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The Elements and Principles of Design

Date post: 13-Jan-2016
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The Elements and Principles of Design. What Are They?. Elements of design are the parts or tools,. They structure and carry the work. Principles of design are concepts. They affect content and message. Line. A line is the path of a moving point. Direction. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The Elements and Principles of Design
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Page 1: The Elements and Principles of Design

The Elements and Principles of Design

Page 2: The Elements and Principles of Design

What Are They?

Elements of design are the parts or tools,.

They structure and carry the work.

Principles of design are concepts.

They affect content and message.

Page 3: The Elements and Principles of Design

Line

A line is the path of a moving point.

Page 4: The Elements and Principles of Design

Direction

Direction is the course along which a line moves.

Page 5: The Elements and Principles of Design

Value

Value is how dark or light a color is.

Page 6: The Elements and Principles of Design

Texture

Texture is the visual surface quality of an object.

Page 7: The Elements and Principles of Design

Form and Space

Form is an area surrounded by space.

Space can be positive or negative.

Page 8: The Elements and Principles of Design

Color

Color is the hue, shade, or tone of an object. Hue is the name of the color, a shade adds black and a tint adds white.

Page 9: The Elements and Principles of Design

Balance

Balance relates to our physical sense of balance.

Page 10: The Elements and Principles of Design

Movement

Movement leads the eye from one direction to another.

Page 11: The Elements and Principles of Design

Proportion

Proportion is the relative size and scale of elements in a design.

Page 12: The Elements and Principles of Design

Repetition

Repetition is one, or similar elements that are repeated.

Page 13: The Elements and Principles of Design

Rhythm

Rhythm is a measured movement through space. It is a regular repetition of elements.

Page 14: The Elements and Principles of Design

Center of Interest

Center of Interest is when one object is emphasized more than another.

Page 15: The Elements and Principles of Design

Contrast

Contrast is when elements are different.

Page 16: The Elements and Principles of Design

Unity and Variety

Unity is a set of elements from the same family. Variety is elements that are similar, but not the same.

Page 17: The Elements and Principles of Design

Harmony

Harmony is when elements are related.

Page 18: The Elements and Principles of Design

Your Turn!

What elements and principles do you see being used in this image?

Page 19: The Elements and Principles of Design

SourcesJirousek, C. (1995). Elements of Design. In Art, Design, and Visual Thinking. Retrieved September 28, 2009, from

http://www.char.txa.cornell.edu.

Lovett, J. (1999). Elements and Principles of Design. In John Lovett Watercolor and Mixedmedia Artist. Retrieved September 28, 2009, from http://www.johnlovett.com/test.htm

Line: Mike Chaput-Branson, “Line Up The Color” January 19, 2008 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution, Noncommercial, Share Alike License.

Form and Space: Ntr23, “Ice Form” August 19, 2006 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution, Noncommercial, Share Alike License.

Image Sources

Page 20: The Elements and Principles of Design

Image SourcesMovement: Ed Schipul, “Orange Line @ eTech 2007” March 28, 2007 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution, Share Alike License.

Color: Nasplayer, “Rainbow Colored Milk Drop Splash (Explore 108)” June 11, 2009 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution, No Derivative Works License.

Texture: Lucy Nieto, “Tapete de Plástico – 2007” November 24, 2007 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution, Noncommercial, Share Alike License.

Direction: Jeff Bauche, “Abstract Life Line” January 21, 2008 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution, Noncommercial, No Derivative Works License.

Proportion: Alper Çuğun, “Disproportion” July 4, 2007 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution, Noncommercial License.

Page 21: The Elements and Principles of Design

Image SourcesBalance: Terence T.S. Tam, “Space Needle and Pacific Science Center” October 6, 2008 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution, Noncommercial, Share Alike License.

Gradation: Natrium Chlorine, “IMGP4383a2” October 18, 2008 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution, Noncommercial, Share Alike License.

Repetition: Kevin Dooley, “Angles, Lines, Light, and Shadows” November 7, 2007 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution License.

Contrast: Cataline Olavarria, “Al Fondo a la Derecha” September 2, 2006 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution, Noncommercial, Share Alike License.

Page 22: The Elements and Principles of Design

Image SourcesHarmony: Kris De Curtis, “Christmas in Love…” December 12, 2007 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution, Noncommercial, No Derivative Works License.

Dominance: Toshihiro Oimatsu, “Emphasis” June 23, 2009 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution License.

Rhythm: ZeroOne, “Spiral Staircase” July 2, 2007 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution, Share Alike License.

Variety: Ross Orr, “Series VI” September 26, 2007 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution, Noncommercial, No Derivative Works License.

Your Turn!: Romnick Simplicio, “Africa Fighting Below the Line - Print Ad (Education)” June 24, 2008 via Flickr, Creative Commons Attribution, Noncommercial, No Derivative Works License.


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