Principles of Life…
Principles of Life
- Winning isn’t everything but wanting to win is.
- You would achieve more, if you don’t mind who gets the credit.
- When everything else is lost, the future still remains.
- Don’t fight too much or the enemy will know your art of war.
- The only job you start at the top is when you dig a grave.
- If you don’t stand for something, you’ll fall for everything.
- If you do little things well, you’ll do big ones better.
- Only thing that comes to you without effort is old age.
- You won’t get a second chance to make a first impression.
- Only those who do nothing do not make mistakes.
- Never take a problem to your boss unless you have a solution.
- If you are not failing, you’re not taking enough risks.
- Don’t try to get rid of your bad temper by losing it.
- If at first you don’t succeed, skydiving is not for you.
- Those who don’t make mistakes usually don’t make anything.
- There are two kinds of failures: Those who think and never do, and those who do and never think.
- Pick battles big enough to matter, small enough to win.
- All progress has resulted from unpopular decisions.
- Change your thoughts and you change your world.
- Understanding proves intelligence, not the speed of the learning.
- There are two kinds of fools in this world.: Those who give advice and those who don’t take it.
- The best way to kill an idea is to take it to a meeting.
- Management is doing things right. Leadership is doing the right things.
- Friendship founded on business is always better than business founded on friendship.
Via: Karishma is the rockstar girl @ Tumblr… Awesome posts / collection she’s got there.
Principles of Design
Four principles of Design: Balance, Emphasis, Rythm & Unity. Below are some tips on the same.
Balance
- Repeat a specific shape at regular intervals, either horizontally or vertically.
- Center elements on a page.
- Put several small visuals in one area to balance a single large image or block of text.
- Use one or two odd shapes and make the rest regular shapes.
- Lighten a text-heavy piece with a bright, colorful visual.
- Leave plenty of white space around large blocks of text or dark photographs
- Offset a large, dark photograph or illustration with several small pieces of text, each surrounded by a lot of white space.
Rhythm
- Repeat a series of similarly shaped elements, with even white spaces between each, to create a regular rhythm.
- Repeat a series of progressively larger elements with larger white spaces between each for a progressive rhythm.
- Alternate dark, bold type and light, thin type.
- Alternate dark pages (with lots of type or dark graphics) with light pages (with less type and light-colored graphics).
- Repeat a similar shape in various areas of a layout.
- Repeat the same element in the same position on every page of a printed publication such as a newsletter.
Emphasis
- Use a series of evenly spaced, square photographs next to an outlined photograph with an unusual shape.
- Put an important piece of text on a curve or an angle while keeping all of the other type in straight columns.
- Use bold, black type for headings and subheads and much lighter text for all other text. Place a large picture next to a small bit of text.
- Reverse (use white type) a headline out of a black or colored box.
- Use colored type or an unusual font for the most important information.
- Put lists you want to highlight in a sidebar in a shaded box.
Unity
- Use only one or two typestyles and vary size or weight for contrast throughout the publication, presentation, or web site.
- Be consistent with the type font, sizes, and styles for headings, subheads, captions, headers, footers, etc. throughout the publication, presentation, or web site.
- Use the same color palette throughout.
- Repeat a color, shape, or texture in different areas throughout.
- Choose visuals that share a similar color, theme, or shape.Line up photographs and text with the same grid lines.
Contributed by me & my friend Madhkar.