Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Color Schemes




Monochromatic- Monochromatic colors are all colors of a single hue. Monochromatic color schemes are made up from a single base hue and extended using tints and shades. For my monochromatic olioboard I used a brown hue. It has a very comfortable and relaxed feel to it.
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Analogous-Analogous colors are groups of three colors that are next to each other on the color wheel, with one being the dominant color, which tends to be a primary or secondary color, and one on either side of the color. For my olioboard I used Green and Blue shades. It is a very bright room. 
    1. Analogous

    2. Split Contemporary- The split-complementary color scheme is a variation of the complementary color scheme. In addition to the base color, it uses the two colors adjacent to its complement. This color scheme has the same strong visual contrast as the complementary color scheme, but has less tension.For my Split Contemporary olioboard I used the colors Red Blue and Green, it has a bright look. 
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      split-complementary
    4. Triadic- Triadic color scheme. Examples: The triadic color scheme uses three colors equally spaced around the color wheel. This scheme is popular among artists because it offers strong visual contrast while retaining balance, and color richness. For my olioboard i used the colors green, purple, and orange it has a relaxed calm feel. 
    5. triadic

Friday, March 6, 2015

Texture

There are three categories for texture; visual, tactile, and audible. My visual texture items are the starfish, the mirror on the wall, the blanket, and the wall. These items are all visual because you can tell that the starfish will have a rough bumpy feel to it. The mirror you can see will have a smooth texture with many different lines, the blanket will have a soft fuzzy feel which you can tell just by looking at it. The pillow you can tell is going to be fluffy and have many different soft lines it in.
The tactile textured items are the one that you can tell the texture by feeling it. In my room the tactile items are the wall, basket, side table, and the books. You can get the texture by feeling all of these. The wall will have a smooth feel in most spots a little section of bumpy. The basket would have a rougher feel to it if you feel to it. The side table is the perfect combination of texture, it mixes rough on the bottom with smooth glass on the top of it. The books have a smooth feel to them which would make them tactile because you have to feel it to know the texture of them. Audible texture are ones that you can hear if you touch them. In my room the bookshelf, the couch, the floor, and decorations have an audible feel. The bookshelf if you touched it would be smooth and make a squeaky noise. The couch would have a soft comfortable feel to it. The floor would have a smooth feeling much like the book shelf it would be squeaky. The decorations have a rough bumpy feel but also squeaky because they are glass. Textures make things pop more than they normally would so it is good to have smooth textures mixed in with rougher textures. Like my couch with the throw pillow are good compliments to each other. Because my room has a lot of smooth textures i think it gives a feeling of relaxation and comfort. 

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Elements of Design: Line

Do you dream in color V.2?
Curved- In this picture the wallpaper and the decorations have curved lines. Curved lines make spaces look larger than they really are, they are less conservative than other lines. Have a soft gentle youthful feeling.

black and white Bedroom
vertical- The wallpaper in this picture shows vertical lines. Vertical lines lead the eyes up and down, they add height and slimness. Vertical lines give a feeling of action.

Orange Burst
Horizontal- The wallpaper in the picture shows horizontal lines. They lead the eye side to side, less height and more width. They give a feeling of relaxation, and a feeling of calm, rest, and gentleness,

caratteri
Diagonal-  The carpet in this picture shows diagonal lines. Diagonal lines are versatile and interesting. They draw attention to area used. They give you a feeling of excitement.

Housing Styles

This week in interior design we have been learning about housing styles. We watched a video on housing styles and read over a housing style packet. It is important to be able to identify houses so instead of saying I like houses that have this or that you can name what kind of house. It will make it easier to find a house you want because you will know what style house you are looking for.
   
Saltbox House- This is an early North American house style. As families grew they added the single story additions to the rear, this made it look like an old fashioned saltbox. The front wall has many windows to capture the suns warmth. The sloping side of the roof  offered protection from the cold wind.

           
Garrison House- This house will usually have narrow wooden clapboard siding, trim and decorative details are minimal. The second story overhangs the first story. This style house usually has a gable roof and a chimney is common in this style house. They are still popular today.


Georgian style house- Named for the King Georges of England were built before the American Revolution. Have classic-inspired details around the main door, classic columns or pilasters and a round arch. These type of houses have pitched roof, and have several chimneys. Some old original houses had wood siding but others were made of brick and now most have brick around them.
















