Trial demonstratives are not illustrations added to a finished argument. They are instruments of the argument itself. Every board, animation, timeline, and diagram either advances your theory of the case or it is wasted effort.
We build demonstrative packages organized around your verdict architecture. That means starting from the verdict form and working backward: what must the jury conclude at each element? What confusion stands in the way? What inference do you need them to draw? The visual plan follows from those answers, not from a list of available formats.
Opening statement presentations that establish the mental model jurors will use to interpret all subsequent evidence. These are not summaries of what you plan to say — they are frameworks that prime the jury to notice the right things and ask the right questions as testimony unfolds.
Witness examination graphics coordinated to direct and cross. Each visual is timed to a specific moment in testimony, designed to make the expert’s explanation land on the first pass rather than requiring jurors to hold complex information in working memory.
Closing argument presentations that reconnect evidence to verdict form elements. By this point, jurors have heard days or weeks of testimony. The closing deck does not repeat — it reorganizes. It shows jurors the path from what they heard to what they must decide.
Supporting materials: timelines, causation diagrams, standard-of-care comparisons, document callouts, and annotated records that serve specific evidentiary purposes throughout trial.
Every demonstrative package is delivered trial-ready. That means files formatted for TrialDirector, OnCue, and other courtroom presentation systems, with backup versions in PDF, video, and image formats. We test for legibility at courtroom projection distances and provide alternative versions in case of objections or technology failures.
Demonstrative packages can include any combination of custom PowerPoint or Keynote presentations with original illustrations, standalone 2D and 3D graphics, animated sequences, and data visualizations. The format serves the cognitive task, not the other way around.
One producer owns your project from intake through trial. We work directly with your attorneys, paralegals, and experts — in the language of litigation, not design. Status updates cover completed work, work in progress, and blockers. Revisions are structured through defined review rounds with clear scope, so there are no surprises on either side.
Surgical procedures, injury mechanisms, and anatomical progressions made visible.
Accident reconstruction, engineering failures, and mechanical analysis from evidence.
Evidence-based three-dimensional models of scenes, objects, and structures.
Numerical evidence transformed into clear, persuasive trial graphics.
Complex technology explained clearly for judges and juries.