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Graphic Design is Emotional Design

Although to work in the digital age means you must design with interactive software, graphic design still revolves around age-old principles. It’s crucial that you strike the right chord with users from their first glance—hence, graphic design’s correspondence with emotional design. As a graphic designer, you should have a firm understanding of color theory and how vital the right choice of color scheme is. Color choices must reflect not only the organization (e.g., blue suits banking) but also users’ expectations (e.g., red for alerts; green for notifications to proceed). You should design with an eye for how elements match the tone (e.g., sans-serif fonts for excitement or happiness). You also need to design for the overall effect, and note how you shape users’ emotions as you guide them from, for instance, a landing page to a call to action. Often, graphic designers are involved in motion design for smaller screens. They will carefully monitor how their works’ aesthetics match their users’ expectations. They can enhance their designs’ usability in a flowing, seamless experience by anticipating the users’ needs and mindsets. With user psychology in mind, it’s important to stay focused on some especially weighty graphic design considerations, namely these:

  • Symmetry and Balance (including symmetry types)

  • Flow

  • Repetition

  • Pattern

  • The Golden Ratio (i.e., proportions of 1:1.618)

  • The Rule of Thirds (i.e., how users’ eyes recognize good layout)

  • Typography (encompassing everything from font choice to heading weight)

  • Audience Culture (regarding color use—e.g., red as an alert or, in some Eastern cultures, a signal of good fortune—and reading pattern: e.g., left to right in Western cultures)

Overall, your mission—as far as graphic design goes in UX and UI design—is to display information harmoniously. You should ensure that beauty and usability go hand in hand, and therefore your design can discreetly carry your organization’s ideals to your users. When you establish a trustworthy visual presence, you hint to users that you know what they want to do – not just because you’ve arranged aesthetically pleasing elements that are where your users expect to find them, or help them intuit their way around, but because the values which your designs display mirror theirs, too. Your visual content will quickly decide your design’s fate, so be sure not to overlook the slightest trigger that may put users off.
Authors: T. C. Okenna
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What Is Graphic Design? A Beginner's Guide to This Creative Career

When you think of graphic designers, what do you picture? Creative-looking, fashionable people with a tablet in one hand and a pen in the other? A lone professional using design software in a dark room? An artist?

And what does graphic design really mean? Eye-grabbing graphics on websites? While that can certainly fit under the scope of what a graphic designer might create, a career in graphic design could involve so many different things. Posters, infographics, book covers, product labels, logos, business cards, signs, website layouts, mobile apps, software interfaces—the list goes on.

“Every day, we take many of the subtly artistic things around us for granted,” says Jacob Smith, founder of illustration studio ProductViz. “But hidden in every magazine, exit sign and textbook lies a set of design ideas that influence our perceptions.”

Graphic designers work to communicate ideas in a visual format, guiding perception and informing their audience. Most graphic designers work on behalf of a client or company, creating designs to satisfy specific objectives. Graphic designers are also often considered artists.

Graphic design is a huge industry. And if you’re at all interested in becoming a professional graphic designer, there are so many options to explore!

First, what is graphic design?

Graphic design is “the art and practice of planning and projecting ideas and experiences with visual and textual content,” according to the American Institute of Graphic Arts (AIGA®). In simple terms, graphic designers make visuals to communicate certain messages. These visuals can be as simple as a business logo, or as complex as page layouts on a website.

“Graphic design helps the producer connect with the consumer,” says graphic designer, Alexandros Clufetos. “It conveys the message of the project, event, campaign or product.”

Companies use the visual concepts of graphic design to promote and sell products through advertising, to convey complicated information in an easy-to-understand format (think of infographics), to develop a brand identity, and so much more.

While most companies are hiring graphic designers for commercial purposes, many designers also use their work for artistic expression.

What are the elements of graphic design?

A graphic designer creates work utilizing certain visual elements. Graphic designers can use these elements in conjunction or opposition with each other to create striking and impactful visuals.

These graphic design elements include:

  • Color
  • Form
  • Line
  • Shape
  • Size
  • Space
  • Texture

Graphic designers also adhere to the principles of design, which are essentially a set of guidelines that help a design achieve appealing composition.

