The four basic principles of design The following is a brief overview of the principles of design. Although they are discussed separately, they are really interconnected. Rarely will you use only one principle at a time. Contrast Repetitio n Alignment Proximity
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The four basic principles of design The following is a brief overview of the principles of design. Although they are discussed separately, they are really.
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The four basic principles of design
The following is a brief overview of the principles of design. Although they are discussed separately, they are really interconnected. Rarely will you use only one principle at a time.
Contrast
Repetition
Alignment
Proximity
Contrast
The idea behind contrast is to avoid elements that are merely similar. If the elements (type, color, size, line thickness, space, shape) are not the same, then make them very different. Contrast is often the most important visual attraction on the page.
Contrast
Contrast on the page draws our eye to it; our eyes like contrast. If you are putting two elements on the page that are not the same, such as two typefaces or two line widths or two colors, they cannot be similar. For contrast to be effective, make them very different.
How has the designer increased the contrast in the
text elements from version to version?
In the colors? In the size of
elements? The graphics? In the
spatial relationships?
Question To which design elements has the designer added contrast from the first version to the second?
Think about type, line thickness, dark and light areas, shapes, sizes, proportion, etc.
Repetition
Repeat visual elements of the design throughout the piece. You can repeat color, shape, texture, spatial relationships, line thickness, size, and type. This helps develop the organization and strengthens unity visually.
Repetition
Repetition of visual elements throughout the design unifies and strengthens it by tying together otherwise separate parts. Repetition is very useful on one-page pieces, and is critical in multi-page documents, where we often just call it being consistent. Don’t underestimate the the value of the visual interest you can achieve through repetition--if a piece looks interesting, it is more likely to be read.
Which elements are repeated
throughout this design?
How does your eye move around the
design--what’s the compositional
scheme? Which elements are your
eyes drawn to?
Repetition
Avoid repeating an element so much that it becomes overwhelming or annoying. Be conscious of the value of contrast
Which elements are repeated
throughout this design?
How has the designer pushed
consistency to turn it into part of the
conscious graphic design?
Which elements are repeated throughout this design? How has the designer pushed consistency to turn it into part of the conscious
graphic design?
Repetition
Repetition of visual elements from page to page within your site is also critical to avoiding confusion on the user’s part about where they are, where they can find information, and how they can return to where they were. Note the repetition within each page as well.
AlignmentNothing should be placed on the page arbitrarily. Every element should have some consciously designed visual connection with another element on the page. This creates a clean, fresh, and intentional look.
AlignmentThe web site’s pages are arrayed along a curved alignment. How does your eye move through them? How about the centered alignment of the red links below?
AlignmentThe main pages of the Art Institute’s site are contained in frames with a centered alignment. Is it easy to scan the list? How might the navigability be improved through the use of a stronger alignment?
Alignment
Unity is an important concept in design. To make all of the elements on the page appear to be unified, interconnected and interrelated, there needs to be some visual tie between the separate elements. Even if they are far apart on the page, they can appear connected or related simply by their placement on the page.
Find two (or more) elements that are
aligned on the design.
How does the alignment of the
elements create a sense of
organization in the design?
Alignment
Be conscious of where you place elements. Always find something else on the page to align with, even if the two objects are physically far away from each other.
Avoid using more then one text alignment on the page. That is, don’t center some text and right align other text, unless you have a good reason for doing so.
Describe the sense of organization
achieved through unity in this page.
How can you relate the feel of the piece
to the alignment scheme?
Proximity
Items relating to each other should be grouped close together. When several items are in close proximity to each other, they become one visual unit, rather than several separate units. This helps organize the information and reduces visual clutter.
Proximity
When several objects are in close proximity to each other, they became one visual unit rather than several separate units. Items relating to each other should be grouped together. Be conscious of where your eye is going. Where do you start looking? What path do you follow? Where do you end up; after you’ve read it, where does your eye go next? You should be able to follow a logical progression through the piece, from a definite beginning to a definite end.
Squint your eyes slightly and count
the number of visual elements by
counting the number of times
your eye stops. If there are more than
3-5 items, can some be grouped in
closer proximity to become one visual
unit?
ProximitySquint and count again.If there are more than 3-5 items, can some be grouped in closer proximity to become one visual unit?
Proximity
What could the designer do to make the navigation bar easier to scan?
Proximity
Avoid too many separate elements on the page.Don’t stick things in the corners and in the middle.Avoid using equal amounts of white space between elements unless each group is a part of the subset.Don’t create relationships with elements that don’t belong together. If they’re not related, move them very far apart.
What elements are grouped together in close
proximity?
How does the proximity of the elements help organize
the information?
If information is logically organized, it will be less