Slide 2:
Line Horizontal: indicates resting and gravity
Vertical: indicates spirituality and looking upward
Diagonal: indicate movement or direction
Curves: indicate a sense of flow and softness Represents a point between two paths. Types of Lines
Slide 3:
Form & Shape 2 dimensional
3 dimensional
organic
geometric
realistic
abstract
Slide 4:
Movement Literal: How an object literally moves.
Compositional: How the viewer’s eyes move across an image.
Slide 5:
Color Hue: refers to the names of the primary colors, red, green and blue. Value: lightness and darkness of the color - the amount of white or black added. Intensity: the purity or saturation of the color Monochromatic color: use of one color where only the value of the color changes Analogous colors: colors that are adjacent to each other on the color wheel, e.g. yellow and green
Slide 6:
Pattern and Texture Pattern: a repeating form: branching, spiral, flowing Texture: How something feels through the sense of touch either literally or remembered: rough, smooth, soft, wet, etc.
Slide 7:
Rhythm Repetition
Alternation
Slide 8:
Emphasis Repetition: repeating an object can make it stand out to the viewer.
Contrast: a contrast of color, shape, texture, or size will make an object stand out as well.
Placement: prominent placement of an object can make it stand out.