeing patterns.

So, I encourage you to take 5 minutes and doodle out what you appreciate. Just write or doodle what comes to mind when you ask yourself: 

What do I appreciate today? 

Not keen on grappling with a blank sheet of paper? You can use this template. And if you want to learn to draw a turkey, click right there – both links take you to more resources on appreciation and gratitude.

I APPRECIATE YOU! 

Once again, thank you from my heart and soul for your support, great senses of humor, brilliant minds, collaboration and what you're each doing to make the world a better place.

Cheers, 

Karina Signature.png

Where in the Virtual World is ConverSketch?

Currently in the midst of UNICON 2020: A global Executive MBA conference hosted by Arizona State University’s Thunderbird School of Global Management. Here’s a snapshot of a Miro board I designed for an interactive session for over 400 particip…

Currently in the midst of UNICON 2020: A global Executive MBA conference hosted by Arizona State University’s Thunderbird School of Global Management. Here’s a snapshot of a Miro board I designed for an interactive session for over 400 participants!

Queer Student Panel: This intimate and authentic panel of students in the LGBTQ+ community at Regis University was by students, for students. They curated a space where new connections were made and stories were shared honestly and humbly.&nbsp…

Queer Student Panel: This intimate and authentic panel of students in the LGBTQ+ community at Regis University was by students, for students. They curated a space where new connections were made and stories were shared honestly and humbly.  

The Newest Drawing Connections illustrated video is out for the National Park Service! Take a journey through the history of Castillo de San Marcos in Florida and find out how it is affected by climate change.

Three Ways to Create an Engaging Visual Summary of Your Virtual Event

One of the most valuable aspects of having a graphic recorder in the room during an event is the opportunity to host a Gallery Walk. 

Karina in the midst of a Gallery Walk for Broto, 2019 (aka The Before Times). Photo: Michael & Suz Karchmer

Karina in the midst of a Gallery Walk for Broto, 2019 (aka The Before Times). Photo: Michael & Suz Karchmer

What is a Gallery Walk? When a group takes time to intentionally reflect on graphic recordings, flip charts, posters, or other visuals around the room in a meeting. They can be guided by a facilitator walking the group through a high-level summary, or can be less structured with a time for people to wander around and observe. 

Gallery Walks serve as an opportunity to:

  • Look for connections across sessions, presentations, small group conversations

  • Review ideas to be able to build consensus, move toward convergence, or look for gaps

  • Create space for reflection and integration of content 

  • See the amount of thinking and work the group has accomplished – it feels good!

We all know working in virtual spaces is challenging for a lot of reasons – and translating engaging process design to a virtual space using tools like a Gallery Walk is no exception. 

Today, I’d like to share three ways I’ve seen Gallery Walks leveraged to support virtual groups

Create an Adobe Spark Page

-        Spark makes it fast, easy, and fun to build your own custom web page in minutes! Drag and drop, and before you know it you’ve got key images, written highlights, and links to other resources all in one place to share right into that chat box!

Make a Google JamBoard Gallery 

-        Participants can collaborate in real-time adding sticky notes or text with ideas or reactions 

-        Other tools that are similar to JamBoard include Mural and Miro, which both require paid subscriptions while JamBoard is free, however not everyone can access Google platforms

Share a Google Doc

-        As with JamBoard, participants can collaborate on the same page at the same time

-        Also, free, again – not all organizations allow access to Google platforms

Once again, thank you from my heart and soul for your support, great senses of humor, brilliant minds, collaboration and what you're each doing to make the world a better place.

Cheers, 

Karina Signature.png

Where in the Virtual World is ConverSketch?

Adobe EduMAX 2020: If you didn’t click on the Adobe Spark link above, check it out here to see the images and time-lapse videos of real-time graphics I captured digitally last week for Adobe. AdobeMAX is happening this week and it’s free – check it …

Adobe EduMAX 2020: If you didn’t click on the Adobe Spark link above, check it out here to see the images and time-lapse videos of real-time graphics I captured digitally last week for Adobe. AdobeMAX is happening this week and it’s free – check it out and get creative!

In the Studio: This month is full of studio illustration and video sketches, revisions, and refinements. A few of the topics getting the visual treatment: hiring barriers and biases for a national agency, strategic mapping for a wealth management co…

In the Studio: This month is full of studio illustration and video sketches, revisions, and refinements. A few of the topics getting the visual treatment: hiring barriers and biases for a national agency, strategic mapping for a wealth management company explaining their vision to a client, creating illustrations for a white paper on wildfire planning and mitigation at multiple scales, facilitating a workshop on regenerative foodscapes in the Americas, and more!

Ready to take a (Gallery) Walk on the Wild Side?

Chaos Clarified: Visualizing Systems Cycles

As I was floating in a river canyon last week, thinking those sorts of nebulous thoughts, a memory clicked into place while gazing at the ancient stone and water around us. 

