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Principles of Design

This document provides an overview of 9 principles of design: 1) Balance, 2) Emphasis, 3) Movement, 4) Pattern, 5) Repetition, 6) Unity, 7) Proportion, 8) Rhythm, and 9) Variety. For each principle, it provides a brief definition and examples of how that principle can be applied. Multiple choice questions are included to test understanding of each design principle.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
20 views

Principles of Design

This document provides an overview of 9 principles of design: 1) Balance, 2) Emphasis, 3) Movement, 4) Pattern, 5) Repetition, 6) Unity, 7) Proportion, 8) Rhythm, and 9) Variety. For each principle, it provides a brief definition and examples of how that principle can be applied. Multiple choice questions are included to test understanding of each design principle.

Uploaded by

Sams Vimal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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NAME 


CLASS : 
Principles of Design
9 Questions DATE  : 

1. This Principle of Design is the distribution of the visual weight of


objects, colors, texture, and space. If the design was a scale,
these elements should be balanced to make a design feel stable.
Symmetrical, asymmetrical, radial balance are examples of this
principle. 

A Movement B Pattern

C Emphasis D Balance

2. This Principle of Design catches the viewer’s attention. Usually


the artist will make one area stand out by contrasting it with
other areas. The area could be different in size, color, texture,
shape, etc. 

A Movement B Emphasis

C Balance D Repetition

3. This Principle of Design is the path the viewer’s eye takes through
the work of art, often to focal areas. It can be directed along lines,
edges, shape, and color within the work of art. 

A Unity B Emphasis

C Movement D Repetition
4. This Principle of Design is the repeating of an object or symbol all
over the work of art.

A Repetition B Balance

C Emphasis D Pattern

5. This Principle of Design make the work of art seem active. The
replication of elements of design creates unity within the work of
art. 

A Proportion B Variety

C Repetition D Rhythm

6. This Principle of Design is the feeling of harmony between all


parts of the work of art, which creates a sense of completeness. 

A Unity B Rhythm

C Balance D Repetition
7. This Principle of Design uses several elements of design to hold
the viewer’s attention and to guide the viewer’s eye through and
around the work of art. 

A Variety B Unity

C Movement D Proportion

8. This Principle of Design is the feeling of unity created when all


parts (sizes, amounts, or number) relate well with each other. It
can refer to the size of the head in relationship to the rest of the
body, for instance.

A Rhythm B Emphasis

C Proportion D Variety

9. The Principle of Design is created when one or more elements of


design are used repeatedly to create a feeling of organized
movement. It creates a mood like music or dancing. To keep this
principle exciting and active, variety is essential.

A Repetition B Variety

C Pattern D Rhythm

Answer Key

1. d 2. b 3. c 4. d

5. c 6. a 7. a 8. c

9. d

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