
Design Composition: Layout, Balance, and Visual Flow
A practical guide to design composition, covering visual hierarchy, balance, focal points, grid systems, and how to arrange elements so a design communicates clearly and guides the eye deliberately.
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Composition is the arrangement of visual elements within a design, and it determines whether a viewer understands your design immediately or has to work to make sense of it. A composition that works is usually invisible: the viewer doesn't notice it, they just find the design easy to navigate. A composition that doesn't work is immediately felt, even when it can't be named. This guide covers the principles that make composition work, the practical tools designers use to structure layouts, and how to apply them in Linearity Curve.
What composition actually controls
Every composition makes decisions about three things, whether the designer makes them consciously or not:
What the viewer sees first. The element with the most visual weight — the largest, most contrasted, most isolated — is where the eye lands first. If that element isn't the most important thing in the design, the composition is working against the message.
What the viewer sees next. After the first element, the eye follows a path through the design. Good composition designs that path deliberately. Poor composition leaves the viewer's eye to wander, often settling on the wrong thing.
How the viewer feels about the whole. Balance, tension, density, and space all contribute to an emotional response before any content is read. A crowded composition feels anxious. A spacious one feels confident. A symmetrical one feels formal. These aren't accidents — they're the result of compositional choices.
Understanding composition means understanding that every element placement is a decision about visual attention — and that attention is the scarcest resource in any design.
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Composition is the difference between a layout that communicates and one that just contains elements.
Visual hierarchy and focal points
Every composition needs a clear entry point — a focal element that the eye is drawn to first. Without one, the viewer's attention scatters across the design and nothing is read with the right weight.
Focal points are created through:
- Size — larger elements attract attention before smaller ones
- Contrast — high-contrast elements (dark on light, vivid on muted) draw the eye first
- Isolation — an element surrounded by space has more visual weight than one surrounded by other elements
- Colour — a single vivid colour in a muted composition becomes an immediate focal point
- Position — elements at the top-left and centre of a composition naturally attract attention in Western reading contexts
Once the primary focal point is established, secondary and tertiary elements support it — they provide additional information without competing for the same level of attention. This layering of attention is visual hierarchy: the system that tells the viewer what matters most, second most, and least.
Visual weight is the perceived heaviness of an element. Large, dark, isolated, and saturated elements have high visual weight. Small, light, surrounded, and muted elements have low visual weight. Balance in composition is the distribution of visual weight across the layout — not symmetry, but equilibrium.
| Creates high visual weight | Large size |
|---|---|
| Creates low visual weight | Small size |
| Creates high visual weight | Dark or saturated colour |
| Creates low visual weight | Light or muted colour |
| Creates high visual weight | Isolation (surrounded by space) |
| Creates low visual weight | Proximity to other elements |
| Creates high visual weight | Complex shape |
| Creates low visual weight | Simple shape |
| Creates high visual weight | High contrast with background |
| Creates low visual weight | Low contrast with background |
| Creates high visual weight | Position at optical centre |
| Creates low visual weight | Position at edges |
| Creates high visual weight | Creates low visual weight |
|---|---|
| Large size | Small size |
| Dark or saturated colour | Light or muted colour |
| Isolation (surrounded by space) | Proximity to other elements |
| Complex shape | Simple shape |
| High contrast with background | Low contrast with background |
| Position at optical centre | Position at edges |
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Visual hierarchy creates an attention sequence, the viewer reads the composition in the order the designer intended
Balance: symmetrical, asymmetrical, and radial
Balance is the distribution of visual weight across a composition. It doesn't require symmetry — it requires that the design feels stable and intentional rather than accidentally lopsided.
Symmetrical balance
Elements are mirrored across a central axis — horizontally, vertically, or both. Symmetrical compositions feel formal, stable, authoritative, and calm. They're common in logos, editorial title pages, architectural photography, and contexts where precision and order need to be communicated.
The limitation of symmetry is that it's static. The eye reaches the centre and stops — there's nowhere to travel. For designs that need to feel dynamic, engaging, or modern, symmetry often isn't the right choice.
Asymmetrical balance
Different elements of different sizes, colours, and weights are positioned so the overall composition feels stable — even though nothing is matched or mirrored. Asymmetric balance is more dynamic than symmetric balance and requires more deliberate judgement to achieve.
The principle is visual weight, not size. A small, vivid, isolated element can balance a large, muted, busy element on the opposite side of a composition. Much of modern web design, editorial layout, and brand design uses asymmetric balance because it carries more energy while still feeling considered.
Radial balance
Elements are arranged around a central point, radiating outward. Less common in standard layouts, but powerful in logo design, decorative illustration, and brand marks. Mandalas, circular logos, and radial icon sets use this structure.
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Three types of balance: symmetrical (formal, stable), asymmetrical (dynamic, modern), radial (centred, decorative). Each communicates a different tone before any content is read.
