Mobile app version of vmapp.org
Login or Join
Shelley591

: Designing in Black & White I have to design flyers for someone, which will be printed in black and white (low budget thing). My problem is, I am used to design with colors, to use colors

@Shelley591

Posted in: #DesignPrinciples

I have to design flyers for someone, which will be printed in black and white (low budget thing). My problem is, I am used to design with colors, to use colors to direct the focus, to emphasize important points, balance the overall design, etc.. and I have no idea how to do without colors.

I have tried to just use tones of grey instead of several colors, but it still feels like playing with one color, and I am not going anywhere. Even small pieces of one color would totally change my life, but it is not a possibility.

I am pretty sure there is a way to make a good design even with only grey shades, and more talented people are able to do it, but I just don't know about it. Where can I look for inspiration? Are there applicable principles for this kind of design?

Thanks!

10.02% popularity Vote Up Vote Down


Login to follow query

More posts by @Shelley591

2 Comments

Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best

 

@Hamm6457569

All the principles of design that you already know apply equally to monochrome as they do to multi-colored work. Working with a single ink (whether it's black or any other color) may feel unfamiliar, but it is not fundamentally different. I suspect that it is unfamiliarity that is making you uncomfortable, not any lack of skill.

A good design will always work in monochrome ("black and white"). If it doesn't, then there is probably something fundamental wrong with it. As in photography, color can "blind" you to flaws in the work that become visible when the color is removed. Pull a few color images into Photoshop and practice making black and white versions that work well.

There are no different design principles for monochrome. You apply the same rules, but use shades and tints of your single color to emphasize, contrast, lead the eye and balance a composition, just as you would with color. If you look around at magazines, posters, or on the web you will find many examples of good monochrome design.

Here's what I would suggest: build your design using any colors you like, then create a grayscale version. You will find that you must adjust the relative values of your gray tints to achieve the effect of the color version, and you may have to adjust weight of some elements for the best impact, but you will still be able to achieve an effective design.

It may be that the budget will allow an ink other than simple black, provided it is just one ink. If that is the case, a suitable Pantone color will allow you to create "color" using different percentages of screen, just as you would in grayscale.

I'm offering this as a way to ease you into designing in monochrome, but you will find it both good discipline and an excellent way to improve your technique to create a few designs in monochrome then color them.

10% popularity Vote Up Vote Down


 

@Goswami567

I would try the following to get started:


Don't assign meaning with color (even in full-color designs, you shouldn't solely rely on color for this). Color is just one tool in a large toolbox. Instead use size, shape, contrast, whitespace, negative space, proximity, alignment, and your copy to guide attention and give meaning.
Logo design would be a good place to start looking for inspiration. The best logos work in a single color first and only then add the other details. Try just using black on white first to get your idea down and then, if necessary, add the shades of gray.
If you're really having trouble without color, you can try making your design with color and then desaturating the entire piece so that it becomes grayscale. You'll have make adjustments, but it might give you a place to begin.

10% popularity Vote Up Vote Down


Back to top | Use Dark Theme