British designer Patrick Smith has created a great series of Mental Disorder Posters.
[via CMYBacon]

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British designer Patrick Smith has created a great series of Mental Disorder Posters.
[via CMYBacon]
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19 Comments
Arthur Taylor on 04.03.2011 at 18:04 PM
As a bipolar-sufferer I’d love to see your take on manic-depression. The closest I can come is an emoticon! :)(
Md.Moinul haque on 04.04.2011 at 00:01 AM
I like every post of design milk. Everypost is full of creativity and intelligence touch & that’s why their attempt is highly appraisable,,,,plz never stop this. Our heart will follow you always,,,
ALICE IN DESIGNLAND on 04.04.2011 at 16:34 PM
These are so witty. I love the Anorexia and OCD prints the best. Very cool!
Heretic on 04.04.2011 at 17:53 PM
These look both boring and bad.
Hiruki on 04.18.2011 at 18:44 PM
They’re minimalist. Simple and clean, dude.
keithlevene on 07.06.2011 at 18:53 PM
Yeah… These could be very boring but nit bad. They’ve actually got a sense of humour and are to the point. Its art?! I guess they’re useless in essence but “Bad” ??? JKL
Sonja on 09.16.2014 at 00:22 AM
No shit. Open your mind dude. Not bad for sure. And definately the opposite of boring. Thats where imagination gets to play.
Bridgette on 04.05.2011 at 18:18 PM
I love these, ocd and agoraphobia are the best. So witty and i think i must put one in my apartment, and prolly the agoraphobia because the ocd one will drive me nuts!
Keith levene on 07.06.2011 at 19:00 PM
I like the idea of the OCD one being interactive so when u straighten the square another one moves out of place.. they are funny aren’t they. JKL
Andrea on 04.06.2011 at 14:20 PM
My partner and I love these. I am a psychology major and he is a graphic designer. Something for everyone. Great job!
tom hayes on 04.11.2011 at 15:42 PM
I think the ocd artwork and the depression artwork are great as i suffer from both.i also like the others..
bluescocuyo on 04.16.2011 at 07:02 AM
They are deep in their simplicity, though, they are the best way to explain to children what is like. i Likee
janessa c. on 05.15.2011 at 23:19 PM
wow. OCD : “press arrow keys up and down, repeatedly.” it moves.
Isabel on 07.06.2011 at 18:56 PM
These are so ingenious. Granted, agoraphobia is really difficult to capture in its true meaning(the fear is not necessarily of “open space”), but this series of designs is very compelling!
Kalanisays on 01.02.2012 at 09:34 AM
I had to download the OCD image and photoshop it. It’s all better now.
Rob k on 01.05.2012 at 16:03 PM
I’m bi-polar so I like all 10 of them!
Kat Ban on 12.25.2012 at 00:02 AM
I recently found this site via stumble upon and I found it very interesting… HOWEVER (and this is a big however) because of the first image, of which one only sees the first 3 or 4 rows of white squares, I thought the page had loaded incorrectly and immediately went to stumble upon another website. If that image was switched with the one below, I would have been more bound to scroll through it immediately rather than come upon it again.
Simon on 02.17.2013 at 12:57 PM
Is there anything for emetophobia?
If you are a sufferer, this is a good site
http://phobiatreatment.org
Chris on 11.28.2019 at 17:54 PM
I appreciate these as minimal artwork, and can imagine them on walls in modern appartments and offices due to their aesthetic value. I can also see how they contain humour, which is something hard to inclue when looking at mental health conditions.
I am not sure they really contribute to the understanding of the mental health conditions they depict though. Take the OCD one, for example, already in society, people equate a desire to be neat and ordered as having OCD, or throw the term around without a true understanding of what someone living with OCD may experience on a daily basis or how it really affects their lives. My concern is that people would see these and believe that they have gained an understanding of the mental health conditions, when this is not really true at all.
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