65 Design Terms You Should Know | FREE COURSE
65 Graphic Design Terms You Should Know
Introduction to Graphic Design Language
- Laura Kyung introduces the course, emphasizing the importance of understanding design terminology for effective communication in visual work.
- The course will cover essential, complex, and often misused design terms, including basic concepts like composition and technical terms such as dpi and ppi.
Essential Design Principles
- The lesson focuses on 10 fundamental design principle terms that are crucial for creating effective compositions.
- Composition: Also known as layout; it refers to the visual arrangement of elements to create a complete image using various design principles.
- Balance: Refers to the visual weight of elements affected by form, size, color, and texture; achieving balance may require scaling certain elements.
- Alignment: The positioning of elements within a layout; can be left-aligned, right-aligned, or centered for cohesive organization.
- Repetition: Creates consistency by repeating elements within a layout (e.g., page numbers).
Additional Design Concepts
- Contrast: Differentiation between design elements that establishes visual hierarchies through variations in form, color, texture, and size.
- Negative Space: The blank area around design elements used to emphasize specific parts of a layout.
- Hierarchy: Arranging elements based on importance; contrast is key in establishing hierarchy.
Symmetry and Grids
- Symmetry vs. Asymmetry: Symmetry involves equal distribution of elements across a central line while asymmetry creates an unbalanced look with unequal distributions.
- Grid: A structure formed by intersecting vertical and horizontal lines that helps organize content effectively.
Important Color Definitions
Understanding Color Models
- This section covers 11 important color definitions relevant in graphic design due to its complexity.
- CMYK vs. RGB:
- CMYK (Cyan Magenta Yellow Key/Black): Used for printing; subtractive color model resulting in less vibrant colors compared to RGB.
- RGB (Red Green Blue): Used for screens; additive model allowing broader color range through combinations.
Key Color Concepts
- Grayscale: A monochromatic palette consisting of different shades of gray up to 256 combinations per image.
- Opacity: Refers to transparency levels; lower opacity means more transparency while 100% opacity indicates solid visibility.
Saturation and Hue
- Saturation: Intensity level of a color; saturated images appear brighter while desaturated ones seem duller.
- Hue, Tone, and Tint/Shade:
- Hue describes pure colors without tint or shade (e.g., blue).
- Tone is hue mixed with gray reducing intensity.
- Tint adds white making colors lighter while shade adds black darkening them.
Color Palette & Pantone System
- A color palette consists of selected colors harmonizing for specific projects or brands.
Understanding Key Design Terms
Technical Terms in Graphic Design
- Resolution: The resolution of an image determines its quality; high-resolution images are crisp with defined edges, while low-resolution images appear pixelated and blurry.
- Pixels: A pixel is the smallest unit of color on a computer that composes images. The number of pixels affects whether an image is high or low resolution.
- PPI vs. DPI: PPI (pixels per inch) measures screen resolution, while DPI (dots per inch) pertains to printing quality, indicating how printers create images using small dots.
- Cropping vs. Closed Crop: Cropping removes unnecessary parts of an image, altering its emphasis and composition. Closed crop refers to trimming size guided by crop marks on printed sheets.
- Rule of Thirds: This compositional guideline uses a 3x3 grid overlaying an image where intersecting lines indicate focal points for placing important elements.
Typography Essentials
Important Typography Terms
- Serif vs. Sans Serif: Serifs are small strokes at the ends of characters; serif typefaces enhance readability in body text, while sans-serif fonts lack these details and are preferred for screen use.
- Script Fonts: These typefaces mimic handwriting and can be historical or modern, often used for display purposes due to their fluidity compared to traditional fonts.
- Slab Serif Fonts: Characterized by thicker serifs than regular serif fonts, slab serifs can be square, angular, or rounded depending on the design style.
- Monospace Fonts: Each character occupies the same horizontal space in monospace fonts; commonly seen in typewriters and coding environments.
- Kerning vs. Tracking: Kerning adjusts space between specific letter pairs to improve legibility, whereas tracking applies spacing adjustments across groups of letters.
Font Design Concepts
Key Aspects of Font Design
- Leading: Refers to the vertical space between lines of text ensuring readability without lines touching each other.
- Weight in Font Design: Weight indicates the thickness relative to height; typefaces typically come in various weights from normal to bold.
- Point Size Measurement: Font size is measured in points; there are 72 points per inch (2.54 cm), dictating character height visually on a page.
- Uppercase vs. Lowercase Characters: Uppercase letters start sentences or proper nouns (historically stored in upper drawers), while lowercase letters make up most text blocks (stored in lower drawers).
- Small Caps & Placeholder Text (Lorem Ipsum): Small caps are shorter uppercase characters matching lowercase heights; Lorem Ipsum serves as placeholder text during design mock-ups before final content is available.
Readability and Typesetting Challenges
Understanding Readability Issues
- Readability vs. Legibility: Readability concerns how text blocks are arranged on a page, while legibility focuses on distinguishing individual characters from one another.
- Widows and Orphans in Typesetting:
- A widow is a short line at the end of a paragraph causing excessive white space.
- An orphan is a single word or short line at the beginning of a column/page disrupting flow.
Logo Design Styles What Are the Key Logo Design Styles?
Overview of Logo Design Styles
- There are several different styles of logos, each with its own purpose and strengths. This lesson covers eight essential logo design styles.
Types of Logo Designs
- Letter Mark (Monogram): A type-based logo made from a few letters, often using initials to simplify a company's name composed of two or more words.
- Word Mark: Focuses solely on the business name without reducing it to initials, emphasizing the full name for brand recognition.
- Pictorial Mark (Brand Mark): A graphic-based logo that uses an icon simplified and stylized to represent a brand visually.
- Abstract Mark: Unlike pictorial marks, abstract marks do not depict real objects but use geometric shapes to symbolize a business.
- Emblem: Contains the business name within a single shape; commonly used by schools and sports teams as well as in corporate branding.
- Mascot Logos: Feature stylized characters that can be animated, serving as brand spokespersons and enhancing engagement.
- Combination Mark: Merges elements of word marks with pictorial or abstract marks or mascots; layout varies based on design elements.
- Favicon: A shortcut icon derived from the primary logo used for website branding and sometimes as social media profile pictures.
Image File Formats What Are Essential Image File Formats?
Understanding Raster Images
- Raster images consist of grid pixels forming an entire image. Stretching these images results in pixelation and blurriness due to their fixed resolution.
Common Image File Formats
- GIF: Stands for Graphic Interchange Format; supports animation and transparency but limited to 256 colors, making it suitable for small web files.
- JPEG: The most widely recognized raster file format (Joint Photographic Experts Group); ideal for web and print but lacks transparency capabilities.
- PNG: Portable Network Graphics maintain quality during compression; created to enhance GIF's quality while supporting transparency.
- TIFF: Tagged Image File Format is primarily used in layout design applications like InDesign, producing higher-quality images than other formats.
Vector Graphics Explained
- PSD Files: Adobe Photoshop Document format allows layered editing in Photoshop projects.
- Vector Graphics: Composed of points, lines, and curves defined by mathematical equations; they can be resized without losing quality unlike raster images.
Additional Vector Formats
- AI Files: Adobe Illustrator format representing single-page vector drawings designed specifically for scalable graphics.
- EPS Files: Encapsulated PostScript is resizable containing vectors mainly used for logos allowing scalability across various projects.
Course Summary
Recap of Key Concepts