In order to do this communicating, every scientist that I'm aware of at some point has had to approach Adobe Illustrator (or related vector-image software), which is a rat's nest of options and tools, many of which are incredibly useful, but most of which are complicated and not easy to surface. Most of my colleagues end up finding the 3 or 4 basic tools that fulfill the bare minimum of requirements for putting together a figure and leave it at that.
This instinct is easy to understand - Illustrator is complicated, and scientists have a lot of demands on their time. It feels like a waste of that time to watch youtube tutorials that show you how to draw a strawberry* when you've got experiments to run. I've watched probably 30 hours of tutorial videos like that one, and it's incredibly frustrating since it feels like you have to watch an hour to extract 5 minutes of useful tools, but you have no idea even what those useful tools are until you seem them used.
That said, despite all of that time "wasted," being comfortable in Illustrator probably saved me hundreds of hours over the course of writing my paper and my dissertation, since making figures, displaying data, and even making cartoons for presentations has become faster and easier (not to mention better looking). A peer reviewer for a review article I wrote recently specifically praised the quality of the figures.
Because I don't want other scientists to suffer through irrelevant tutorial videos like I did, about 6 months ago, I made a set of tutorial videos that explains how to use illustrator that's specifically targeted at scientists. The whole series is about an hour, and encompasses the most useful and time saving tools that I've found. I thought I'd throw them up here to make them a bit more discoverable - hope you find them useful. And if you run into any issues or have any questions, please don't hesitate to ask!
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*I should point out that that strawberry tutorial was the first one I watched, and actually gave me a great foundation for getting to understand the software.
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