Elements and Principles
Elements and Principles
Line
A line is defined as an extension of point. Line is a
one-dimensional entity with only length and
having no width. This point in motion can either
be thick or thin. Thinness or thickness of line
creates a visual impact.
LINE
Colour
Colour is the core attribute of visual perception
and therefore it is the most effective element of
design. No one can imagine a world with only two
colours: black and white. Colour is the soul of
design.
The Elements of Art
Types of colours
Primary colour: The three colours that are equal
distant on the colour wheel and are used to make up all
other colours; red, yellow, and blue.
Alexander Calder
Henri Matisse
The Elements of Art
Value
Value is the degree of lightness or darkness of a colour.
Value is also called tone. Tonal contrast is simply the
difference between the light and dark areas in a painting.
VALUE
Joan
Miro
Gustave Caillebotte
A 3-dimensional object; or something in
a 2-dimensional artwork that appears to
FORM
FORM
be 3-dimensional.
Alexander Calder
Symmetrical Balance
Leonardo DaVinci
Asymmetrical Balance
James Whistler
The Principles of Art
Dominance (Emphasis)
Every page needs a focal point. Emphasis (also known as
dominance) in graphic design is the first thing the eye
sees.
EMPHASIS
Salvador Dali
Ansel Adams
The Principles of Art
Rhythm
Rhythm is a pattern created by repeating elements on a
page in an expected manner. There are many different
kinds of rhythm
Regular: A regular rhythm occurs when the intervals
between the elements, and often the elements themselves,
are similar in size or length.
and
Marcel MOVEMENT
Duchamp
Vincent VanGogh
The Principles of Art
Pattern is also a repeating unit of shape or form, but it
can also be thought of as the “skeleton” that organizes the
parts of a composition.
PATTERN
and Repetition Gustav Klimt
Repetition of a design.
The Principles of Art
Unity
Unity is the underlying principle that summarizes all of
the principles and elements of design. It refers to the
coherence of the whole, the sense that all of the parts are
working together to achieve a common result; a harmony
of all the parts.
UNITY
VAR IET Y
Marc Chagall
The Principles of Art
Proportion
Proportion is the comparison of dimension of forms. It is
the relationship in scale between one element and another,
or between a whole object and one of its parts.
PROPORTIO N
The comparative
relationship of one part to
another with respect to size,
quantity, or degree; SCALE.
Gustave
Caillebotte
The Principles of Art
Repetition generally refer to repeating elements, like predictable
background patterns or multiple instances of the same object
appearing.
White Space
Designs that try to cram too much text and graphics onto the page
are uncomfortable and may be impossible to read. White space
gives your design breathing room.
Alignment
Alignment refers to lining up the top, bottom, sides, or middle of
text or graphic elements on a page.
Similarity
The principle of similarity states that things which share visual
characteristics such as shape, size, colour, texture, value or
orientation will be seen as belonging together.
whAT IS Art ?
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