Two-Dimensional Design
Design Fundamentals for 2D
1. Elements of Design (2D)
Line:
- Quality: Thick, thin, broken, continuous
- Direction: Horizontal, vertical, diagonal, curved
- Purpose: Dividing, leading, framing, structure
- Expression: Calm, dynamic, delicate, bold
- Organization: Creating rhythm and movement
Shape:
- Geometric: Circle, square, triangle, polygon
- Organic: Irregular, natural forms
- Positive and negative space
- Silhouette and outline
- Symbolic meaning
Color:
- Hue: The color itself
- Value: Light to dark
- Saturation: Intensity or purity
- Tone: Color with gray added
- Psychology and association
Texture:
- Visual texture: Appearance of texture
- Actual texture: Physical surface
- Pattern: Repetited texture
- Pattern making techniques
- Visual interest and variation
Space:
- Positive space: Object or shape
- Negative space: Empty area
- Figure-ground relationship
- Depth illusion (atmospheric, linear)
- Composition balance
2. Principles of Design
Balance:
- Symmetrical: Mirror arrangement, formal, stable
- Asymmetrical: Unequal but balanced, dynamic
- Radial: Around central point, focal emphasis
- Visual weight and placement
- Creating harmony
Emphasis and Focal Point:
- Main area of interest
- Using contrast to emphasize
- Color, size, position, isolation
- Directing viewer's attention
- Hierarchy of importance
Movement and Flow:
- Guiding eye through design
- Leading lines and shapes
- Diagonal alignment
- Progressive change
- Rhythm and pattern
Rhythm:
- Repetition of elements
- Regular or varied interval
- Creating visual beat
- Unity through consistency
- Interest through variation
Proportion and Scale:
- Size relationships
- Golden ratio
- Relative measurements
- Emphasis through size
- Harmonious relationships
Unity and Variety:
- Cohesive design
- Repetition of elements
- Variation for interest
- Consistency in approach
- Avoiding confusion
Color Theory
1. Color Systems
RGB (Light):
- Red, Green, Blue
- Additive color (light-based)
- Screen displays
- White = all colors combined
- Black = no light
CMY/CMYK (Pigment):
- Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, (Black)
- Subtractive color (pigment-based)
- Print and painting
- Black = all colors combined
- White = no pigment
HSL/HSV:
- Hue: Color position on wheel
- Saturation: Purity/intensity
- Lightness/Value: Light to dark
- Digital color selection
- Intuitive color picking
2. Color Relationships
Color Wheel:
- 12 colors arranged in circle
- Primary: Red, Yellow, Blue
- Secondary: Orange, Green, Violet
- Tertiary: Primary + Secondary
- Shows color relationships
Color Harmonies:
Complementary:
- Opposite on color wheel
- High contrast
- Dynamic and vibrant
- Used for emphasis
- Can be overwhelming if not balanced
Analogous:
- Adjacent on color wheel
- Harmonious and peaceful
- Related colors (red, red-orange, orange)
- Low contrast
- Comfortable and cohesive
Triadic:
- Three colors equally spaced
- Balanced and vibrant
- Complex but harmonious
- Equal visual weight
- Modern and playful
Monochromatic:
- Single color with variations
- Value and saturation changes
- Sophisticated and unified
- Subtle and refined
- Easy to create successful designs
3. Color Psychology and Symbolism
Warm Colors (Red, Orange, Yellow):
- Energy, warmth, excitement
- Advancing colors (appear closer)
- Attention-getting
- Associated with heat and light
- Stimulating and active
Cool Colors (Blue, Green, Violet):
- Calm, peace, serenity
- Receding colors (appear distant)
- Soothing quality
- Associated with water and nature
- Passive and tranquil
Color Associations:
- Red: Passion, danger, energy
- Blue: Trust, calm, sadness
- Yellow: Joy, optimism, warning
- Green: Nature, growth, jealousy
- Purple: Luxury, mystery, spirituality
- Cultural variations in meaning
Composition and Layout
1. Compositional Strategies
Grid Systems:
