Sir, I'm really confused - when I try to learn design principles, I understand what they are and how they work. But when I'm creating my own design, I'm unsure how to implement these principles and which one to use when. Cloud you please make a video how to implement all these principles
Designs should have a practical brief - for example, I need an ergonomic remote control for a TV set that appeals to young women - it should be made from sustainable materials and lightweight... etc etc.. your designing for the client so design principles should not get in the way of the design though should be in the back of your mind.
Another solution is to start drawing what's in your mind first THEN you judge them by the principle THEN you had corrections THEN go back to evaluating the results until you are satisfied or run out of options or time (deadlines) ITERATION is key, I can go up to hundreds of sketch before finding something great, also you don't have to answer everything at once, only one or two considerations at a time, that's why most people do sketch for composition, then do values, and then add colors. Generally start with functions and general shapes, then finish with aesthetics and details. It's just easier to find what doesn't works than what works, so you start with what doesn't until you eliminate them and corner triangulate what works.
Sir, I'm really confused - when I try to learn design principles, I understand what they are and how they work. But when I'm creating my own design, I'm unsure how to implement these principles and which one to use when. Cloud you please make a video how to implement all these principles
Designs should have a practical brief - for example, I need an ergonomic remote control for a TV set that appeals to young women - it should be made from sustainable materials and lightweight... etc etc.. your designing for the client so design principles should not get in the way of the design though should be in the back of your mind.
@ Thanks ❤️
Another solution is to start drawing what's in your mind first THEN you judge them by the principle THEN you had corrections THEN go back to evaluating the results until you are satisfied or run out of options or time (deadlines) ITERATION is key, I can go up to hundreds of sketch before finding something great, also you don't have to answer everything at once, only one or two considerations at a time, that's why most people do sketch for composition, then do values, and then add colors. Generally start with functions and general shapes, then finish with aesthetics and details. It's just easier to find what doesn't works than what works, so you start with what doesn't until you eliminate them and corner triangulate what works.
@ Thank you 😊 I’ll try it hope it will work ❤️