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Using the Principles of Design on your Skateboard

Using the Principles of Design on your Skateboard. Emphasis Rhythm and Movement. Emphasis a principle of design that helps you focus you eye to a specific area in your work. You can achieve this by ………. Rule of Thirds. Can you see how this artist used the rule of thirds?.

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Using the Principles of Design on your Skateboard

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  1. Using the Principles of Design on your Skateboard Emphasis Rhythm and Movement

  2. Emphasis a principle of design that helps you focus you eye to a specific area in your work. You can achieve this by ………..

  3. Rule of Thirds

  4. Can you see how this artist used the rule of thirds?

  5. Centering the object

  6. Using bright colours against a dark or busy background o

  7. By using complementary or contrasting colour

  8. Using Leading Lines

  9. Isolation

  10. To Review Emphasis can be achieved by • Using the rule of thirds • Centering your main object • By using bright/light objects over a busy/dark background • By using complementary colours • By using leading lines • Through isolation

  11. Rhythm and Movement • Rhythm is the repetition of visual movement of colors, shapes or lines. It shows that the design has a 'beat' or 'flow' going with it. There are many different kinds of rhythm

  12. Rhythms can random, regular, alternating, progressive, and flowing.

  13. What type of movement or rhythm is this?

  14. What type of movement or rhythm is this?

  15. What type of movement or rhythm is this?

  16. What type of movement or rhythm is this?

  17. What type of Rhythm is this?

  18. Line and Dot Exercise

  19. Dot Examples Use only two colors per design (keep it simple). Dots must be round and colored solid. Dots within each design should vary in size (change can be sudden or gradual but is important for providing contrast, thereby avoiding "chicken tracking"). Dots may "follow the leader," touch, overlap, stack on top of each other, run off the edge of the paper

  20. Line Examples Use only two or three colors per design. Lines should begin thin, grow in thickness and return to a thin line again...or run off the paper (so they remain lines instead of becoming shapes). Lines should vary in length (short, medium, long) and may expand/contract in any form or direction. Lines may be straight, curved, zigzag, twist; cross over, build on top of or weave under and through each other

  21. Combination Designs Look for new ways that dots and/or lines can be drawn or interact with each other and still remain dots and lines.

  22. Creating Deck Design Choose the best three of your action/motion line/dot rectangles. Adding more lines, shapes, color to further develop the appearance of action/motion. You may only have 3-4 colours but can change the values to create more contrast. Each one should be unique. Be creative!

  23. Student Examples

  24. Student Examples

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  27. Student Examples

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