- Dividing space into columns and rows
- Structure and alignment
- Consistency across pages
- Flexibility within structure
- Publication design foundation
Rule of Thirds:
- Dividing into thirds horizontally/vertically
- Placing focal point off-center
- Dynamic composition
- Natural visual interest
- Photography and design
Golden Ratio:
- Mathematical proportion (~1.618:1)
- Natural harmony and beauty
- Spiral composition
- Aesthetically pleasing
- Classical and modern application
2. Visual Hierarchy
Size:
- Larger = more important
- Emphasis through scale
- Differentiation and organization
- Guides viewer attention
- Clear prioritization
Position:
- Top left: Natural starting point
- Center: Formal, stable
- Top or sides: Secondary elements
- Bottom: Supporting information
- Page reading patterns
Color and Contrast:
- Bright colors attract attention
- High contrast = emphasis
- Low saturation = secondary
- Dark on light and light on dark
- Directing focus
Typeface and Weight:
- Larger type more visible
- Bold weight = emphasis
- Light weight = secondary
- Typeface selection
- Hierarchy through typography
Typography
1. Type Basics
Typeface Categories:
Serif:
- Small lines at ends of letters
- Traditional and formal
- Good for body text
- Examples: Times New Roman, Georgia
Sans-Serif:
- No lines at ends
- Modern and clean
- Clear and legible
- Examples: Helvetica, Arial, Verdana
Script:
- Handwritten appearance
- Formal or decorative
- Limited use, reduced legibility
- Examples: Brush Script, Edwardian
Display:
- Highly stylized
- Headlines and special use
- Expressive and unique
- Used sparingly
2. Typography Principles
Legibility:
- Text readability
- Size and spacing
- Color contrast
- Font selection
- Purpose-appropriate
Kerning and Tracking:
- Kerning: Space between letter pairs (A-V)
- Tracking: Overall spacing between letters
- Visual balance and consistency
- Professional appearance
- Intent communication
Leading:
- Space between lines of text
- Too tight: Hard to read
- Too loose: Disjointed
- Golden rule: 1.5x font size
- Reading comfort
Alignment:
- Left-aligned: Natural, readable
- Right-aligned: Unusual, design-oriented
- Center: Formal, symmetrical
- Justified: Blocked edges
- Purpose and effect
3. Text Layout
Type Sizes:
- Display/Headline: 28-72pt+
- Body text: 10-13pt (print), 16-18px (screen)
- Caption: 8-10pt
- Hierarchy through size
- Context and medium dependent
Column Width:
- Optimal: 50-75 characters per line
- Too narrow: Excessive breaks
- Too wide: Hard to follow
- Readability consideration
- Whitespace important
Pattern and Decoration
1. Pattern Design
Creating Patterns:
- Repeating unit (motif)
- Organized arrangement
- Seamless or distinct repetition
- Transformation and variation
- Digital tools for pattern making
Pattern Types:
Geometric:
- Mathematical precision
- Regular repetition
- Symmetrical or radial
- Structured and ordered
- Mathematical patterns
Organic:
- Natural forms as basis
- Irregular repetition
- Flowing and natural
- Botanical inspiration
- Rhythmic variation
2. Decorative Elements
Ornament:
- Embellishment without function
- Visual interest
- Cultural and historical significance
- Restraint in modern design
- Purpose and context
Illustration:
- Original artwork
- Supporting textual content
- Style and medium choices
- Infographics and diagrams
- Visual communication
Summary
Two-dimensional design involves:
- Elements: Line, shape, color, texture, space
- Principles: Balance, emphasis, movement, proportion, unity
- Color: Theory, psychology, harmony
- Composition: Layout, hierarchy, grid systems
- Typography: Type selection, spacing, hierarchy
- Pattern: Visual rhythm and repetition
Successful 2D design combines these elements and principles effectively to communicate ideas visually, creating aesthetically pleasing and functional designs that serve their purpose.