Editorial-style anatomy reference poster showing how free infographic images can be structured for medical education. Features a hand-drawn body outline, organ callouts, process arrows, inset diagrams, and a clean legend in warm earth tones.
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.
Educational infographic poster titled "Anatomy Infographic Elements" in portrait layout, designed as a clear medical/anatomy reference board with sharp, readable text labels in clean sans-serif typography. Create a conceptual anatomy-themed infographic about how free infographic images in medicine are structured visually, not a branded advertisement. Include 6 numbered components arranged in a vertical flow with connecting arrows and subtle dotted guide lines, each section clearly separated but visually linked in sequence. Text labels must be crisp and legible. 1. heading: "Body Outline"; caption: "A clean human anatomical silhouette provides the main visual anchor."; visual: bold hand-drawn outline of a front-facing generic human body diagram, simplified and non-identifiable, with neutral anatomy proportions and faint guide marks. 2. heading: "Organ Focus"; caption: "Highlight one internal system to create a clear teaching focal point."; visual: cutaway sketch inside the torso showing simplified heart, lungs, stomach, liver, and intestines, with one system emphasized using a darker earth-tone accent and a circular callout ring. 3. heading: "Labeled Callouts"; caption: "Short labels and leader lines identify key anatomical structures."; visual: multiple neat callout lines extending from organs to small label boxes around the figure, with arrows pointing precisely to structures such as heart chambers, bronchi, diaphragm, and digestive tract. 4. heading: "Process Arrows"; caption: "Directional arrows explain movement, flow, or functional relationships."; visual: curved arrows showing conceptual pathways such as airflow into lungs, blood circulation loops around the heart, and food passage through the digestive tract, using distinct line weights and numbered markers. 5. heading: "Inset Diagrams"; caption: "Small magnified panels add expert-level context without clutter."; visual: two side inset boxes connected by dotted lines, one showing a simplified alveoli cluster and one showing a cross-section of an artery wall, both rendered as sketch-style mini diagrams with tiny legend markers. 6. heading: "Legend and Metrics"; caption: "A compact legend clarifies colors, symbols, and diagram conventions."; visual: bottom panel with icon key for organ highlight color, flow arrows, dotted connectors, and magnification symbol, plus a small scale-style anatomy reference grid and clean divider lines. Show sequence numbers 1 through 6 in clear circular badges. Use arrows, dotted connectors, and leader lines to guide the eye from top to bottom. Style: hand-drawn sketch / whiteboard educational poster, warm earth tones palette with terracotta, sepia, sand, muted olive, and warm cream background; expert-reference mood, organized, academic, calm, and precise. Render as magazine-grade editorial illustration, vector-clean lines, no photographic textures. No logos, no copyrighted characters, no identifiable people, no graphic medical content. 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 watermarks Render labels and headings in clean English typography (sans-serif). No real-brand logos, no copyrighted characters, no people that could be identified, no graphic medical content. If the topic touches a regulated domain (medicine, finance, law), keep the explanation conceptual and add no specific dosages, prices or legal advice.
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