Ch 9 Principles of Design Flashcards

1
Q

The arrangement of elements in a composition to achieve visual equilibrium.

A

Balance

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2
Q

What does balance depend on?

A

The idea of visual weight. It also depends on both object (weight) and placement.

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3
Q

What are some ways objects or elements vary in visual weight?

A

Large objects are heavier than small objects of the same form, shape, color and texture; Highly textured or detailed elements are heavier than plain elements; Dark elements are heavier than lightly shaded elements; Bright colors carry more “weight” than neutral colors; Complex or unusual shapes weight more than simple shapes; Several small objects closely grouped can balance a single object with the same area.

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4
Q

What do all visual compositions have?

A

A balance point or axis or a field within which the balancing takes place.

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5
Q

What are the three types of balance?

A

Symmetricial, Asymmetrical, and Radial (in most interior designs they are used together,but one will have dominance)

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6
Q

What type of balance consists of identical elements arranged equally about a common axis.

A

Symmetrical Balance - This is also called bisymmetrical, bilateral or axial symmetry.

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7
Q

What type of balance is very stable and connotes formality?

A

Symmetrical Balance

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8
Q

The perception of symmetry is most likely to occur when elements are symmetrical about what axis?

A

Vertical

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9
Q

What type of balance depends on equalizing the visual, or optical, weights of nonsimilar elements in a composition within a visual field or about a common axis.

A

Asymmetrical Balance

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10
Q

What type of balance is considered informal and dynamic?

A

Asymmetrical Balance

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11
Q

A type of symmetrical balance in which elements are arranged uniformly about a central point.

A

Radial Balance

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12
Q

What type of balance focuses attention on the center of the grouping?

A

Radial Symmetry

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13
Q

In a composition, it is the agreement of the parts to each other and to the whole.

A

Harmony

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14
Q

How is harmony most often achieved?

A

By relating a number of different elements through a common characteristic.

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15
Q

_________ can be achieved by grouping the elements close together, by relating them to a common architectural element, or by organizing them around a shared design feature.

A

Harmony

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16
Q

_______ & _______ can also be achieved by using a common shape in varying sizes and textures.

A

Harmony & Unity

17
Q

While ______ seeks to achieve a unity of appearance in which everything belongs, some ______ is required to prevent the composition from becoming dull and monotonous.

A

Harmony; Variety

18
Q

The repetition of elements in a regular pattern, setting up a sequence of multiple elements in a space.

A

Rhythm

19
Q

What design principle has elements following a common baseline, either physically or an imaginary line to tie things together?

A

Rhythm

20
Q

What is the simplest kind of rhythm?

A

The uniform repetition of identical objects.

21
Q

What are more complex kinds of rhythm?

A

Irregular spacing, emphasizing or changing elements and regular intervals, and uniformly increasing or decreasing the size of the elements.

22
Q

An important type of rhythm where the size, color or value of design elements are gradually modified as the elements repeat.

A

Graduation

23
Q

This can be given to an element by its size, color, shape, or texture, or in any way that creates a noticeable contrast between it and surroundings.

A

Emphasis

24
Q

The juxtaposition of dissimilar elements.

A

Contrast

25
Q

Good _______ ________ is a balance between harmony, or the unity of a space, and the liveliness and interest created by emphasis and contrast.

A

Interior Design

26
Q

What is a dramatic way to create contrast?

A

Lighting

27
Q

What is the maximum brightness ratio between the task surface and its background for critical visual tasks?

A

3 to 1

28
Q

What is the maximum brightness ratio between the task and the surrounding surfaces of the room (it is not desirable to work on a bright surface in a dark room).

A

5 to 1

29
Q

What should bright lighting be limited to?

A

Highlighting paintings, sculptures or other small accent pieces.

30
Q

The relationship between one part of an object or composition and another part and to the whole, or between one element and another. It is not dependent on the relationship of one element to another of known size, such as the human body.

A

Proportion

31
Q

__________, by definition, is relative, and is also a matter of judgement and situation, and for interior designers it is dependent on the 3D relationship of object and space.

A

Proportion

32
Q

Describe the Golden Ratio.

A

The most well known ideal proportioning system in which a single line is divided into two unequal segments such that the ratio of the smaller part is to the larger part as the larger part is to the whole. When translated to a rectangle, it becomes the golden section. The ratio is an irrational number designated by the Greek letter phi, equal to approximately 1.618.

33
Q

What is the Golden Section?

A

The golden ratio applied to a rectangle. Since the time of the Greeks, the golden section has been believed to be the most pleasing proportion possible and has been found to occur repeatedly in nature as well as in human-formed structures, artwork, and musical harmony.

34
Q

Fibonacci Series

A

A sequence of numbers beginning with 0 and 1. Each successive number in the series is the sum of the previous two. It begins as: 0,1,1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89 ….. When any number is divided by the previous term, the quotient approximates the golden ratio, and as the number get larger, the quotient gets closer to the value of the golden ratio.

35
Q

A well-known proportioning system developed by the architect LeCorbusier, and is loosely based on the golden section but uses the human body as a starting point. The system begins by dividing the height of a man (about 6’) at the waistline or navel. Another proportion is developed by the distance from the top of the head to the fingertips when the arm is naturally raised about the head. From these three dimensions and proportions, all the others are developed. The distance from the bottom of the feet to the navel (aout 44”) is equal to the distance from the navel to the tip of the raised hand. The dimension from the navel to the raised hand divided by the dimensions from the top of the head to the raised hand is approximately equal to the golden section. From these main dimensions of 44”, 72” and 88”, LeCorbusier developed two series, the red series and the blue series, each with 10 numbers.

A

Modulor System