
Preview image. Unlock full-res
Headline and a short quote on the left, with a From/To comparison built from two stacked columns of primary-color bars on the right.
Summary
A comparison slide: a headline, intro paragraph and a short pull-quote on the left, with a From/To shift shown as two parallel columns of stacked primary-color bars on the right, each row pairing an old belief with its new counterpart.
Visual description
White ground. "An emerging cultural shift" in two lines of oversized black sans-serif top-left, then a paragraph on changing perceptions of play and a short quote attributed to "Thea, mother of Annabell" in bold. The right side is a two-column "From" / "To" table built entirely from short color bars: nine rows, each bar a brand color (wood-grain, yellow, green, red, blue, repeating), with white or black centered labels. The left column lists old framings ("Time for play is scarce," "Play is frivolous," "Play has a goal") and the right column the new ones ("Play is a priority," "Play is the ticket to happiness," "Play is carefree"). A "Source: The Family room" credit sits low.
Key takeaway
Building a From/To comparison out of stacked color bars instead of a plain two-column table; the brand palette codes the rows and the bar lengths give it the feel of a chart. Pairing the data with a single human quote grounds the abstraction.
Reuse notes
A clean device for any "old way vs new way," "before vs after," or mindset-shift slide. The colored-bar treatment keeps a long list from looking like a spreadsheet. Keep the two columns aligned row-for-row so the contrast is instantly scannable.





































