1 / 42

The Principles of Design

The Principles of Design. The Structures Behind Improved Print Design . The elements and principles of design are the building blocks used to create The elements of design can be thought of as the things that make up a layout

alton
Télécharger la présentation

The Principles of Design

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Principles of Design The Structures Behind Improved Print Design

  2. The elements and principles of design are the building blocks used to create • The elements of design can be thought of as the things that make up a layout • Good or bad - all layouts will contain most of if not all, the seven elements of design ELEMENTS OF DESIGN

  3. Line can be considered in two ways: • the linear marks made with a design toolor the edge created when two shapes meet Elements of Design: the line

  4. A shape is a self contained defined area of geometric or organic form • A positive shape in a design automatically creates a negative shape (aka white space) Elements of design: SHAPE

  5. All lines have direction - Horizontal, Vertical or Oblique. • Horizontal suggests calmness, stability and tranquillity. • Vertical gives a feeling of balance, formality and alertness • Oblique suggests movement and action Elements of Design: Direction

  6. Size is simply the relationship of the area occupied by one shape to that of another • Size can denote importance ELEMENTS OF DESIGN: SIZE

  7. Texture is perceived surface quality • Print design largely uses implied texture (the surface of an object looks like it feels. The texture may look rough, fizzy, gritty, but cannot actually be felt) ELEMENTS OF DESIGN: TEXTURE

  8. aka swatches (in InDesign) • Considered to be the most expressive element • Can create illusionof depth • Can draw attention to a particular part • Increases visual appeal • Complementarycolours help create contrast • Monochromatic colours are tints and shades of the same colour • Warm colours: reds, yellows, oranges • Cool colours: blues, greens, and purples ELEMENTS OF DESIGN: COLOUR

  9. Primary colours

  10. Secondarycolours

  11. TertiaryColours

  12. ComplimentaryColours

  13. TriadColours

  14. ANALOGOUSColours

  15. aka tone • Value is lightness or darkness of a colour • Add black to a pure colour to create a shade • Add white to a pure colour to create a tint • Value gives objects depth and perception Elements of Design: Value

  16. The 3fs (FFF) • Form Follows Function • (what it looks like is not as important as the job it is supposed to accomplish) • A layout should help NOT hinder the message • It should be transparent in nature (ie. your viewer should not be remarking on the layout, but rather focusing on the content) THE #1 RULE OF PRINT DESIGN

  17. The Principles of design can be thought of as what we do to the elements of design • How we apply the Principles of design determines how successful we are in creating layout Principles of Design

  18. Balance in design is similar to balance in physics • A large shape close to the center can be balanced by a small shape close to the edge • A large light toned shape will be balanced by a small dark toned shape (as the darker the shape the heavier it appears to be) PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN: BALANCE

  19. Not UsingBalanceCreatively

  20. UsingBalance

  21. Gradation of size and direction produce linear perspective. • Gradation of colour from warm to cool and tone from dark to light produce aerial perspective. • Gradation can add interest and movement to a shape. A gradation from dark to light will cause the eye to move along a shape. Principles of Design: Gradation

  22. Gradations

  23. Gradation example

  24. Where else have you seen gradation used today to present information to you? A Pause forGradation

  25. Dominance gives a layout interest, counteracting confusion and monotony • Dominance can be applied to one or more of the elements to give emphasis PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN: DOMINANCE

  26. Not UsingDOMINANCE

  27. UsingDOMINANCE

  28. Nothing should be paced on the page arbitrarily • Every element should have some visual connection with another element on the page • Creates a sophisticated look Principles of Design: ALIGNMENT

  29. Not UsingALIGNMENT

  30. UsingALIGNMENT

  31. Repetition with variation is interesting • without variation repetition can become monotonous Principles of design: Repetition

  32. Not UsingRepetition

  33. UsingRepetition

  34. Items relating to each other should be grouped close together • Items in close proximity become one visual unit instead of several separate items • Helps organize information, reduce clutter, and give structure Principles of Design: PROXIMITY

  35. Not UsingProximity

  36. UsingProximity

  37. Contrast is the juxtaposition of opposing elements e.g.. opposite colours on the colour wheel - red / green, blue / orange etc. Contrast in tone or value - light / dark. Contrast in direction - horizontal / vertical • The major contrast in a layout should be located at the center of interest • Too much contrast scattered throughout a layout can destroy unity and make a work difficult to look at. Principles of design: contrast

  38. Not UsingContrast

  39. UsingContrast

  40. Unity is staying on the story, telling only one thing at a time • Unity is staying in style throughout the design • It helps provide clear and complete communication Principles of Design: Unity

  41. A PAUSE FOR UNITY • Where else have you seen unity used today to present information to you?

  42. TheEND shaun_perry@bwdsb.on.ca

More Related