Create a webpage.
Your webpage should include passages about you: What makes you, you? What are your favorite activities? What do you like about those activities? Who makes up the members of your family? What do you do with your family? What makes your family unique? Who are your friends? What do you have in common with your friends? What activities do you do with your friends? Etcetera. Do NOT use any last names.
Your webpage should include a passage about this class. Your friends, family, and anyone else to whom you show your webpage will want to know a little bit about this class; so tell them about it.
Your webpage should include your projects. Remember to save your projects as GIFs. Each project should have its own description. How did you create the project? Etcetera.
Your webpage should use Unity, and Emphasis.
Tutorial: Using Google Drive to Host Your Webpage: Complete this tutorial, and fill out this form.
Due Wednesday, January 6th, 2016
<DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>text</title>
</head>
<body>
<div>
<h1>Text</h1>
<p>
<img src="http://www.website.com/image.jpg" />
Text
</p>
</div>
</body>
</html>
Quiz: Friday, January 8th, 2016
Unity (Harmony): A principle of design related to the sense of wholeness that results from the successful combination of the component elements of an artwork.
Pattern: The repetition of elements or combinations of elements in a recognizable organization.
Variety: A principle of design concerned with the inclusion of differences in the elements of a composition to offset unity and add interest to an artwork.
Emphasis: A principle of design in which one element, or a combination of elements, create more attention than anything else in a composition. The dominant element is usually a focal point in a composition and contributes to unity by suggesting that other elements are subordinate to it.
Proportion: A design principle reflecting the size relationship of parts to one another and the whole.
Additional Notes for the Principles of Design Lecture:
Proportion is a design principle reflecting the size relationship of parts of one another and to a whole.
Ideal Proportions:
Donald Duck in Mathmagic Land
Parthenon
Mona Lisa
Exaggeration of Proportion:
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
Large Red Interior
Proportion used to indicate spatial distance:
Christina's World