Elements of Design
Line
Line is the most basic building block of formal analysis. Line can be used to create more complex shapes or to lead your eye from one area in the composition to another. The red railing on both sides of the stair case leads the eye down the stairs, toward the top of the picture.
Shape
Shapes are created when lines are combined to form a square, triangle, or
circle. Shapes can be organic (irregular shapes found in nature) or
geometric (shapes with strong lines and angles such as circles,
triangles, and squares). There are two different shapes in the shapes, the square packaging of a poptart and then two circles of the vending machine holding the poptart in place.
Form
Forms are three-dimensional shapes with length, width, and depth. Balls, cylinders, boxes and pyramids are forms. This column in the picture is a cylinder that reflects form.
Value
Value is the degree of light and dark in a design. It is the contrast
between black and white and all the tones in between. Value can be used
with color as well as black and white. Contrast is the extreme changes
between values. Where the walls connect, the degree of black and white is very strong, and looking to the right, the contrast changes in a small degree.
Color
Space
Space is the area between and around objects. Increasing or decreasing the amount of space around an object affects the way we view that object. The space between the lockers are smaller towards the page resulting in the eye looking at the row of lockers.
Texture







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