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Design Principles

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

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

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

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

  • Likeness principles help create coherence over a whole design: alignment, consistency, symmetry, harmony, unity, simplicity
  • Difference principles help mark the distinction between design elements: gradation, color, radiation, contrast, variety, rhythm, repetition
  • Composition principles help organize designs to influence our viewpoint: framing, structure, focal point, perspective, movement
  • Architecture principles focus on visual organization and hierarchy: context, emphasis, subordination, hierarchy, dominance
  • Gestalt principles govern perception of two-dimensional design objects: proximity, gestalt, closure, continuation, similarity, attraction
  • Grouping principles organize individual design objects into larger groups and patterns: chunking, grouping, comparison, pattern
  • Space principles guide the design of the two-dimensional field: scale, proportion, space, figure/ground, balance

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.

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