7.8 KiB
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
- Proximity — Close items are related
- Similarity — Similar items are related
- Common Region — Items in same container are related
- 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
- Image/media — Visual hook, top
- Title — Primary info, prominent
- Description — Supporting context
- Metadata — Secondary info, muted
- Actions — Clear CTA, bottom
Tables
- Header row — Bold, sticky
- Key column — Left-most, often linked
- Data columns — Clear alignment
- Actions column — Right side
- Pagination — Below, muted
Forms
- Form title — Clear purpose
- Section headers — Group labels
- Labels — Above fields, clear
- Inputs — Prominent
- Help text — Below fields, muted
- Primary action — Emphasized
- Secondary action — De-emphasized
Pages
- Page title — Clear orientation
- Primary content — Center/prominent
- Supporting content — Secondary/sidebar
- Navigation — Consistent location
- 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 |