Thursday, October 10, 2013

Triangulation



Triangulation
El Lissitzky used this type of ideology by using elements of 90 degree angles as well as 45 degree angles. By using these as triangles and pushing words together it caught people’s attention making a great way to advertise. When it first came out it was not very attention grabbing, however in the 1930s Jan Tschichold took triangulation and combined it with typography to help make images, articles, and posters more attention grabbing. It wasn’t until nearly 50 years later in the 1970s that it caught the attention of people. Triangulation is very eye catching and almost everything can be broken down or built in triangles. Many forensic anthropologist use triangulation to help recreate a face based on bone structure.
Escher, house of stairs
This artist uses triangulation in most of this drawing but he uses it not only to create his shapes out of but he used it to entertain as well by creating illusions using triangulation.
by ~lisamisu
This image represents Jan Tschichold who used triangulations angles and typography to create images and posters to catch peoples eyes. When reading something and everything reads straight left to right and straight down it can get old, however if you shift your typing in to be angled it catches the readers attention.



This one has a stained glass feel to it and a lot of stained glass windows have a lot of
triangulation in it. This one is no exception.


by Epheus



This one, even though they are all equilateral, would still be classified as triangulation.

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