Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byOliver Wilson Modified over 6 years ago
1
Elements of Design and Principles of Design for Photography
2
Today: Visual Elements
If we want to be good photographers, we must train ourselves to see the parts of a photo, not just the sum. If we’re going to build pictures, we must learn to recognize the parts and learn to assemble them into a whole, or coherent pattern.
3
Today: Visual Elements
What are the parts?
4
Today: Visual Elements
Visual elements are the vocabulary They are the construction materials
5
Today: Visual Elements
Dot Line Shape Form Texture Tonality Directional forces Color
6
Visual Elements Dot: A single point
7
Line: An unconnected stroke of pen or pencil
Visual Elements Line: An unconnected stroke of pen or pencil
8
Shape: When connected, lines make two dimensional shapes
Visual Elements Shape: When connected, lines make two dimensional shapes
9
Form: When extended in space, shapes have three dimensional form
Visual Elements Form: When extended in space, shapes have three dimensional form
10
Visual Elements Form:
11
Visual Elements Form:
12
Visual Elements Texture:
Simulation of tactile stimuli. Texture bridges the gap between senses of sight and touch, between eye and finger
13
Visual Elements Texture:
14
Visual Elements Texture:
15
Visual Elements Texture:
16
Visual Elements Texture:
17
Visual Elements Tonality: Continuum of light to gray to dark
An expression of contrast Long range – high contrast Medium range – moderate contrast Short range - flatness
18
Visual Elements Tonality:
19
Visual Elements Tonality: Helps create atmosphere
Dark tones: mystery, intrigue, sadness or drama Light tones: light/airy, brightness, joy, thoughtlessness,
20
Visual Elements Tonality:
21
Visual Elements Tonality:
22
Visual Elements Directional forces:
Pointers within a picture that direct eye movement Leading lines
23
Visual Elements Directional forces:
24
Visual Elements Directional forces:
25
Visual Elements Directional forces:
26
Visual Elements Color:
A major visual element which we will treat separately later in the semester
27
Visual Elements Color:
28
Dot Line Shape Form Texture Tonality Directional forces Color
Visual Elements Dot Line Shape Form Texture Tonality Directional forces Color
29
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
But we also need the syntax, the blueprints How do we organize the visual elements so they cohere? How do we create the feeling of unity within a picture?
30
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
POD for photography are the syntax They are the blueprints
31
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
Balance Emphasis Economy Repetition Proportion Unity Variety
32
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
Balance Distributing the apparent weight of the visual elements prevents the work from appearing lopsided or top heavy
33
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
Balance Can be symmetrical - elements exactly the same on either side of a center line or point Mirror image/centered
34
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
Balance Can be asymmetrical - elements of different visual weights arranged to create the feel of balance using size, position, color, etc.
35
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
Balance
36
Balance:
37
Balance:
38
Balance:
39
Balance:
40
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
Emphasis Focusing on a single strong visual element, unifies a picture Also called focal point/CVI
41
Emphasis:
42
Emphasis: Emphasis using DOF Emphasis using color
43
Emphasis:
44
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
Emphasis Emphasis is often achieved through Placement in the frame Contrast of shape Contrast of value (color, tone) Scale (relationship b/w size of an image and of its surrounds) Light Angle
45
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
Economy Eliminating everything not necessary to communicate the information and create the effect. This clarifies and strengthens the message.
46
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
Economy Economy involves the viewer in the creative experience. The less an artist shows us, the more of ourselves we have to bring to a design to give it meaning
47
Economy:
48
Economy:
49
Economy:
50
Economy:
51
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
Repetition Repeating visual elements: lines, forms, textures, etc., creates a powerful attraction Pattern
52
Repetition:
53
Repetition:
54
Repetition:
55
Repetition:
56
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
Proportion Arranging the size relationships of visual elements to each other and the to the whole picture so that they are pleasing. This is often an emotional response.
57
Proportion: One proportion often cited is the “golden rectangle”
Photographers often translate this as the “rule of thirds”
58
Proportion: Golden Rectangle
An image ratio (width vs.. the height) that makes the most pleasing, balanced impression on the viewer. Panoramas are long and skinny; square negatives often make it hard for the viewer to recognize the central focus of a composition. A 35mm format is pretty close to a golden rectangle.
59
Proportion: Rule of thirds:
60
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
Unity Arranging the elements and using the other principles of design so the picture coheres - feels like it all belongs together. It becomes a balanced, harmonious, complete whole. Elements have a clear visual relationship to other elements. Not cluttered or confusing. Elements aren’t competing with each other.
61
Unity:
62
Unity:
63
Unity:
64
Today: Principles of Design for Photography (BEER-PUV)
Variety Changing visual elements adds interest Precise repetition runs the risk of boring the viewer. Slight variations on a central theme, or strong contrasts to that theme, are effective
65
Variety:
66
Variety:
67
Major ideas today: The visual elements and POD are not merely descriptive They do carry content But they also are expressive, convey emotion
68
Major ideas today: 4. Often this emotion is registered on a subliminal level, not a conscious level. 5. But it is still a part of our reaction to any image.
69
Major ideas today: 6. But the same content can be expressed with altered visual elements to create an entirely different emotional response and, consequently, a different meaning.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.