Elements of Design

Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 88

ELEMENTS

OF
DESIGN...... EEEE
Interior design is "the art or
process of designing the interior
decoration of a room or building“
 An interior designer is someone
who coordinates and manages such
projects.
Interior design is a multifaceted
profession that includes conceptual
development, communicating with the
stakeholders of a project and the
management and execution of the design.

sr
3
 In the past, interiors were put together
instinctively as a part of the process of
building.
 The profession of interior design has been a
consequence of the development of society
and the complex architecture that has
resulted from the development of industrial
processes.
 In ancient India, architects used to work as
interior designers.
 This can be seen from the references of
Vishwakarma the architect - one of the gods
in Indian mythology.
 The interior design profession became more
established after World War II.

sr 4
 The elements of design are the
fundamental building blocksof any
composition.
 These pieces work together to form
a unified composition, and when
utilized successfully, create a strong,
dynamic visual layout.
 The designer uses these elements
as tools that control how a message
is delivered to an audience.
 These principles can be applied to
fine art, photography and graphic
design.

4
sr
5
sr
form

LIN line

E
Space

Shape
shapes
Form space

Texture colour

Color

sr texture 7
sr 8
 One of most important element of design, line defines a subjectʼs form or shape on a flat, two-
dimensional surface.
 Lines can be thick or thin, smooth or jagged, rigid and mechanical or organic and handdrawn.
 When discussing line as it applies to interior design, we mean the lines created by the furnishings
and architecture of a room.
 Line sets form and shape.
 Line is responsible for harmony, contrast and unity in interior design.
 Line can be used to show movement and guides the eye throughout a room.
 Line can be used to show mood.
 Lines can be used to convey a sense of strength, serenity, gracefulness, or action.
 Combining lines and placing them in a design in certain ways can create specific effects and feelings.
 The use of line can also have an effect on how space is perceived.
 Different types of lines have different effects on design.
a mark, or stroke that is longer then it is wide. It is the path of a pointmoving
in space. Objects and things are perceived by the line that describes them.

Characteristics of line include:


Width - thick, thin, tapering, uneven
Length - long, short, continuous, broken
Direction - horizontal, vertical, diagonal, curving, perpendicular, oblique,
parallel, radial, zig-zag
Focus - sharp, blurry, fuzzy, choppy
Feeling - sharp, jagged, graceful, smooth ... can you think ofothers?

sr 9
sr 10
The difference in line quality have created works with very different impact. How you use line is very important
while creating someartwork.

sr 11
sr 1
3
VERTICAL LINES
Vertical lines lead the eye up,
 adding height
 formality
 growth
 spirituality
 grandeur
 strength to a design.

Can be seen in:


 Tall furniture

 Columns

 Pillars This drawing room displays the use of vertical line.


 Stripedwallpaper The example that stands out the most in this image
 Long narrow draperies is the glass window. Vertical line is also shown in
the columns.
sr 14
The back
wall, glass
window,
furniture
etc. give
rise to
verticality

sr
14
•Vertical railing showing vertical lines. These
suppose to increase the height.
sr
Vertical
lines can
make
rooms
seem
more
spacious
than
they
actually
are and
ceilings
appear
higher.

sr 16
HORIZONTAL LINES
Horizontal lines lead the eye to the left or right,
suggesting informality
 calm
 peace
 gentleness
 gravity
 restfulness.

Can be seen in:


 Long, low roofs
 Long, low furniture pieces such as sofas and chests

sr
Horizontal
lines can
make
buildings,
rooms,
and
furniture
seem
wider and
shorter.
sr 19
Horizontal
lines can
make
buildings,
rooms, and
furniture
seem wider
and shorter.

sr 2
0
Horizontal
lines
depicts
calm,
peace,
and
relaxation

sr 20
DIAGONAL LINES
Diagonal lines suggest
 action,
 activity,
 movement
 excitement
 Creates a sense of speed

Can be seen in:


 Staircases

 Cathedral ceilings

 Gable Roofs

sr 21
Diagonal lines
can be
overpowering
and tiring, so
they should
be used
sparingly in
design

sr 2
3
Diagonal
lines creating
action and
excitement.

sr 24
Depicting
a sense of
action

sr 2
5
CURVED LINES
Too many curved lines create
 a busy look
 Represent freedom
 Natural
 Flow
 Appearance of softness
 A soothing feeling.

