# Patterns: Visual Hierarchy Patterns for guiding attention and creating clear content structure. --- ## What is Visual Hierarchy? The arrangement of elements to show relative importance. Users should instantly understand what's most important without reading everything. **Core principle:** Design tells users where to look. Make it intentional. --- ## Typography Hierarchy **What:** Using type size, weight, and style to establish importance. ### Hierarchy Levels | Level | Purpose | Typical Treatment | |-------|---------|-------------------| | **Display** | Hero content, page title | Largest, boldest | | **H1** | Page heading | Large, bold | | **H2** | Section heading | Medium-large, semibold | | **H3** | Subsection | Medium, semibold | | **Body** | Primary content | Base size, regular | | **Secondary** | Supporting text | Smaller, lighter color | | **Caption** | Labels, metadata | Smallest, light | ### Implementation Guidelines **DO:** - 2:1 ratio minimum between heading levels - Consistent application across pages - Weight AND size differences (not just one) - Appropriate line height per level - Limit to 4-5 distinct levels **DON'T:** - Use more than 2 typefaces - Make headings barely bigger than body - Use color alone for hierarchy - Skip heading levels (H1 → H3) - Use all caps for long text ### Type Scale Example ``` Display: 48px / Bold H1: 36px / Bold H2: 24px / Semibold H3: 20px / Semibold Body: 16px / Regular Small: 14px / Regular Caption: 12px / Regular ``` --- ## Color Hierarchy **What:** Using color intensity, saturation, and contrast to direct attention. ### Hierarchy Through Color | Element | Color Treatment | |---------|-----------------| | Primary action | Brand color, high saturation | | Secondary action | Muted/outline variant | | Primary text | Darkest (near black) | | Secondary text | Medium gray | | Disabled | Light gray | | Destructive | Red family | | Success | Green family | ### Implementation Guidelines **DO:** - High contrast for primary elements - Reserve saturated colors for actions/emphasis - Use color consistently (same action = same color) - Ensure 4.5:1 contrast ratio minimum - Test with color blindness simulators **DON'T:** - Use more than 3-4 colors for UI elements - Use red for non-destructive actions - Rely on color alone to convey meaning - Make secondary elements more colorful than primary - Use low contrast for important elements ### Color Application ``` Primary action: Blue-600 (saturated) Secondary action: Blue-100 bg + Blue-700 text Tertiary action: Gray-200 bg + Gray-800 text Disabled: Gray-100 bg + Gray-400 text ``` --- ## Whitespace Hierarchy **What:** Using space to group related items and separate unrelated ones. ### Principles - More space between unrelated items - Less space between related items - Space increases with hierarchy level - Consistent spacing scale throughout ### Spacing Scale ``` 4px - Tight (icon + label) 8px - Related elements 16px - Related groups 24px - Section spacing 32px - Major section breaks 48px+ - Page-level separation ``` ### Implementation Guidelines **DO:** - Follow Law of Proximity religiously - Use consistent spacing scale - More space above headings than below - Generous margins at page level - Space proportional to importance **DON'T:** - Use arbitrary spacing values - Cram elements together - Use equal spacing everywhere - Separate clearly related items - Waste space inconsistently --- ## Size Hierarchy **What:** Using element size to indicate importance. ### Size Principles - Larger = more important - Primary actions larger than secondary - Main content larger than supporting - Size differences should be noticeable (1.5x minimum) ### Button Size Example ``` Large: 48px height (primary page actions) Medium: 40px height (standard actions) Small: 32px height (inline/secondary) X-Small: 24px height (compact contexts) ``` ### Card Size Hierarchy | Purpose | Size | |---------|------| | Featured | Largest, spans multiple columns | | Primary | Standard size, prominent | | Secondary | Smaller, supporting content | | Compact | Minimal, high-density contexts | --- ## Proximity & Grouping **What:** Using spatial relationships to show content relationships. ### The 4 Gestalt Laws for Hierarchy 1. **Proximity** — Close items are related 2. **Similarity** — Similar items are related 3. **Common Region** — Items in same container are related 4. **Connectedness** — Items connected by lines are related ### Application Examples **Proximity:** - Form label + input (tight spacing) - Form group + next group (more spacing) - Card content grouped tightly - Cards separated from each other **Similarity:** - All navigation items styled the same - All buttons of same importance styled the same - All card components share style **Common Region:** - Related items in same card/container - Form fields in fieldset - Related actions in button group **Connectedness:** - Breadcrumbs connected by separators - Stepper stages connected by line - Related items connected by visual element --- ## Contrast Hierarchy **What:** Using contrast differences to establish visual priority. ### Contrast Types | Type | Application | |------|-------------| | **Color contrast** | Light/dark, saturated/muted | | **Size contrast** | Large/small | | **Weight contrast** | Bold/regular | | **Density contrast** | Busy/sparse areas | | **Motion contrast** | Static/animated | ### Creating Focus **High contrast for:** - Primary CTAs - Important information - Error states - Current/active states **Low contrast for:** - Secondary actions - Supporting text - Disabled states - Background elements --- ## Position Hierarchy **What:** Leveraging natural reading patterns and expectations. ### Reading Patterns **F-Pattern (text-heavy pages):** - Users scan horizontally at top - Then vertically down left side - Place key content along the F **Z-Pattern (sparse pages):** - Users scan top left to right - Then diagonally to bottom left - Then across bottom - Place CTAs at end of Z **Gutenberg Diagram:** - Top left: Primary optical area (high attention) - Top right: Strong fallow area - Bottom left: Weak fallow area - Bottom right: Terminal area (natural end, place CTAs) ### Position Guidelines **DO:** - Most important content top-left - Primary actions top-right or bottom-right - Navigation where expected (top, left) - CTAs at natural stopping points **DON'T:** - Bury primary actions bottom-left - Place important info in weak fallow area - Violate expectations without reason - Scatter actions unpredictably --- ## Hierarchy Patterns by Component ### Cards 1. **Image/media** — Visual hook, top 2. **Title** — Primary info, prominent 3. **Description** — Supporting context 4. **Metadata** — Secondary info, muted 5. **Actions** — Clear CTA, bottom ### Tables 1. **Header row** — Bold, sticky 2. **Key column** — Left-most, often linked 3. **Data columns** — Clear alignment 4. **Actions column** — Right side 5. **Pagination** — Below, muted ### Forms 1. **Form title** — Clear purpose 2. **Section headers** — Group labels 3. **Labels** — Above fields, clear 4. **Inputs** — Prominent 5. **Help text** — Below fields, muted 6. **Primary action** — Emphasized 7. **Secondary action** — De-emphasized ### Pages 1. **Page title** — Clear orientation 2. **Primary content** — Center/prominent 3. **Supporting content** — Secondary/sidebar 4. **Navigation** — Consistent location 5. **Actions** — Contextual, accessible --- ## Hierarchy Audit | Element | Clear Hierarchy? | |---------|------------------| | ☐ Headings distinct from body | | | ☐ Primary action obvious | | | ☐ Related items grouped | | | ☐ Unrelated items separated | | | ☐ Reading flow logical | | | ☐ Most important content prominent | | | ☐ Consistent hierarchy across pages | |