Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Yes, even hamsters can teach you something about Gestalt.

I saw this magazine ad for the Kia Soul, and I realized that Gestalt works on motion (video) as it does in print design.


The print ad is a wonderful example of the Gestalt principle of similarity. Similarity is when items are perceived as being related because they have a similar shape, color, size, etc. This is actually an example of the inverse of similarity, where everything is the same and this makes the odd item stand out amid the others. That’s what makes the hamsters in the red Kia Soul stand out among the hamsters in the wheels.

This made me start thinking about the Kia Soul Hamster TV ad, and how they use the same inverse of similarity. Notice how everything in this ad is a very muted color allowing you to focus on the red Kia Soul.


Who knew dancing hamsters could be so interesting?

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Make your mark memorable with Gestalt

When looking at logos why do so many use figure/ground ambiguity?

I was creating a Gestalt lecture this week for my students and I noticed that when I got to the principle of figure/ground, instead of finding examples of how the content was designed like news and magazine pages, advertisements, and web site designs, I was finding examples of the visuals like logos and illustrations. This got me thinking...

To start I need to explain the Gestalt principle of figure/ground. An image (figure) is separated from its surroundings (ground). This is how contrast is created in a design. The more you separate the image from its surroundings, the more contrast is being created.

When the figure and the ground become ambiguous, meaning figure and ground become hard to differentiate, it can create an interesting image. It’s this ambiguity we will explore.

So why was I finding more logo and illustration examples instead of design examples?

I believe it is because when an image is ambiguous it makes us pause. You are more likely to stop, look more closely and try to figure out what you are looking at. This is what an illustration needs to do so that the reader stops to read an article or advertisement.

This goal becomes even greater when designing logos. You want the consumer to stop and imprint that image on their brain. Probably the best way to illustrate this point is to take a look at some successful examples that use figure/ground ambiguity.

Many people don't see the hidden arrow between the "E" and the "x" in the FedEx logo.


Their are eleven teams in the Big 10.


Food writers logo


Knight Transportation logo, I actually called my wife to tell her about this logo while I was on the road as the logo passed me on a tractor-trailer. She was not nearly as interested as she should have been. I don't understand it?

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Gestalt grabs me in the eye doctor’s office.

I know it’s been a little time since my first post, as Charles Apple commented on in his blog. But it’s been a bit hectic over the past week or so because of my recent career change.

Last week I was sitting in the eye doctor’s office as my daughter was reading off the eye chart. I was scanning the office, basically because I was bored. Things went though my head like, “why does one eye chart use slab-serif type and others use san-serif?” I’m sure people all over have thoughts like these on a daily basis.

Then a brochure about contact lenses called “synergeyes” grabbed my attention. Looking at the logo at first I couldn’t wrap my head around what I was seeing. Was that a brush stroke, or an eyebrow? But there’s no pupil. Intriguing!

This is the principle of closure, where your brain fills in images that aren’t really there. This is a great principle to use when you are creating an identity for an organization because it has the effect, as it did on me, to force the person looking at the image to figure out the images and their meaning. In a world of logos vying for attention this principle can give you a leg up on the competition.

Other principles being used on the logo are proximity, all the letters and the eyebrow being close to one another, creating a unit. Then there is similarity, “synerg” is displayed in a light san serif font and “eyes” are in a bold san serif font. This breaks the two words apart even though all the letters are the same distance apart from one another.

On the brochure, the similarity of the purple color brings your eyes down the design to the logo. This way of directing your eye down the page is the principle of continuation. More on that one another time…