Here are her sketchnotes on the Thursday speeches:
Opening speech by Dale Herigstad: Mediaspace: Where is what? What is where?
Kutlu Çanlıoğlu & Titus Nemeth: BBC’s global experience language in 27 languages
and 9 scripts
Jonathan Ellery: The here and the now & Tony Brook: Bred in the Bone
Sketchnote on Michael Bierut‘s closing speech on Thursday: The only important decision
- Eva-Lotta will speak today at 12.00
- Find all her Sketchnotes in the TYPO London 2011 Flickr group
- See her Berlin notes on flickr
Eva-Lotta Lamm
UX Designer, Illustrator, Visual Thinker (Berlin)
Eva-Lotta Lamm is a User Experience Designer, illustrator and visual thinker. She grew up in Germany, worked in Paris and London for a few years before packing up her backpack and go travelling the world for 14 months. She has over 12 years of experience working on digital products as an in-house designer for Google, Skype, and Yahoo! as well as freelancing and consulting for various agencies and her own clients. After being a (semi-)nomad for 2 years, she is now based in Berlin.
Besides her UX work, she has been taking sketchnotes at hundreds of talks and conferences and has self-published her notes in several books (www.sketchnotesbook.com). During her world trip, she documented her experience as daily sketchnotes in her travel diary (www.secretsfromtheroad.com).
Eva-Lotta also is a sought after expert and teacher in the area of sketching, sketchnoting and visual thinking. She is regularly speaking at international design conferences and has been teaching sketching workshops at conferences and for companies for over 5 years. She is currently writing a book on sketching interfaces, based on one of her workshop formats.
Eva-Lotta is the illustrator of Content Everywhere by Sara Wachter-Boettcher and The User’s Journey by Donna Lichaw, both published by Rosenfeld Media.
In her personal sketching practice, she is exploring the area of Visual Improvisation, where she is looking at the parallels between sketching and improvisation and experiments with how the principles from her regular theatre improvisation practice can be used to inspire visual work.
Photo: Marc Thiele