Rodin in 4×5 grid
June 5th, 2008I’m not a grid-guy. I’ve never used a precise grid for layout or design. One reason for this is because I’ve never went to college for what a lot of designers (who have gone to college) refer to as “formal art training”. I never had some creepy old designer hover over me and tell me how to portion out little fields with absolute equality in order to create designs through mathematical exactness. This is a good thing.
As a designer I’ve never been all that interested in rigid displays of organization. More often than not, I feel it’s not the best way to impact the viewer. So, for years I’ve spent my time working outside of the straight lines. I try to approach every design in a new way with a new point of view and it’s been that way since I can remember until recently when I started to experiment with grids on my own.
In the past year I’ve started to look more and more into what grids can offer me as a designer. There’s a real risk with grids to limit yourself to a repetitive layout system that defines your all your designs that implement your grid. I don’t want that, it’s not what I am about. What I am about is forcing the grid to work for me and what I am designing at that moment. To take any number of equally spaced fields and bend them to your will, that’s the kind of stuff that interests me.
What do I lose by twisting the grid layout concept into something more than a way to format columns of text? Nothing, you lose nothing at all. If anything you gain the pros of working both on and off of a grid. Grids give you a strong sense of organization. Grids, in their best forms, let the designer present his visual concepts to the viewer in an easy to read manner.
By working outside of the grid, by breaking many of the lines, you can still impart a sense of visual distress and tension. It’s this visual break in the rules that gets the viewer’s mind working and helps pull them into your message.
For me, grids are here to stay. I look forward to using them, and breaking them, in the future and enjoy it when someone else does the same.