Grid systems and alignment
Grids are the invisible structure that makes composition consistent and scalable. They define where elements can be placed, how they relate to each other, and how a layout adapts across different sizes.
Column grids
The most common grid in editorial and web design. Content is divided into equal-width columns with consistent gutter spacing between them. Most web layouts use 12 columns — a number divisible by 2, 3, 4, and 6, giving maximum layout flexibility. Print editorial typically uses 6 or 8 columns.
Elements span multiple columns. A full-width hero image might span all 12. A sidebar might span 3. Body text might span 7. The column grid creates the underlying logic that makes all of these feel related to each other.
Baseline grids
A horizontal grid that text sits on — like lined paper. Baseline grids ensure that text from different columns and different sizes aligns horizontally, creating a sense of vertical rhythm throughout a layout. Important in long-form typographic design; less critical in short-form or highly visual work.
Modular grids
A grid of both columns and rows, creating a matrix of equal cells. Modular grids are the basis of design systems, icon sets, and grid-based illustration. Every cell follows the same logic, making systematic work significantly faster.
| Grid type | Column grid |
|---|---|
| Best for | Editorial, web, marketing layouts |
| Key benefit | Flexible span system for varied element widths |
| Grid type | Baseline grid |
| Best for | Long-form typographic work |
| Key benefit | Consistent vertical rhythm across columns |
| Grid type | Modular grid |
| Best for | Design systems, icon sets, systematic illustration |
| Key benefit | Equal-cell logic speeds systematic production |
| Grid type | Isometric grid |
| Best for | Technical illustration, 3D perspective work |
| Key benefit | Consistent 30° angles for depth and structure |
| Grid type | Best for | Key benefit |
|---|---|---|
| Column grid | Editorial, web, marketing layouts | Flexible span system for varied element widths |
| Baseline grid | Long-form typographic work | Consistent vertical rhythm across columns |
| Modular grid | Design systems, icon sets, systematic illustration | Equal-cell logic speeds systematic production |
| Isometric grid | Technical illustration, 3D perspective work | Consistent 30° angles for depth and structure |
Alignment is what makes a grid feel like a grid rather than a suggestion. Elements that align to the same grid lines feel intentionally related. Elements that don't feel accidentally placed — even when the misalignment is small. The eye detects misalignment before the brain names it.
The most common alignment error is near-alignment: two elements that are almost — but not quite — on the same line. This reads as a mistake. Either align precisely or create deliberate, obvious offset.
Visual flow and the Z and F patterns
Viewers don't look at a composition randomly — they follow predictable patterns based on how they've learned to read. Understanding these patterns lets designers align composition with natural eye movement.
The Z pattern
In compositions with low information density — advertising, hero sections, posters — the eye tends to follow a Z-shaped path: starting at the top left, moving to the top right, dropping diagonally to the bottom left, then moving to the bottom right.
This is why many advertising layouts place the logo or headline at the top left, a supporting image in the middle, and the CTA at the bottom right. The Z pattern delivers the viewer to the call to action as the natural conclusion of reading the composition.
The F pattern
In text-heavy, high-information-density contexts — articles, email, dashboards, search results — the eye follows an F-shaped pattern: reading horizontally across the top, then dropping down and reading a shorter horizontal sweep, then scanning vertically down the left edge.
The F pattern has significant implications for content hierarchy: the most important information should be in the top horizontal band and the left vertical column, because those are the areas that receive the most attention before the reader drops off.
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The Z pattern guides the eye through advertising and hero compositions. The F pattern describes how readers scan text-heavy layouts, both have direct implications for where to place key content
Gestalt principles in composition
Gestalt psychology describes how the human brain organises visual information into meaningful patterns. Several Gestalt principles have direct practical applications in composition.
Proximity. Elements close to each other are perceived as related. Elements far from each other are perceived as separate. This is the compositional logic behind grouping — placing related items together and separating them from unrelated items with white space creates structure without any explicit lines or borders.
Similarity. Elements that share visual characteristics — same colour, shape, or size — are perceived as belonging to the same group. This is how icon sets, navigation items, and repeating components feel coherent even when they depict different things.
Continuation. The eye follows lines, curves, and implied paths, even when they're not explicitly drawn. A row of elements creates an implied line the eye will follow. A curved arrangement implies a path. Designers use continuation to guide the eye through a composition without the viewer being aware of it.
Figure-ground. The eye distinguishes between foreground elements (figures) and background (ground). Strong figure-ground contrast makes focal elements immediately clear. Weak figure-ground relationships make compositions feel muddy and hard to read.
Closure. The brain completes incomplete shapes. The FedEx arrow, the WWF panda, and the IBM striped letters all exploit closure — the viewer's brain perceives a complete form even where one isn't fully drawn. This is the principle behind negative space logos and clever compositional illusions.
| Principle | Proximity |
|---|---|
| What it does | Groups related elements perceptually |
| Design application | Use white space to separate sections; cluster related items |
| Principle | Similarity |
| What it does | Creates visual groups through shared properties |
| Design application | Consistent icon style, colour coding, repeating components |
| Principle | Continuation |
| What it does | Guides the eye along implied paths |
| Design application | Align elements to create visual flow through the layout |
| Principle | Figure-ground |
| What it does | Separates foreground from background |
| Design application | Ensure sufficient contrast between focal elements and background |
| Principle | Closure |
| What it does | Brain completes incomplete shapes |
| Design application | Negative space logos, implied shapes, typographic illusions |
| Principle | What it does | Design application |
|---|---|---|
| Proximity | Groups related elements perceptually | Use white space to separate sections; cluster related items |
| Similarity | Creates visual groups through shared properties | Consistent icon style, colour coding, repeating components |
| Continuation | Guides the eye along implied paths | Align elements to create visual flow through the layout |
| Figure-ground | Separates foreground from background | Ensure sufficient contrast between focal elements and background |
| Closure | Brain completes incomplete shapes | Negative space logos, implied shapes, typographic illusions |
Composition in Linearity Curve
Linearity Curve has several tools that directly support compositional work.
Grid and snapping
Enable the grid in Settings > Canvas. Curve supports both a square perpendicular grid and an isometric grid. Set the grid spacing to match your layout's column width or baseline unit — snapping will then lock every element to the grid automatically, making precise alignment fast without manual adjustment.
Alignment tools
Select multiple elements and use Curve's alignment tools to align them to each other or to the artboard. Options include align left, centre, right, top, middle, bottom, and distribute evenly — both horizontally and vertically. Even distribution is particularly useful for spacing repeating elements (navigation items, icon sets, card grids) consistently without manual measurement.
Artboard setup
Set your artboard to the exact dimensions of your output — social media format, screen resolution, print size. Working at the correct dimensions from the start means compositional decisions are made in the actual context of the final output, not approximated and adjusted later.
Grouping for compositional control
Use groups (Cmd+G) to treat related elements as a single compositional unit. A card with an image, headline, and body text becomes one moveable element once grouped — you can reposition it within the layout without disrupting the internal relationship of its components. Nested groups let you move sections while preserving sub-group structure.
Visual weight check
Curve's canvas view — zoomed out to see the full artboard — is the fastest way to evaluate overall compositional balance. The eye reads the composition very differently at full view than at working zoom. Make a habit of zooming out after placing major elements to check visual weight distribution before adding detail.
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Zooming out to full artboard view in Linearity Curve is the fastest way to evaluate overall compositional balance, detail work at close zoom hides weight distribution problems.
Common composition mistakes
| Mistake | No clear focal point |
|---|---|
| What it looks like | Everything feels equally important — the eye doesn"t know where to start |
| Fix | Define the primary message and build visual hierarchy around it before placing any elements |
| Mistake | Near-alignment |
| What it looks like | Two elements almost on the same line — reads as a mistake |
| Fix | Either align precisely to the grid or create an obvious, deliberate offset |
| Mistake | Symmetry by default |
| What it looks like | Every layout centred, every element mirrored — feels static |
| Fix | Use asymmetric balance for dynamic, modern layouts; reserve symmetry for formal contexts |
| Mistake | Ignoring the F/Z pattern |
| What it looks like | Key content placed in low-attention zones |
| Fix | Place primary content in the top horizontal band and left column for text-heavy layouts |
| Mistake | Crowding without hierarchy |
| What it looks like | Too many elements at similar visual weights |
| Fix | Reduce the number of elements or differentiate weights dramatically — not everything can be important |
| Mistake | White space treated as waste |
| What it looks like | Every area of the canvas filled |
| Fix | Allocate white space deliberately — it creates hierarchy, breathing room, and signals quality |
| Mistake | No grid |
| What it looks like | Elements placed by eye with inconsistent alignment |
| Fix | Enable the grid before placing any elements; establish the column structure first |
| Mistake | What it looks like | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| No clear focal point | Everything feels equally important — the eye doesn"t know where to start | Define the primary message and build visual hierarchy around it before placing any elements |
| Near-alignment | Two elements almost on the same line — reads as a mistake | Either align precisely to the grid or create an obvious, deliberate offset |
| Symmetry by default | Every layout centred, every element mirrored — feels static | Use asymmetric balance for dynamic, modern layouts; reserve symmetry for formal contexts |
| Ignoring the F/Z pattern | Key content placed in low-attention zones | Place primary content in the top horizontal band and left column for text-heavy layouts |
| Crowding without hierarchy | Too many elements at similar visual weights | Reduce the number of elements or differentiate weights dramatically — not everything can be important |
| White space treated as waste | Every area of the canvas filled | Allocate white space deliberately — it creates hierarchy, breathing room, and signals quality |
| No grid | Elements placed by eye with inconsistent alignment | Enable the grid before placing any elements; establish the column structure first |
This article is a part of the design principles guide — covering colour, typography, composition, and white space in professional design work.
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