How To Create A Hierarchy With Fonts And Visual Elements To Tell One Story

Piktochart
Piktochart
Published in
5 min readSep 6, 2016

Design is not just about making something pretty. It’s about making something functional. It’s about putting something together that the reader or user can easily consume and understand. A huge part of that is the concept of hierarchy.

Hierarchy, which comes from the Greek word hierarchia or ‘rule of high priest’, is an arrangement of items or elements in which the items are represented as being “above,” “below,” or “at the same level as” one another.

In design, this concept is applied in the form of an arrangement or presentation of elements in a way that implies importance. By using color, contrast, texture, shape, position, orientation, and size, designers organize elements so that users get a sense of visual importance.

Below you’ll find 15 red circles. When you see the image, your attention is directed to the group of circles rather than one particular circle.

Now, let’s add a bit of color. When you see the group of circles, your attention immediately gravitates to the black circle on the middle left. That was intentional. By changing the color to black, your mind detects the difference.

Why Is Hierarchy Important?

Hierarchy is only one of the tools in a designer’s tool belt, but it’s one of the most important. Having hierarchy in your design helps differentiate and prioritize visual elements and content so that the human mind gets a sense of what’s more important and what needs to be consumed first.

Design is not just about red circles, though. Let’s take a look at an excerpt from a New York Times article.

The content is great. But something’s missing. The article is hard to read. There’s nothing separating the title from the body apart from the content itself.

Now, let’s work some hierarchy magic.

There you go! By utilizing font size and color, we turned the excerpt into something that’s much easier to read. With visual hierarchy plays a role in telling your story, you help the reader focus. Elements that stand out the most are usually at the top of the hierarchy; these are what your eyes gravitate towards first.

Utilize hierarchy as a narration tool by holding the hand of the reader and showing them how to consume the content. For example, text headers usually have bigger proportions when compared to body text or sub-headers. This increases the visibility of the text, placing it higher on the visual hierarchy.

Pay attention to how your gaze flows through the example above. Organizing text hierarchy in this way helps organize messages at a glance, and can entice and direct readers to jump into the lengthier body text.

How To Display Hierarchy

Hierarchy can make a big difference in your design. It helps to prioritize your information because it acts as a reading & scanning guide for your audience. It improves the readability flow of your design as your audience is directed towards information they need to digest first.

People do not want to spend time trying to understand something; rather, it’s all about quick, bite-sized information. Hierarchy can help your audience finds those snippets and prioritize what they’re reading. Here are three different ways you can make hierarchy work for you:

Through Typefaces

A good balance between text hierarchy is what keeps a design clean and simple. Normally for text, headers take the top spot in the hierarchy and capture attention. They are typically darker and bolder, usually due to the use of a different typeface or type styling. They are also larger in size. They can be followed by a subtitle, and each subsequent section is introduced by a smaller headline.

Through Size

At a glance, larger things generally grab the most attention. A great tactic to move up an element the hierarchy is to make it bigger. Mike Suster does a great job of this on his blog, Both Sides of The Table.

Your attention immediately gravitates towards the image and then towards the embedded title. This is intentional, as the image generates a sense of importance, and then transports you to the headline, which is the first thing you need to digest when reading an article.

There is one thing to keep in mind: although bigger means more important, it’s paramount to portray the correct and relevant message in order to hook the reader to the rest of the content. Besides tweaking the size, make sure that the visual element is important, relevant, and helps narrate the visual message.

Through Whitespace and Alignment

It’s important to keep your design neat and consumable. Whether it’s the main headline or a blown-up icon you’re using to snag the attention of your readers, make sure there is sufficient white space around it and that it is well-aligned. Position it in a way that can lead users to the next part of the design .

The Best Examples Out There– Event and Announcement Flyers

One of the best examples of hierarchy being implemented in design is in promotional flyers, especially in event promotion. Designers are forced to apply hierarchy because of the informational nature and purpose of this type of flyer.

Imagine if all of the text were the same size as the header text. The audience would not know which information to digest first and mostly likely not be able to remember what’s being promoted.

For more tips on infographic design, along with some advice on how visual storytelling can improve your skills as a designer, marketer, and educator, check out our blog at http://piktochart.com/blog.

This article was originally posted on the Piktochart Blog.

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Piktochart
Piktochart

At Piktochart, we’re a bunch of enthusiastic and passionate people joined together for one mission — to help people tell visual stories, beautifully.