Can be seen in:


 Doorway arches

 Ruffled curtains

 Curved furniture
 Rounded accessories

 Staircases

sr 26
CURVED
LINES
CREATE
NATURAL
FLOW AND
FREEDOM.

The dynamic
nature of
diagonal
lines creates
drama and
movement
in room with
a staircase

sr 2
7
Curved line
represent
freedom
Appearance
of softness

sr 28
Curved lines add a softening, graceful effect to designs.

sr 28
sr 29
DIRECTIONAL/JAGGED LINES
Can be experienced by
 Rigid
Can be perceived as Thick lines  Dependent
 forceful
 dominating
 chaotic
 sharp
 threatening

Thin lines
Can be experienced by
 Unstable
 weak

sr 30
sr 3
2
sr 32
 Space, in two-dimensional design, is essentially flat.
 It has height and width, but no depth.
 There are certain visual cues, however, that can create the illusion of space in
the mind of the viewer.
 By using those cues, artists and designers can create images that are interpreted
as three-dimensional.
Space is the area provided for a particular purpose.
It may have two dimensions (length and width) such as a floor, or it may have three
dimensions (length, width, and height), suchas a room or dwelling.
It refers to the area that a shape or form occupies.
When space changes gradually, it is more pleasing than when it changes abruptly.
When space changes suddenly, the eye shifts from one view to the other without
making a smooth transition.

sr 33
Space can be defined
as positive or negative.
 Positive space is the filled
space, the object(s) or
element(s) in the design.
 Negative space is the empty
space, or the open space
between design elements or
objects, such as a
background.

sr 34
sr 35
Any space,
no mater
what size or
shape, can
be divided
into distinct
parts.

3
7
sr
Designers can create the illusion of
physical space and spatial relationships
through:
 Linear Perspective
 Size & Vertical Location
 Overlapping
 Detail (Aerial orAtmospheric
Perspective)

3
8
sr
Shapes that
contrast
negative and
positive space
can create the
illusion of
perspective.

Linear perspective is
based on the visual
phenomenon that as
parallel lines (such as
railroad tracks) recede
into space, they appear to
converge at a distant
point. Linear perspective
not only evokes a feeling
of great depth, but it also
creates a strong focal
point at the place where
the lines converge.
sr
•Linear perspective in a photorealistic image. 3
9
Size is one of the
easiest ways to
create the illusion of
space. A larger
image will appear
closer than a smaller
one because we
observed (very early
in life) that objects
appear to become
smaller as they get
sr farther away. 4
0
Overlapping is another easy way to suggest depth
in an image. When objects overlap each other, the
viewer perceives the one that is covering parts of
other to be in front and the one that is covered to be
in the back.
sr 40
 Atmospheric perspective uses
value, contrast and color to give the
illusion of space.
 Atmospheric perspective is based on
the fact that the farther something is
away from us, the more the
atmospheric haze may obscure our
view of it.
 By lightening the value, lowering the
value contrast, softening the edges,
decreasing detail and muting the
color, you can mimic the effect of
atmospheric haze and create the
illusion of increasing distance.
 Increasing the bluish cast of an image
also creates a sense of depth because
cool colors recede and warm colors
come forward.

sr 41
Compositional location refers to where a form is
positioned vertically in the image. The bottom is
seen as the foreground, the part of the image that
is nearest the viewer and the top as the
background, the part farthest from the viewer. The
higher an object is place in the image, the farther
back it is perceived to be.

sr 42
Too little
space can
create a
feeling of
being
exposed.

sr 43
Very large rooms designed for many people can produce a
lonely feeling when a person is alone

sr 44
Space is affected by the
number and size of
objects in it.

sr 45
Many objects scattered
throughout a room will
most likely destroy the
design effect because the
space will have no
apparent organization or
unity.

sr 46
Objects grouped into
large unitswill create a
more ordered space.

