TH - 13 Visual Design Building Blocks
TH - 13 Visual Design Building Blocks
• Color lets you set the mood and helps you to tell a story.
In a visualization of drone strike victims in Pakistan, Pitch
Interactive uses red drops very effectively. The
association of red with the color of blood makes it work.
• When Professor Klaus Schulte created a visualization of
how Germans have dominated the Olympic sport of
Luge, he used the black, red and yellow of the German
flag. The blocks of color were immediately recognizable.
Choosing your colors
• Neil Patel reports that 52% of the time, poor color choice and other inferior design
choices make users leave a website and never go back. In data visualization, colors
have the same effect and choosing the right colors is very important. Choosing your
colors depends on various factors and aesthetics, testing and science should all play
a part.
• Your Target Audience: You need to know who they are, what they care about and
how they will be affected by the colors you choose. For example, color means
different things in different cultures.
• Derek Morgan, a writer at essayshark reviews, says he was surprised to discover
just how different the perception is of the color yellow in different cultures. In
Japan, yellow is associated with courage but in certain parts of China, it can have
vulgar connotations.
• Color perceptions are influenced by age, race, social class, religion and gender.
Researching the cultural associations of your target audience with each color is
important.
Choosing your colors
• Appropriateness: Certain colors are more appropriate to
some industries than to others. Sometimes, colors just feel
wrong to us because they don’t match our expectations.
• For instance, we don’t expect to see financial institutions
using bright yellow or orange. We don’t expect to see
landscaping companies using these colors either.
• Influence overall feel and give depth: Using the right colors is important to get your
viewers feeling how you want them to feel about your data. Colors can create a
cheerful mood or convey a sense of calmness. They can evoke feelings of creativity,
purity or sophistication.
• Make important elements stand out: Using the same colors for everything is not
only dull and uninteresting but is also confusing to viewers. Color helps you to
highlight the most important aspects of your message and simplify complex graphs.
• By using contrasting colors, such as blue and orange, if you’re comparing two data
sets, you can simplify data and help viewers to see the big picture. Using gray for less
important chart elements can make highlight colors stand out more.
• Use contrasting colors to make data jump out and grab attention. For example, if you
want to emphasize a piece of data in a bar graph, you will make it bright red in a sea
of gray.
Improve data visualization by using color
• Create contrast: Using a great range of colors is no good if viewers can’t read
the data. You want to make sure that viewers are able to read your data on
their screens, even if you use light colors like gray.
• This is especially important for text as the smaller it is, the higher the
contrast to the background needs to be for it to be readable.
• Avoid using bright colors for backgrounds. Consider giving small lines a high
contrast in hue or brightness so they are easy to distinguish. Testing a
presentation on a projector before giving a presentation is important
because the colors may look quite different from those on your laptop
screen or phone.
Improve data visualization by using color
• Use colors consistently: If you have certain variables that you repeat across
different sets of data, you should use the same colors where possible. A
sense of consistency helps viewers to relate.
• Use gradients when you can: Gradients offer a great way to compare and
contrast data and feel natural when viewers see them. If a gradient indicates
a scale of low to high, light colors should represent the low values and
darker colors, the high values. This is intuitive for the audience.
• Having unrelated colors can make data more difficult to read. If you’re
unsure about using gradients but want to try your hand, you could try using
the ColorBrewer palettes.
Improve data visualization by using color
• Using color strategically is more than just choosing what
looks good to you. You should never select colors
because you think they are trendy or cool or they’re the
colors you always favor.
• You need to choose them carefully by understanding the
meaning behind them, taking your audience into
consideration and knowing what’s appropriate for your
brand. The value of picking the right colors for your data
visualization should never be underestimated.
Color
• Colour is an element of light. Colour theory is
a branch of design focused on the mixing and
usage of different colours in design and art.
• In colour theory, an important distinction
exists between colours that mix subtractively
and colours that mix additively.
• In paint, colours mix subtractively because the
pigments in paints absorb light.
• When different pigments are mixed together, the
mixture absorbs a wider range of light, resulting in a
darker colour.
• A subtractive mix of cyan, magenta and yellow will
result in a black colour.
• A subtractive mix of colours in paint and print
produces the CMYK (i.e., Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and
blacK) colour system.
• In digital design, where the product shows up on a
screen, colours mix additively, since the screen emits
light and colours add to one another accordingly.
• When different colours are mixed together on a
screen, the mixture emits a wider range of light,
resulting in a lighter colour.
• An additive mix of red, blue and green colours on
screens will produce white light. An additive mix of
colours on digital screens produces the RGB
(i.e., Red, Green, Blue) colour system.
• The subtractive mix of colours in paint and
print produces the CMYK colour system. The
additive mix of colours on digital screens
produces the RGB colour system.
• Use colours in visual design to convey
emotions in and add variety and interest to
our designs, separate distinct areas of a page,
and differentiate our work from the
competition.
Texture
• Texture is the surface quality of an object.
Around 2011, Apple introduced a widespread use of linen texture (which first appeared on
iOS) in all of its operating systems.
Principles of Design
• The elements of visual design — line, shape,
negative/white space, volume, value, colour
and texture — describe the building blocks of a
product’s aesthetics.
• On the other hand, the principles of design tell
us how these elements can and should go
together for the best results.
• Many of the principles below are closely related
and complement one another.
• Partner and chief research and development officer at
the Applied Management Sciences Institute William
Lidwell, in his landmark and widely referenced
book Universal Principles of Design, explains: