1) Symmetry: the woke of art is the same on one side as the other, a mirror image of itself, on both sides of a centerline
2) Radial Symmetry: A form of symmetry in which identical parts are arranged in circular fashion around the central axis.
3) Contrast: the arrangement of different elements in a design to create visual interest, emphasis, or a focal point.
4) Emphasis: the principle of design that highlights the most important elements in a composition to draw the viewer s attention. Emphasis can be achieved through size, color, contrast, or positioning.
5) PNG: a file type used for online (NOT printing) that has a transparent background
6) RAW file: An uncompressed file directly exported from a camera with the most detail possible for editing. After editing, RAW files are often composed into JPG files.
7) Release: a legal document giving permission from the copyright holder to use copyrighted material.
8) Metada: information about an image file such as copyright information.
9) Rasterize: to convert a vector image to pixel (raster image). Text and shapes created with the shape tool are the only vectors in photoshop
10) Resample: to change the dimension of a raster image by adding or deleting pixels through sampling.
11) Gradient: a gradual face between two colors
12)rule of thirds: the technique using of a using a grid of three rows and columns
13) Crop: to cut out unnecessary of an image to improve framing, highlight a subject or change the image s aspect ratio
14) Grayscale: the use of only black, white and shade of gray in a image
15) Saturation: the intensity of a color
16) Value: the lightness or darkness of a color
17) Creative Commons: copyright license that allows anyone to use a work in certain ways with permission from the creator
18) Non-commercial: copyright license that does not allow profit to be made from the use of a creative work
19) Public Domain: creative work that can be used without permission because it is owned by the public and not an individual
20) Development Order: 1) Planning 2) Designing 3) Building, 4) Testing, 5) Publishing
21) orientation: specify a page orientation for the document as either portrait or landscape
22) Foreground: elements in a composition that are closest to the viewer
23) No derivates: copyright license that allows others to use a creative work but it cannot be changed in any way
24) Share Alike: copyright license that allow other to reuse, remix, and modify a creative work, but any derivate (changed) works must be distributed under the same terms and conditions as the original work
25) Iterative Design: involves a continuous cycle of planning, analysis, implementation, and evaluation
26) Rule of Thirds: the technique of using a grid of three rows and columns and placing important elements where the lines meet
27)Gestalt Principle: when things appear to be similar to each other, we group them together
28) Emphasis: the principle of design that highlights the most important elements in a composition to draw the viewers attention
2) Radial Symmetry: A form of symmetry in which identical parts are arranged in circular fashion around the central axis.
3) Contrast: the arrangement of different elements in a design to create visual interest, emphasis, or a focal point.
4) Emphasis: the principle of design that highlights the most important elements in a composition to draw the viewer s attention. Emphasis can be achieved through size, color, contrast, or positioning.
5) PNG: a file type used for online (NOT printing) that has a transparent background
6) RAW file: An uncompressed file directly exported from a camera with the most detail possible for editing. After editing, RAW files are often composed into JPG files.
7) Release: a legal document giving permission from the copyright holder to use copyrighted material.
8) Metada: information about an image file such as copyright information.
9) Rasterize: to convert a vector image to pixel (raster image). Text and shapes created with the shape tool are the only vectors in photoshop
10) Resample: to change the dimension of a raster image by adding or deleting pixels through sampling.
11) Gradient: a gradual face between two colors
12)rule of thirds: the technique using of a using a grid of three rows and columns
13) Crop: to cut out unnecessary of an image to improve framing, highlight a subject or change the image s aspect ratio
14) Grayscale: the use of only black, white and shade of gray in a image
15) Saturation: the intensity of a color
16) Value: the lightness or darkness of a color
17) Creative Commons: copyright license that allows anyone to use a work in certain ways with permission from the creator
18) Non-commercial: copyright license that does not allow profit to be made from the use of a creative work
19) Public Domain: creative work that can be used without permission because it is owned by the public and not an individual
20) Development Order: 1) Planning 2) Designing 3) Building, 4) Testing, 5) Publishing
21) orientation: specify a page orientation for the document as either portrait or landscape
22) Foreground: elements in a composition that are closest to the viewer
23) No derivates: copyright license that allows others to use a creative work but it cannot be changed in any way
24) Share Alike: copyright license that allow other to reuse, remix, and modify a creative work, but any derivate (changed) works must be distributed under the same terms and conditions as the original work
25) Iterative Design: involves a continuous cycle of planning, analysis, implementation, and evaluation
26) Rule of Thirds: the technique of using a grid of three rows and columns and placing important elements where the lines meet
27)Gestalt Principle: when things appear to be similar to each other, we group them together
28) Emphasis: the principle of design that highlights the most important elements in a composition to draw the viewers attention