Climate scientists don’t usually become tastemakers.

But Ed Hawkins at the National Centre for Atmospheric Science at the University of Reading in the United Kingdom has a knack for creating haunting viral visuals of humanity’s impact on the planet. And a pattern he created last year is now showing up on everything from flip-flops to blown glass to Teslas.

Hawkins noticed that the past five years have been the hottest on record, as average global temperatures keep peaking in a more than century-long pattern of gradual, and then rapid, warming.

And he wanted to convey to the public in a fresh way just how dramatic this recent warming is — warming that is undoubtedly tied to greenhouse gas emissions from human activity.

Why? For one thing, the standard way of visualizing this data — in charts like this — is kind of ugly:

In 2016, Hawkins decided to present this temperature trend as an animated spiral rather than a line graph. The visual soon started bouncing around the web. It was even featured in the opening ceremony of the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro:

But Hawkins wanted to make something with more aesthetic appeal and an even lower barrier of entry for a casual viewer. “We very deliberately set out to make a simple representation of global temperatures” for people unfamiliar with climate science, he told me.

The result was climate warming stripes:

The stirring cerulean-to-crimson bars tell a story about how the planet has changed over the past century and the what’s in store for this one. It’s a vivid visual of the warming humanity is causing. The color of each stripe represents the relative annual average global temperature from 1850 to 2017. The fact that there are more blues on one side of the pattern and more reds on the other clearly indicates that the planet is warming.

Despite the existential dread they may inspire, the climate stripes have become a motif in clothing and crafts since they were created in 2018.

Take a look. Here we have a tie and cufflinks, part of a coordinated campaign last summer by meteorologists to raise awareness about climate change:

Hawkins has also set up a Zazzle store where you can buy prints of the warming stripes on earrings, water bottles, and leggings (the proceeds go to charity):

Then there’s glasswork:

We are on fire in the kiln room today!



Fantastic fused glass showing change in global temperatures

from 1875 (left side, blue)

to 2018 (right side).



One stripe of glass per year.



Shows how our climate is changing.



By Laura Reed and I. Based on @ed_hawkins climate stripes. pic.twitter.com/glqBidCnaB — Keer-Keer (@sarahkeerkeer) February 27, 2019

A banner:

.@ed_hawkins Got my banner! Hung it up to use a video backdrop. Cool stuff. pic.twitter.com/ULFPW0AkCu — Mark Trexler (@ClimateRoulette) May 26, 2019

Light sculptures:

And even a car:

Mark Hanson, the owner of this stripey Tesla, notes that the climate stripes have become a conversation starter at electric vehicle get-togethers. “At one of the events, I heard a woman using the ‘warming stripes’ design to show her daughter how the Earth’s temperature has been changing,” he wrote in a blog post. “Besides events such as the above, I have had conversations in parking lots, while eating lunch, and almost anywhere. Some of them about the Tesla Model 3, some about the car wrap and many about both!”

Hawkins says the stripes have caught on in part because they are simple, but also because they can be used in so many different ways.

He has also made different versions of the stripes tailored to represent warming trends in particular cities and countries, giving different parts of the world their own unique local climate barcodes. And in March, he tweeted out a new design by Twitter user Alexander Radtke, who said he decided to stretch the stripes out to 2200 because the originals “cut off before the most frightening part begins”:

A new design concept for the #warmingstripes by @alxrdk showing how the stripes could evolve out to 2200, depending on emission choices pic.twitter.com/notGTQ8lS8 — Ed Hawkins (@ed_hawkins) March 20, 2019

After getting some feedback I updated the #warmingstripes posted before with a better colorscale. Will upload more this week, but here are the renewed ones. pic.twitter.com/wP5QDkLava — Alexander Radtke (@alxrdk) March 21, 2019

The climate warming stripes tell an even more alarming story when animated

Kevin Pluck, a UK-based software engineer who has made a hobby of designing mesmerizing climate visuals, recently took the stripes one step further and animated them:

What’s interesting about this visual is you can see how what was once a relatively warm year starts to become cooler as temperatures continue to rise. Look at 1940, which was one of the warmest years in the 20th century at the time. It registers as a deep red:

By 2010, the stripe for 1940 has literally paled in comparison to the hotter temperatures of the 21st century:

“You can see in the first few decades there was a random scattering of cool years and warm years as one would expect in a stable climate,” Pluck wrote in an email. “This all changed again during the 1980’s and 90’s when the warming really started to pick up reducing most of the first century to shades of blue.”

That means today’s hottest may soon become tomorrow’s coolest. While this animation is more visually appealing than some of the frenetic carbon dioxide trackers out there showing humanity’s relentless output of greenhouse gases, it’s no less alarming. Animations also capture the fact that climate change is a dynamic phenomenon. Here is how my colleague David Roberts put it on Twitter:

Humans alive today are experiencing: a) the warmest global average temperatures that any human being has ever experienced, in the history of the species, and b) the coolest global average temperatures any human will ever experience again. — David Roberts (@drvox) February 27, 2019

Hawkins acknowledged that the stripes do leave out some of the nuance in the temperature record, but they’re not intended as a scientific graph so much as a way to communicate with the public. And he isn’t too concerned that a pretty visual might undersell the seriousness and urgency of a major global problem like climate change. Rather, it’s a way to loop in people who otherwise might not have joined the discussion.

“We have to find a very wide range of ways of communicating about this,” Hawkins said. “This graphic is not the one answer.”

But for the sake of the planet, let’s hope that this pattern goes out of style.