Paste your data. Pick a style. Get a photorealistic 3D chart in under 60 seconds — with the bar heights and slice proportions rendered from your real numbers, not invented by an image model.
Pilot plan from $9. No credit card to try a chart.
A 3D chart maker renders charts with depth, lighting, and material textures instead of flat 2D fills. Chartissimo drives the geometry from your real data — bar heights, slice proportions, and trend curves come from the spreadsheet, while the visual style is applied on top. That data-first separation is what distinguishes a chart maker from a general AI image generator, which fabricates the numbers.
Until recently, getting a polished 3D chart meant one of two routes: spend hours in Blender or Cinema 4D building the scene from scratch, or write WebGL/Three.js code to bind your data to 3D geometry. Both are professional skills. Neither is what a presentation designer or startup founder has time for at 11 p.m. before a client meeting.
Two pressures collided around 2024–2026. The first: an industry-wide fatigue with hyper-flat dashboard aesthetics, captured well in Fuselab Creative's 2026 data visualization trends report. The second: investor and audience attention windows kept shrinking — Peony.ink's 2026 VC analysis measured first-pass deck reviews at an average of 2 minutes 14 seconds. A chart that needs explaining is a chart that costs you the meeting.
Chartissimo exists in the gap between those two pressures: a 3D chart maker that produces decks-ready output without the 3D modeling skill stack, and renders fast enough that you can iterate three styles in the time it takes to make coffee.
Twelve preset categories, 200+ pre-tuned styles. Each family is built around a different visual register; pick whichever matches the deck's audience and the data's subject matter.
Bars as buildings — apartments, brownstones, condos, skyscrapers. For real estate, urban planning, REIT pitch decks.
Shipping containers, robotic arms, brushed steel, oil barrels, automotive tires. For supply chain, logistics, commodities, manufacturing.
Forests, ice blocks, coral reefs, citrus slices, bonsai. For ESG, climate, agriculture, sustainability reports.
Gold bullion, marble with kintsugi veins, copper, rose-gold, geode stones. For wealth management, luxury brands, high-end investor decks.
Circuit boards, server racks, neon cyberpunk lines, oscilloscopes, fluid simulations. For tech marketing, hardware, dev-facing brands.
Sliced geodes, polished crystals, iridescent surfaces. For premium consumer brands and wellness verticals.
Pints, sliced cake, stacked cookies, citrus. For hospitality, F&B, restaurant analytics, playful consumer decks.
Tactile, skeuomorphic surfaces — wood grain, ceramic, fabric. For lifestyle brands and decks that want physical weight.
Playful claymorphic forms, soft 3D rounded shapes. For EdTech, consumer apps, internal team-building decks.
Isometric stacks, voxel-style structural blocks. For network mapping, supply chain visualization, IT architecture.
Glassmorphic layers, gradient surfaces, fluid forms. For modern dashboards and tech-forward presentations.
Hand-painted, watercolor, splattered paint, drawn-by-hand registers. For editorial, creative agencies, galleries.
Browse the full 200+ style catalog →
Deeper dive: Metaphorical Data Visualization — 30 Examples That Beat Bar Charts.
Drop a spreadsheet range or a CSV. Chartissimo parses headers, units, and series automatically. No file format conversion.
Browse 200+ presets or describe one in plain English ("brushed copper bars on a dark slide" or "frosted glass donut chart"). Apply your brand hex colors at any point.
PNG export and copy-to-clipboard are unlimited and free on every plan. Drop into PowerPoint, Keynote, Figma, or anywhere else that takes an image.
| Approach | Time per chart | 3D skill required | Data accuracy | Output format |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blender / Cinema 4D | 2–8 hours | High | Manual binding (error-prone) | Render to PNG |
| Three.js / D3.js / WebGL | Days (initial setup) | High (engineering) | Excellent (code-bound) | Web embed |
| Spline (3D web tool) | 1–3 hours per asset | Medium | Manual binding (error-prone) | Web embed / PNG |
| AI image generators | 1–2 minutes | None | None — numbers fabricated | PNG (unusable for real data) |
| Chartissimo | Under 60 seconds | None | Excellent (data-bound) | PNG / clipboard |
The trade-off is honest: Blender and Three.js win on creative ceiling — anything you can model, you can render. Chartissimo wins on speed and data-binding for the specific job of charts. If you're building a one-of-a-kind data sculpture for an installation, model it in Blender. If you're shipping the deck tomorrow, use a chart maker that renders from your numbers.
The audience window is roughly 2 minutes 14 seconds for a first pass, and decks past 15 slides see a 40% engagement drop (Peony.ink, 2026). A 3D chart cued to the data's subject matter — gold bullion for fundraise totals, architectural skylines for portfolio growth, server racks for infrastructure scale — lands in under five seconds. See the related guide: How to Visualize Startup Traction in Your Pitch Deck (publishing soon).
Social graphics, hero images for landing pages, executive summaries — anywhere a flat chart would read as filler. The metaphorical preset families (architectural, industrial, natural) give marketing teams a chart that fits the campaign's visual identity instead of a stock blue bar from the spreadsheet default.
Agencies producing decks for Fortune 500 clients and late-stage startups need consistent, high-impact visuals across every slide. Chartissimo's style catalog + brand-color overrides keep the visual system coherent across a full deck without rebuilding each chart by hand.
A 3D chart maker is a tool that renders charts with depth, lighting, and material textures instead of flat 2D fills. The best ones (including Chartissimo) drive the geometry from your real data — bar heights, slice proportions, and trend curves come from the spreadsheet, while the visual style is applied on top. That separation is what distinguishes a 3D chart maker from a general AI image generator, which fabricates the numbers.
No. Chartissimo is browser-based and no-code. Paste your data, pick a style from the preset gallery (or describe a custom one in plain English), and download a PNG. The 3D rendering is handled server-side; you never touch a viewport or a render queue.
Yes. Chartissimo outputs PNG by default — drop into PowerPoint, Keynote, Google Slides, Figma, or any other tool that accepts an image. Copy-to-clipboard is built in. There is no proprietary file format to deal with. See: How to Export a Chart as PNG for PowerPoint.
Spline and Three.js are general 3D tools. They can render anything, including charts, but you build the geometry by hand and bind the data manually — accurate charts take hours per asset. Chartissimo is purpose-built for charts: data-binding is automatic, and 200+ style presets are pre-tuned. Trade-off: you lose the freedom to model anything; you gain speed and data accuracy.
Yes. Brand hex color input is free on every plan. Drop your color values in and Chartissimo applies them within the chosen style — the textures and lighting stay; the palette becomes yours. See: How to Make a Chart with Your Brand Colors.
The Pilot plan is $9 one-time for 30 credits. Subscriptions start at $15/mo (annual) for 60 credits/month. One credit produces one rendered chart; relabel, recolor, and PNG download are free on every plan. Full pricing at /pricing.
Paste your data, pick a style, get a PNG. Under 60 seconds. Pilot plan is $9 one-time, 30 credits — no subscription, no card on file to try.
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