These visual concepts include:

  • Balance
  • Contrast
  • Emphasis
  • Movement
  • Proportion
  • Rhythm

A good graphic designer must first understand these principles, then use them (or discard them) with intention in each project.

What does a graphic designer do?

Graphic design offers opportunities and options for individuals of almost any interest. If you pursue a career in graphic design, you could work on multiple types of projects—or specialize in just one area you love.

Here’s a glimpse of the kind of tasks a graphic designer might work on.

Website design

Create engaging and intuitive web pages for users. This includes overall layout, color scheme and navigation.

If you’ve ever been on a website that doesn't make sense, buries the information you need, or looks so chaotic you can barely navigate—you’ll understand why careers in web design are so important!

User experience (UX) design

Make a website or application easy and satisfying to use. These designers emphasize value, usability, adoptability and desirability. This type of work can be both highly-technical (programming each pathway through a site) and creative (considering every part of how users interact with your platform).

User interface (UI) design

UI designers work toward the same overall goal as UX designers—making something easy for users to interact with. The interface aspect involves the visual design and layout of an application. For that reason, UI design can be a great career option for graphic designers.

Motion graphics design

Motion graphic designers and animators bring visual elements to life through special effects, video, TV shows, video games, movies and more.

Video and animated elements are becoming more and more common in advertising, and motion graphics designers have a specialized skill set for those mediums.

Print media design

Think of billboards, pamphlets, textbooks, restaurant menus, signage, print ads—print media is everywhere. And someone had to design it!

Visual communication in print can run the gamut from a gorgeous catalog that encourages readers to understand the plants they might purchase to a series of signs that guide travelers through a confusing airport terminal.

You might think of user interfaces as primarily digital—but they are physical too.

Marketing materials of all kinds

Graphic designers create visually appealing advertisements in almost every industry out there. Graphic designers working in healthcare might work on a commercial advertising the opening of a new clinic. A graphic designer working in manufacturing might create a brochure that explains their equipment to businesses considering a purchase.

Is the graphic design industry stable?

With technological advancements introducing new types of graphic design, there has also been an emergence of new graphic design jobs. At the same time, the rise of AI (artificial intelligence) may leave you wondering if the career is in trouble.

Employment of graphic designers is projected to grow by 3 percent from 2022 to 2032, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).1 This growth rate is about as fast as the average for all occupations. The BLS projects about 22,800 openings for graphic designers each year, on average, over the decade.1

The largest employers of graphic designers are companies offering specialized design services, and advertising, public relations and related services, according to the BLS.

Graphic design skills are not as easily replaceable as people think. Powerful visual media that drives action needs to communicate with an audience—not merely look nice. Many graphic designers are excited about the advent of graphic design AI, foreseeing ways it can automate the less-interesting aspects of their jobs.

What tools do graphic designers use?

A graphic designer relies on many different tools. One of the most basic (and least expensive) tools designers use is a sketchbook. If you love studio art, you can certainly integrate those skills into your work as a graphic designer.

That said, most graphic design skills involve computer software.

A graphic designer needs to be able to use design software like Adobe Photoshop®, Adobe Illustrator® and Adobe InDesign®. Since the best graphic design software is computer-based, they also need to be comfortable using a computer (as opposed to a phone or tablet) to design.

But design elements are only part of the picture. A professional graphic designer does more than simply make designs. They have to manage their time, communicate with managers and clients, adjust to feedback and group collaboration and keep track of different projects.

Freelance graphic designers need to attract clients, budget, invoice and file taxes as well as building a professional portfolio that showcases the type of work they love.

As you can see, you need more than a good eye for color to work as a graphic designer. Technical skills, design principles and learning to use new kinds of software are all critical abilities for a graphic designer.

But you don't need to figure all of that out by yourself. Learning these skills are an essential part of a good graphic design program.

Create your future in graphic design

As you can see, there isn’t a one-size-fits-all definition of graphic design.

There are countless ways a graphic designer can solve business problems or evoke inspiration. The industry is wide enough to give you plenty of options in how you want to work.

It might surprise you to learn that some graphic designers don’t especially love art. Or that problem-solving is one of the most important soft skills for graphic designers. This field is easy to misunderstand, and many people have perceptions about graphic design that aren't based in reality.

Authors: T. C. Okenna
Register for this course: Enrol Now
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