Image: Petr Kratochvil
Showing posts with label C.R.A.P.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label C.R.A.P.. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Contrast

Contrast in graphics frequently refers to the appearance of light colors juxtaposed with dark colors.  When a light-colored element and a dark colored element are used together they are visually effective because the light-colored element stands out against the dark, making it easy to see, read or identify.  Graphics like the butterfly above are said to be high-contrast or "contrast-y."  Any design element including lines, shapes, letter forms (fonts) or images can be rendered to contrast with the background.  Black on white and white on black represent the highest contrasting pairing possible.  A clean, sans serif font like Arial or Helvetica look authoritative, yet elegant when used in black and white.  Designers love this stark contrast; it is attention-getting.  When selecting font colors to place on a slide with a white background, I recommend dark colors including navy, browns, purples and dark greens or rich burgundies to provide strong contrast and ensure legibility.  Black is the default color in most software applications (in the absence of a template we hope...) but perhaps it might be more interesting to try dark colored fonts or even white text on a black when you design your next presentation.

Shapes can also be presented to show contrasts as well: big vs. small, smooth vs. rough, or straight vs. curvy.  These, too, are visually interesting owing to contrast.  Humans find anomalies interesting to look at.  We are just hard-wired that way.


Butterfly image from photorack.com

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Repetition Repetition Repetition

There is something so delightful about repetition.  Visual repetition.  Remember this because it is a device that you can use over and over again with great results.  A photo of one green bottle would not be very interesting to look at.  Line up a whole bunch of them and they just look cool.  Have a simple graphic element that carries out the theme of your talk?  Copy, paste.  Shampoo, lather, rinse, repeat.  Go ahead and fill the frame with wild abandon.  After you've copied the second element, group the two elements together and copy again, producing four and so on.  You get the idea.  Like the cracked mud texture in the previous post, you may want to include a number, letter or short word contained within the bottom circle/oval created by the base of the bottles if you are providing some sort of text information on your slide.  Repetition is "R" in the unfortunately-named acronym, C.R.A.P., shown in the mind map at the bottom of this blog and is one of the four basic design principles you must master in order to create a visually pleasing page or slide.  For the remaining letters, "C" is for contrast, "A" is for Alignment and "P" is for proximity which I will discuss in subsequent posts.