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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:
- vertices
- shape/form: geometric/organic, curvilinear/rectilinear, regular/irregular, concave/convex
- size: large/small, thick/thin
- line: line weight
- volume: flat/volumetric
- color: monochromatic, two-tone, harmonic, dissonant, riotous, other palettes
- value
- texture
- orientation
- style
principles of visual design
The following principles of visual design are gathered from a variety of sources.
- structure: geometric/organic
- alignment
- repetition
- pattern
- contrast
- similarity
- variety
- unity
- harmony/disharmony
- consistency
- anomaly
- proportion
- scale
- movement
- rhythm
- continuation
- transformation (including addition and subtraction)
- closure
- gradation
- radiation
- hierarchy/subordination
- emphasis/concentration/focus
- dominance
- balance
- negative space
- proximity: overlap/padding
- grouping/chunking/clustering
- figure/ground
- perspective
- simplicity/complexity
- synthesis
grouped principles
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
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.