Editorial comparison infographic with a hand-drawn whiteboard look, showing Wine vs Beer in two balanced columns with icons, checklist-style winner cues, and a verdict bar. Clean vector lines, wine red and teal accents, and readable English labels give this air fryer noise comparison chart a modern, approachable brand-friendly feel.
Re-render this exact infographic with every label, heading and caption translated. We re-use all the original attributes (topic, style, palette, …) and only swap the language. Currently in English.
Side-by-side comparison infographic titled "Wine vs. Beer" (in English). Split the canvas vertically into TWO clearly separated columns with balanced symmetry: left column for "Wine" with a simple sketch-style wine glass / bottle hero icon, right column for "Beer" with a simple sketch-style pint glass / foam hero icon. Add 8 horizontal attribute rows spanning both columns in a clean editorial comparison layout, clean grid, vector-clean lines, balanced symmetry. On the far left of each row, place a small row icon and the exact English attribute label in quotes; then place the Wine value in the left column and the Beer value in the right column. For each row, subtly highlight the side that wins using a small green checkmark, slightly bolder text, or a colored dot; some rows may indicate a tie or mixed result where appropriate. Use an honest, balanced pros-and-cons checklist framing. Rows and exact on-image text to render: 1. Label: "Flavor Range" — Wine: "Complex, fruit and tannin notes" — Beer: "Wide range from light to bitter" — winner: Beer slightly. 2. Label: "Food Pairing" — Wine: "Strong match for formal meals" — Beer: "Great with casual and spicy foods" — winner: tie / balanced. 3. Label: "Serving Variety" — Wine: "Usually still or sparkling" — Beer: "Many styles and serving formats" — winner: Beer. 4. Label: "Alcohol Strength" — Wine: "Usually higher ABV" — Beer: "Usually lower ABV" — winner: depends; highlight Wine for strength, Beer for lighter drinking with a neutral balanced cue. 5. Label: "Refreshment" — Wine: "Smooth, sip-focused" — Beer: "Cool, crisp, refreshing" — winner: Beer. 6. Label: "Aging Potential" — Wine: "Some bottles improve with age" — Beer: "Best enjoyed fresh" — winner: Wine. 7. Label: "Price Range" — Wine: "Can get expensive quickly" — Beer: "Often more budget-friendly" — winner: Beer. 8. Label: "Occasion" — Wine: "Elegant dinners and celebrations" — Beer: "Social gatherings and casual events" — winner: tie / balanced. Bottom bar: include a one-line balanced verdict in English: "Wine wins on aging and formal dining, Beer wins on variety, refreshment, and value." Ensure all on-image text is sharp, readable, and high-contrast. Visual style: sketch / whiteboard aesthetic with hand-drawn marker outlines, neat infographic structure, soft paper-white background, light gray guide lines, minimal shading, icon-led rows, tidy handwritten-meets-editorial typography that remains highly legible. Color palette: deep wine red accent for the Wine side and vivid teal accent for the Beer side, with black/charcoal text and subtle green winner indicators. Mood: informative, friendly, balanced, modern, approachable, unbiased. No real brand logos; only generic beverage symbols and simple comparison icons such as taste, plate, tap, percent, snowflake, barrel, price tag, and calendar. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no real brand logos beyond what is essential for the comparison subject, no watermarks Honest, balanced comparison — no biased framing, no real brand logos unless essential to the comparison subject. Where logos appear (e.g. crypto coin symbols), use commonly understood generic representations rather than copyrighted marks.
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