48
sr
sr 48
A shape is defined as
 a two or more dimensional area.
 All objects are composed of shapes and all other
'Elements of Design' are shapes in some way.
 Shape is a flat image with two dimensions: Length and
Width.
 Any self-contained area with defined form or outline.
 It refers to the nature of an enclosure, actual or implied,
formed by a line/curve on a flat surface.
 Examples of "shape" in this context include "a geometric
shape" (eg square), "organic shape" (flower-shaped object).
 Perceivable area.
 Shapes can be created by enclosing line, or by colorand
value changes which define edges.

sr 49
 Shape has size, which may connote
significance or insignificance, strength or
weakness.
 A coloured shape on a white back-ground is
itself a positive shape creating a negative
shape (the background)

Types of shapes
 Mechanical Shapes or Geometric Shapes
are the shapes that can be drawn using a
ruler or compass. Mechanical shapes,
whether simple or complex, produce a
feeling of control or order.[5]
 Organic Shapes are freehand drawn
shapes that are complex and normally
found in nature. Organic shapes produce a
natural feel.
sr 5
1
SHAPE
CREATING
PATTERN

Some
geometrical
shapes

sr 51
Color alone can create shapes.

sr 52
Connecting one continuous line to make a circle also creates
shape

sr 53
These are perfect geometric shapes, which are very
pleasing to the eye.

sr 54
Imperfect geometric shapes tend to create tension and attract
greater interest.

sr 55
SHAPE MAY
BE:
 Shiny and reflect
images- mirrors
 Transparent and
create visual effects
- window glass
 Textured and absorb
light and sound -
window treatments
and carpeting
 Hard or Soft
 Plain or patterned
 Colored light or dark

5
7
sr
sr 5
8
sr 58
 Form is the outlined edges of a three-dimensional
object.
 It has length, width, and depth (or height) as well
as volume and mass.
 Form can be measured, from top to bottom
(height), side to side (width), and from back to
front (depth).
 Form is also defined by light and dark.
 It can be defined by the presence of shadows on
surfaces or faces of an object.
 There are two types of form, geometric (man-
made) and natural (organic form).
 Form may be created by the combining of twoor
more shapes.
 It maybe enhanced by tone, texture and color.
 It can be illustrated or constructed.
 It has volume and mass.

59
 Organic - natural, living form.
 Inorganic or geometric - man-made, non-living
forms.
 Open-forms - forms that can be looked into.
 Closed-forms - self-contained.
 Geometric Shape - circle, square, rectangle, triangle,
pentagon, octagon, other polygons.
 Geometric Form - sphere, cube, pyramid, cone,
cylinder.
 Free-Form - any non-geometric shape: irregular,
amorphic

sr 60
 Inorganic or geometric - man-made, non-living forms.

sr 61
 Organic - natural, living form.

sr 62
 Free-Form
- any non-
geometric
shape:
irregular,
amorphic

sr 63
Related
forms
tend to
look
better
together
than
unrelate
d forms.

6
5
sr
 Open-forms - forms thatcan be looked into.

sr 65
A room is more pleasing if the form of the dominate piece is
repeated in minor pieces and accessories in a room.

sr 66
OTHER EXAMPLES OF FORMS ARE FOUND IN
FURNITUREAND ARCHITECTURE

Large, heavy forms provide stability to a design scheme.

Thin, delicate forms appear fragile, even


when built of sturdymaterials
sr 6
8
sr 68
 It is the surface quality or appearance of an object.
 Texture can be used to enhance a room’s features or
provide added dimension.
 The element of texture is defined as “the feel,
appearance, or consistency of a surface.”
 Texture is a surface’s tactile quality.
 Tactile refers to the perception of touch.

Types
 Visual texture is a quality of the surface that you can ‘see’,
but not necessarily ‘felt’.
 Actual texture is a quality of the surface that you can both
‘see’ and ‘feel’.

sr 69
TEXTURE MAY BE :
 rough/smooth,
 wet/dry,
 hard/soft,
 shiny/matte (dull),
 slick/sticky,
 slippery/abrasive,
 coarse/porous ...

sr 71
In
design,
texture
appeals
to sight
as well
as
touch.

