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Table of Contents
Elements & Principles of Design
Author: Michelle McCausland
TLDR;
Elements of Design
- Color (Hue)
- Value (Tone)
- Texture
- Shape
- Form
- Space (whitespace)
- Line
- Type
Principles of Design
- Contrast
- Emphasis
- Balance
- Unity
- Pattern
- Movement
- Rhythm / Repetition
- Proportion
- Simplicity
- Gradation
Elements of Design
- 1. Color (Hue)
- sets the mood or feel of design
- conveys emotion
- Color Wheel
- Types of Colors
- Primary
- Red, Blue, Yellow
- Secondary
- Primary + Primary
- Tertiary
- Primary + Secondary
- Harmonies
- Monocrome
- Complimentary
- Opposite colors on color wheel
- Split Complimentary
- Analogous
- Adjacent colors on color wheel
- Triad
- 3 Adjacent colors
- Tint
- Add White
- Tone
- Add Grey
- Shade
- Add Black
- 2. Value (Tone)
- Degree of lightness or darkness
- Adds Contrast
- Creates area of interest
- Focal point
- e.g. Light shape on a dark background
- Use color to add depth
- 3. Texture
- Surface quality of a defined shape or line
- Adds sense of depth
- e.g. reflective surface effect
- “Flat Design” avoids texture
- More visually tactile
- rough, smooth, hard, soft
- Emphasize focal point
- Subtle decorations
- Texture Resources
- smashingmagazine.com/tag/textures
- Texture King
- Zen Textures
- Texturemate.com
- Grunge textures
- 4. Shape
- Any flat area bound by line, value, color
- Organize and define areas
- Positive
- area a space contains
- buttons
- nav bars
- Negative
- Area around a shape
- Repetition of shapes creates harmony and unity
- Set of buttons
- Set of widgets
- Geometric
- Organic
- 5. Form
- Overall mass of shapes & relationship between them
- The sum of all the parts
- Create black and white mockups first
- Then add color
- Clean and balanced design & layout
- 6. Space (Whitespace)
- Areas, distances between all elements of a design
- resist temptation to fill all space
- give a sense of breathing room
- So eyes have a place to rest
- Use space deliberately
- Make use of negative space
- 7. Line
- can imply movement
- left to right
- diagonal
- can create areas of emphasis
- create dividers
- Separate groups of content
- Mark, path, mass that defines position/direction
- can be formed by edge where 2 shapes meet
- Don't need to just be straight
- Create order / organization
- 8. Type
- typography
- Serif
- Print
- Sans-Serif
- Digital
- Font/text
- Fonts chosen to display text
- Typeface
- Set of fonts in a font family
- Arial
- Arial Bold
- Arial Regular
- Arial Italic
Principles of Design
Rules of Design
- 1. Contrast
- shows users exactly where to look
- juxtaposition of elements to show emphasis
- Should be located at center of interest
- e.g. Hero section
- Opposite colors
- Space/whitespace
- Play with direction
- Hard / soft edge shapes
- 2. Emphasis
- Attention on single area to show visual importance
- Size & placement of elements
- Typographic Hierarchy
- Use of fonts to create a sense of flow / emphasis
- Varying the size, weight, color & spacing
- B, I, All Caps
- H1, H2, H3
- Serif / Sans-Serif for paragraphs and headers
- 3. Balance
- Alignment and distribution of content
- Squint and look at the whole composition
- making use of the grid system
- seesaw analogy
- not same as symmetry
- Can be asymmetrical
- Creates interesting tension that draws attention
- 4. Unity
- Pleasing arrangement of parts in a design
- harmony
- presents info in a logical structure
- Consider user's experience
- link styles
- edit color to match layout
- active
- hover
- visited
- link
- extreme complexity leads to over stimulation
- 5. Pattern
- Way to keep design organized
- sense of harmony through use of repeating elements
- Can be decorative
- less is more
- background patterns
- 6. Movement
- the suggestion of action or direction
- scrolling
- fixed
- scrolling
- parallax
- easing
- Animation
- Sense of interactivity
- 7. Rhythm / Repitition
- repetition of element that creates visual rhythm
- establish visual interest
- grid layout
- alter number of columns in each row
- 8. Proprtion
- visual relationship between 2 or more things
- size
- most important = largest
- large background image with small text
- number
- Tiered dominance
- creates hierarchy
- text size
- Works with emphasis and unity
- 9. Simplicity
- Removal of non essential elements
- only show what's essential
- difficult to determine
- 10. Gradation
- gradual change that occurs in steps/stages
- think of contrast
- draws the eye in
- creates a sense of movement
- size
- large to small
- color
- gradients
- light to dark
- 1 hue to another
- line
- thick to thin
- curved to straight
- long to short
design/elements_principles_of_design.txt · Last modified: 2021/06/25 10:09 by 127.0.0.1