Roll Call Clout Index

Code / May. 5, 2013

clout

The Clout Index shows each state’s relative influence in Congress. The NYT’s electoral college graphic inspired the use of Demers cartograms, which worked out great because it’s easy to see in the transitions which states’ representatives have influence disproportionate to the number of people they represent.

The state boxes are simple divs so theIE people can at least see the cartogram, but alas, 50 animating divs results in choppy animation unless you’re using Chrome on computer with a good GPU.

See interactive on CQ Roll Call or my archived version with no external dependencies

Roll Call redesign

Design / Apr. 1, 2010


To say that I was flattered when the folks at CQ-Roll Call asked me to help redesign the daily print Roll Call product would be a gross understatement. And even though I was already working on the WBJ redesign, that’s just not the sort of request you can say no to.

Roll Call had been without a redesign for even longer than the Business Journal, and was thus a mix of dated typography, quirky stock art icons and styles left behind from myriad designers that had worked there over the years. Roll Call is also pretty conservative (visually speaking) and they focus much more on long-form writing than design. So the design goal was pretty simple: A clean, simple and unified look that would bring some visual sophistication to their sophisticated stories. For my part, I pushed them to do more shorter-form stories, run larger photos and make more use of color.



Because of the way they are staffed, Roll Call doesn’t use many graphics. The poll map was very easy to update and provided a visual anchor for the At the Races standing feature.


Roll Call was resistant to color on the nameplate and section flags. The nameplate ended up black, but the inside sections are now color.

Typefaces used are Lyon Display, Lyon Text and Graphik — all available from my pal Christian Schwartz over at Commercial Type.