Why Your Eye Loves Order — and How to Use It in Design

Have you ever glanced at a flyer or a website and instantly felt uplifted,  excited, or overwhelmed? Your visceral response isn’t an accident; your brain is always hunting for patterns, structure, and balance. When design leans into that impulse, it feels intuitive—like it just makes sense. And when it doesn’t, your eye knows something’s wrong, even if you can’t put your finger on why.

This concept is central to effective design. Once you master how to apply it, everything from your signage to your social posts begins to *function* better.



WHY ORDER MATTERS IN DESIGN

There is a reason why cluttered designs are confusing. The human brain is wired to seek order, and it does so unconsciously.

You notice this order instinct working all the time:

  • On supermarket shelves, where customers know to search for their desired product by category, size, and shape.
  • On Instagram, where uniform margins and filtered aesthetics dictate your scroll.
  • In branding, when a curated collection of logos, typefaces, and color schemes produces a consistent “feel.”

What Gestalt Tells Us About Design

Start by simplifying. Canva has great templates that allow you to keep your fonts, colors and logos in one place.

Psychologists have called this Gestalt theory—the idea that our brains naturally group like-things together so we can process them more quickly. So, rather than twelve distinct dots, you might perceive a triangle. Or, rather than catching each discrete photo and caption on a social feed, your brain discerns a repeating pattern and understands the “system” underlying it.

When design plays off that impulse—when it provides the brain with some structure to hang on to—people are more sure of themselves, more comfortable. Because of that confidence, they’re more likely to interact with what’s in front of them.

Building an Ordered Design

Design order does not just happen. You achieve it through employing some easy habits that will give your design a polished finish:

 

BEGIN WITH A GRID

Before you even begin placing elements and text, generate a grid for your design using guides or even imagine a grid in your mind’s eye. Align your text boxes, images, and buttons to align with each other according to the grid. 

Your layout will be more professional and less cluttered, even to those who can’t put their finger on “why.”

USE CONSISTENT SPACING

From your margins to your padding—even your font size, be consistent and follow a hierarchy. Your headings should have a larger font and padding than your subheadings, which should be larger than your body content. 

Consistent spacing will give your layout a rhythm and make it scannable for your audience.

REPEAT ELEMENTS TO CREATE STRUCTURE

Use the same font for all headings. Use the same style for all icons. Line up the tops of buttons or images on the same level. Repetition doesn’t appear lazy—it will show your confidence and will give your viewer a pattern to follow, and build brand recognition in the process. 

Take luxury brands, for example. Certain fonts, colors, and emblems immediately tell you what brand you’re looking at.

LIMIT CHAOS, DON'T KILL PERSONALITY

You can still be bold. You can still surprise people. But do it on purpose. Begin with order, then violate it strategically when you wish to draw attention to something. (Think: bold splash of color, unexpected text placement, a single oversized image that grabs your eye and pulls you in.)

One of my favorite examples of intentional boldness is Apple—not because they’re loud, but because they’re disciplined.

Use Order to Establish Clear Communication

Ordered design does not seem stodgy—it seems clear. That readability is what keeps people around long enough to read your message, click the button, or remember your name. The best news? You don’t need professional tools or pricey templates to begin doing this. 

Approach structure as a fundamental aspect of your design process—up there with color, type, and mood. Start with order. Your eye, and your audience, will thank you.

If you found this information useful, share with a friend and follow along as new articles are released regularly!

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Practical Design is a DBA of P’s + Q’s, LLC. For more information about P’s + Q’s, LLC, please visit pqconsulting.co.

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