The Principles of Design
Jennifer Kyrnin - 2/26/08
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Apply the Elements of Design with Established
Principles
The basic principles of design are true for Web design as well
as other design. They show you how to put together design
elements in an effective manner. Design is more than just
slapping HTML tags up onto a page, and using these principles
will help you build more pleasing and useful designs.
Balance
Balance is the distribution of heavy and light elements on the
page. Larger, darker elements appear heavier in the design than
smaller, lighter elements. The principle of balance shows you
how to lay out your pages so that they work.
Contrast
When most people think of contrast, they typically think of
colors or black and white. But there is more to contrast than
color. You can have contrasting shapes (square vs. circle), or
contrasting sizes (large vs. small), or contrasting textures
(smooth vs. rough).
Emphasis
Emphasis is what the eye is drawn to in a design. It's tempting
to give everything equal emphasis or try to emphasize
everything in a design, but this ends up making the design
bland and flat. Instead, as a designer you should determine the
hierarchy of the page and then apply the emphasis to the
elements based on that hierarchy.
Rhythm
Rhythm is also called repetition. Rhythm brings an internal
consistency to your Web designs. Patterns are easy for humans
to comprehend, and repetition provides patterns that make your
site easier to comprehend.
Unity Unity is also called proximity. It is
the principle of keeping like elements together and diverse
elements further apart. Unity pulls elements
together.
Jennifer Kyrnin has been a professional Web developer and
has been assisting others to learn Web Design, HTML, CSS, and
XML since 1995.
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