Federal style house- These houses were built immediately after the American Revolution. These houses have many classic details such as palladian windows, columns, or pilasters. They have low pitched roofs that often disappear behind a balustrade as pictured. Windows on the lower stories are taller than the ones above.


Greek Revival House- Copied for a modern colonial house. Inspired by an original classic temple such as the roman temple. Have pillars infront of the house with many windows.

Cape Cod House- Appeared on Cape Cod in the early years of North Americas history. It has a steeply pitched roof, with or without dormers. Originally sidedd with natural wood shingles, today it is more often built with wooden clapboard siding.

Gothic-Revival house- This style house was popular in the middle of the nineteenth century, but is not now. The house borrowed decorative details from medieval Gothic cathedrals. They have pointed arches, high-pitched roofs, elaborated decorative trim, and sometimes even towers.

Row House-As cities grew row houses began lining the streets. These houses were built on narrow, long properties, so they had narrow fronts with several stories above. The walls of one were set against the next. Today they are called town houses.


Italian Villa- These houses used classic columns or pilasters and round arches and pediments over doors and windows. Quoins ran up the corners of the different parts of the house.
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Stick Style- Have intricate and individualistic wood decorations for houses, especially for porches, around doors and windows, and brackets supporting the roofs.
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Art Nouveau-Very decorative style house shape. Human faces wearing fanciful headdresses, plants, and flowers are all typical of Art Nouveau.
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Queen Anne Cottage- This turn of the century style came from England. Large house, it has low arches, deep porch, and dark sides, often of shingles, stone, or brick, give it the cozy, warm feeling of a cottage
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Tudor- Has a traditional appearance, it has remained particularly popular in North America.
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Dutch- This house appeared in Holland and other countries of the lowlands. The steep-roofed, stepped-gable style has appealed to some individuals who've built houses in this style.
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Spanish-This house is made of poured cement or stucco, with details in wood found mainly in western united states.
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Prairie House- Designed houses in Midwestern America,prairie country. All these houses had long, low lines, with open balconies and spreads of windows all reflecting the flat open environment of the prairie
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Ranch-Long and low usually only one floor. Houses are small yet some ranch houses spread out in a rambling design and may include many rooms.

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International- Twentieth century creations. Looks like cubes or boxed grouped together in an interesting composition. Sometimes the house sits on the ground sometimes it is raised on columns with garages underneath, Roofs can be flat or with a single slope. Balconies often add to the houses geometric shapes.
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Split level- The first floor of these houses lies on more than one level so you must step up or down in passing from one room to another. Accommodates a cellar beneath one section of the house,
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Rustic- Houses give the feeling of woods, lakes, and outdoors. Its to be expected in such a rural environment as a vacation home or in a wooden suburb
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Chalet- A swiss mountain cottage. You can expect to find variations when alpine styles are copied for houses in the mountain. Houses vary from valley to valley
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A-Frame- In the 1950s this style house began appearing in the vacation areas of North America. Covered framing members, propped in the shape of a letter A, serve as both the rood and the side walls of the building. Now feature balconies of a swiss chalet, easy cheap vacation home
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Dome- Unique twentieth century structures. They are made of very light yet extremely strong triangular panels, arranged in the shape of a hemisphere. They are economical and easily erected structures
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Solar- Designed to work with nature, using heat and light from the sun as efficiently as possible. The suns energy has been used to great advantage by people. Use solar panels tilted towards the sun to absorb heat. Have double pane windows, thick insulation, and heat absorbing masonry elements.
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Earth-Sheltered- They are most often banked with soil at the back and sides. The roof may be covered with a layer of earth too. Offer as insulator, warming and cooling house naturally. Long low narrow shape, simple and practicle.
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manufactured- They are built by a factory then are transported to building sites. These houses have a lower labor and material cost and shorter construction times.

Mobile- factory built house, can be situated on a private lot or on a mobile home park. They have a long narrow trailer like form.

Duplex- Combines two housing units in one building. The two units may be next to each other or on separate stories. Occupies less land and its cheaper to build than two separate houses. Can be designed in a traditional or contemporary style.

neo eclectic- Contemporary house features a palladian window motif, decorated front gables suggestive of a queen anne style, and a front porch.

High rise apartments- Three or more living units joined together. Often stacked ontop of one another. Conserve space allow green areas to be opened between adjacent buildings.

Bungalow- Built in the 1910s during the great depression. It is a simple natural California house, has rafter that blend with the natural background, front porch, gable dormer, glass front door opens to living room