Way back in 2018 (that was at least 15 years ago, right?), I partnered with the Environmental Defense Fund and Colorado State University to graphic record a series of systems thinking workshops looking at pollinator habitat in midwestern agricultural lands. Over several months, this thoughtful team took a deep dive into systems thinking and I visually mapped out the process and ideas as we went. 

With so many moving parts, mental models, things we can/cannot control, emotions, perspectives, and information to sort through, it felt overwhelming to make decisions or know what we could do to make a positive change.

As we leaned into the systems thinking tools, we began to practice and see how they were one way to help us clarify complexity, map out relationships, and illuminate patterns or points of leverage that had previously gone unrecognized.

So, this last week as I was wondering why it felt like so many complex and difficult things are colliding right now in my country, and why the heck can’t we think long-term and collaboratively to solve problems, a sketch from 2018 popped into my mind: 

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This drawing shows the time cycles of different elements of the pollinator/ag system we were mapping, and how each element’s cycle is quite different than the others. 

For example – our political cycle is four years, while many ecological cycles are much longer (100+ years). And the agricultural cycle is much shorter – just one year. So, if each of these cycles is driven by a different time constraint, the patterns of misalignment start to become clear. And the motivation to create policy or strategies that wouldn’t come to fruition until 10, 20, 100 years later…those are less persuasive in an election year. 

Systems mapping also created a framework to being understanding where changes could be made, and where ripple effects might begin. 

I love this question from Hugh McLeod: Where can the smallest change make the biggest difference?

So, in times where challenges seem enormous, pick up a pencil and make a few marks – you might be surprised at what becomes clear and where YOU can make a difference.

I am delighted to get to share some Very Exciting News!

When I first found out about graphic recording back in 2010, I took a training in the Bay Area which shaped how I approach the work and gave me a strong foundation to build my practice on. Since then, I’ve had the delight to become friends with one of the instructors, Emily Shepard of The Graphic Distillery. Em is kind, funny, compassionate, extremely talented, and an exceptional teacher. 

Why am I telling you all this? Because she just launched her new online course, Draw It Out! If you’ve ever wondered if YOU could take better visual notes or become a graphic recorder, this is your moment. She created this course to help equip people with tools to better understand each other and communicate more easily. Check out her course overview and outcomes here!*

And if you want a MASSIVE discount of $100 off, be sure to register before Friday, October 9th at 8 pm Pacific using the code birdflightdio. 

This is an affiliate link, so if you register I get a kickback because that’s how Emily rolls. For the record, I’d promote the sh*t out of this class regardless because she’s amazing.

Once again, thank you from my heart and soul for your support, great senses of humor, brilliant minds, collaboration and what you're each doing to make the world a better place.

Cheers, 

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Where in the Virtual World is ConverSketch?

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Children with Medical Complexity: In the last of a series of virtual reflections with universities and health campuses across the country, the graphics summarize lessons learned, accomplishments, and where these teams can focus in the future to support families and children in their health.

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On Trails and the River: We snuck out for a small rafting trip in Western Colorado/Eastern Utah last week. Here’s a plein air watercolor I sketched at camp one evening. Spending time in nature fuels my creativity and soul, and I am feeling particularly privileged to have access to public lands, equipment, and time away. 

Water Research Vision 2050: Phase one of this project is also coming to a close this fall, and we are gearing up for the final Writing Workshop later this month to refine a framework for the Agricultural Research Service’s vision for water research in the coming decades.

 

IFVP 2020 – What A Virtual Conference Meant for the Field of Visual Practitioners

In a time of physical distance, connecting with friends and those in our professional field is more important than ever. That’s why I am SO deeply appreciative to the IFVP conference planning team, for putting in the immense lift to host not one, but THREE days of virtual workshops and learning over the course of the summer. 

This year felt pivotal for our community – not only was it the 25th Anniversary of the IFVP, it was also the first fully virtual conference. Because of the remote platform and significantly reduced cost, people from all over the world were able to attend.  

The workshops and conversations that emerged reflected that diversity. We heard more open and honest discussions about structures and systems of power and equity, and stories about resilience. Sitting with not knowing, feeling our whole selves (physically, mentally, emotionally), and how we bring ourselves and biases to the work. 

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Together, we created a virtual web to catch one another as we explored in vulnerable ways, thought critically, and danced forward into uncertainty. Literally. We had the best dance parties.

If you’re curious about what happens at a graphic recorder conference, you can register retroactively and get access to all the session recordings. 

That includes my session called Talk Nerdy to Me: Tips for Success Capturing Scientific and Technical Content. (I like talking nerdy. If you do too, here’s a post I wrote about the science behind graphic recording and visual communication.)

Once again, thank you from my heart and soul for your support, great senses of humor, brilliant minds, collaboration and what you're each doing to make the world a better place.

Cheers, 

Karina Signature.png

Where in the Virtual World is ConverSketch?

Working on several longer-term projects focused on reflecting, learning, and iterating pilot programs. The two teams I’ve worked with are very different…Health care teams to better support children with medical complexity, and the USDA Agricultural Research Service (ARS).

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