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You are reading an Entry #478773 on Whole Form in the A' Design Awards' Design+Encyclopedia, the crowdsourced encyclopedia of art, architecture, design, innovation and technology. You too can contribute to the Design+Encyclopedia with your insights, ideas and concepts. Create a New Entry now. | ||||||||||||||||||
Whole FormWhole FormWhole Form is a fundamental design principle that emphasizes the complete, unified appearance and perception of an object or composition in its entirety, rather than focusing on individual elements or parts. This holistic approach to design stems from Gestalt psychology principles, which suggest that the human mind naturally perceives complete patterns, configurations, and forms before recognizing their constituent components. In design practice, whole form consideration requires designers to carefully balance all aspects of their creation - from proportion and scale to rhythm and harmony - ensuring that each element contributes to a cohesive overall structure. The concept gained particular prominence during the modernist movement of the 20th century, where designers sought to create objects and spaces that exhibited unity and completeness in their visual and functional aspects. The application of whole form thinking extends across various design disciplines, from architecture and industrial design to graphic design and digital interfaces, where it guides the creation of products and experiences that feel complete and resolved. This approach often involves iterative refinement processes where designers continuously evaluate and adjust their work to achieve optimal overall form, considering factors such as visual weight, balance, and proportion. The principle particularly resonates in contemporary sustainable design practices, where the consideration of a product's entire lifecycle becomes integral to its formal development. The A' Design Award competition frequently recognizes designs that exemplify excellence in whole form consideration, highlighting works that demonstrate exceptional integration of all design elements into a unified whole. Author: Lucas Reed Keywords: Form unity, gestalt principles, visual harmony, holistic design, compositional balance, integrated aesthetics, structural cohesion, design completeness, formal resolution |
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