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Design Balance 101: How to Use Symmetry & Asymmetry

For advertisers, a symmetrical design is suitable for projects such as invites to events or coupon sales. But if used on more innovative items, it may appear repetitive.

Asymmetrical designs can elicit sensations of movement & look more contemporary than symmetrical designs, but it can be harder & less simple to create associations between the different elements of the design.

It is important to note that asymmetrical equilibrium is still strategic — the haphazard placement of shapes around a page will not create a compelling composition. You will need to work out how to balance out the picture to make a good asymmetrical design.

For example, The Starry Night of Vincent van Gogh uses a prominent visual, the light, in the upper right. And contrasts it out with a dark cypress tree in the lower left. If Van Gogh put both the sun and the tree on the right side of the page. It would not be a successful asymmetrical balance.

Asymmetric balance is where you have two opposite sides of a pattern & have unequally positioned visual weight & yet you have always achieved a sense of balance. It stimulates a feeling of modernism & movement. Symmetric balance, on the other hand, is when, on either side of a central point of the axis. You have two identical sides of the design with equal weight. It evokes a sense of structure and formality.

Examples of Balance in Graphic Design

  • Airbnb

  • Google

  • Apple

  • InClean

  • Hallo



This post first appeared on Draftss, please read the originial post: here

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Design Balance 101: How to Use Symmetry & Asymmetry

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