Table of Contents

Design Principles

Every field of design has principles that it uses to guide its work.

properties of forms

After points and lines, designs are made up of forms. Forms have the following properties:

  1. vertices
  2. shape/form: geometric/organic, curvilinear/rectilinear, regular/irregular, concave/convex
  3. size: large/small, thick/thin
  4. line: line weight
  5. volume: flat/volumetric
  6. color: monochromatic, two-tone, harmonic, dissonant, riotous, other palettes
  7. value
  8. texture
  9. orientation
  10. style

principles of visual design

The following principles of visual design are gathered from a variety of sources.

  1. structure: geometric/organic
  2. alignment
  3. repetition
  4. pattern
  5. contrast
  6. similarity
  7. variety
  8. unity
  9. harmony/disharmony
  10. consistency
  11. anomaly
  12. proportion
  13. scale
  14. movement
  15. rhythm
  16. continuation
  17. transformation (including addition and subtraction)
  18. closure
  19. gradation
  20. radiation
  21. hierarchy/subordination
  22. emphasis/concentration/focus
  23. dominance
  24. balance
  25. negative space
  26. proximity: overlap/padding
  27. grouping/chunking/clustering
  28. figure/ground
  29. perspective
  30. simplicity/complexity
  31. synthesis

grouped principles

Miles A. Kimball groups the design principles into the following categories:

sources

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_design_elements_and_principles

https://paperform.co/blog/principles-of-design/

https://www.getty.edu/education/teachers/building_lessons/principles_design.pdf

Kimball, M. A. (2013). Visual design principles: An empirical study of design lore. Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 43(1), 3-41.

Wong, W. (1972). Principles of two-dimensional design. John Wiley & Sons.

Wong, W. (1993). Principles of form and design. John Wiley & Sons.