7
2
sr
A room with the same texture throughout is monotonous, but
too many different textures can appear disjointed and
distracting.

7
3
sr
Most well-designed rooms have a dominate texture with
accents of contrasting textures.

sr 74
Often patterns or colors are used to create the illusion of
texture.

sr 74
ROUGH SURFACES ABSORB MORE LIGHT, MAKING THEM
LOOK DARKER AND LESS INTENSE.

Smooth surfaces reflect more light than rough surfaces, making


them look lighter and brighter.
s 75
sr 76
 Color is the key element of interior design.
 It is used to create aesthetically pleasing combinations and
also works on a psychological level.
 Each color has three characteristics: hue, value, and
intensity.
 It can give emphasis to create a hierarchy and the piece of
art
 Colour Saturation gives a color brightness or dullness.
 Colour may connote emotion (excitement, rage, peace)
and stimulate brain activity (action, relaxation,
concentration).
 Light is additive – working towards white.
 Paint or pigment is subtractive – working towards black.
 Mixing red blue and yellow can create any pigment colour.
 Tints are made when white is added to a pure hue tomake
light values.
 A Shade is when black is added to a pure hue to make
dark values.
sr 77
 Hue is the name of a color.

 Red, green and blue-violet are examples of hues.

 A color may be lightened or darkened, brightened or dulled,


but the hue will remain thesame.
 Colour is said to have value, which refers to the lightness or
darkness of the colour (hue).
 Tint (colour plus white) is high-value colour, whereas shade
(colour plus black) is low value colour

sr 78
 Primary colors arehues from which all other colors
can be made: red, yellow, blue.

Secondary colors are made from mixing equal


parts of the Primary colors: orange, green, violet.
 Tertiary colors are those colors between Primary and
Secondary colors: yellow-orange, red-orange, etc.
 Complementary colors are colors that are opposite
each other on the color wheel: red-green, orange-
blue, yellow-violet.

 Analogous colors are colors that are adjacent (side by


side) to each other on the color wheel.
 Monochromatic colors are variations in value of one
color by adding either white to make tints or black to
make shades.
sr 79
sr 80
INTENSITY  refers to the brightness or dullness of a color.
 Intensity is the brightness or dullness of a hue.
 Adding some of its compliment can lower the
intensity of a hue. The compliment of a hue is the
color directly opposite it on a standard color wheel.
 Examples of high intensity colors include hot pink and
fire-engine red. Low intensity colors include rust and
smoky blue.

Colors have degrees of transparency


 A color is Transparent if the viewer can see
clearly through it.
 A color is translucent if it admits light but the
image is diffused and can not be seen clearly.
 A color is opaque if it can't be seen through.

Descriptors: brilliant, medium, dull.


sr 81
 Value is the lightness or
darkness of a hue.
 The value of a hue can be
made lighter by adding white.
This produces a tint.
 Pink is a tint of red, made by
adding white to red.
 A hue can be made darker by
adding black. This produces a
shade.
 Maroon is a shade of red.

Google knows how to apply colour in a way that not only


enforces their brand, but also to create a fun and interesting
working environment that benefits their employees.
sr 82
The offices of Octavian Advisors utilizes a monochromatic
colour scheme, except for the bright green elevator
entrances. This is an effective way of using colour for way
finding.

The Red Prime Steak restaurant takes advantage of colour


psychology by using the colour red to increase appetites.

sr 83
This carpet adds a pop a colour and also provides a sense of
direction within the space

Colour can be applied to surfaces or as light tocreate


sr interested and dynamic spaces. 85
Color schemes look best when one color dominates.
Dominate color should cover about two-thirds of the room
area.

sr 85
sr 86
TINTS AND
TONES
ADD
INTERESTS
AND
BREAKS
MONOTO
NY.

sr 8
8
THANK YOU......

AR.AKRUTHI SHUKLA

You might also like