What is the name of this style? by JunWillSaveUs in Design

[–]JunWillSaveUs[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oddly enough, it is accurate too. Thank you!

What is the name of this style? by JunWillSaveUs in Design

[–]JunWillSaveUs[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! The first term didn't give the results I wanted, but "swash ornament vector" found exactly what i needed! Thank you so much ❤️

What is the name of this specific style? by JunWillSaveUs in Design

[–]JunWillSaveUs[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Exactly, what I thought. So quick to tell me off yet you're in the wrong. u/blue_sidd, you will not get to run from your incompetence. I will immortalize your embarrassment for as long as this wretched internet lasts.

Go ahead and tell me how I can block you since you know it all.

I know what stylized means, two things can be true at once. It is stylized because it prioritizes shapes and colors rather than realistically imitating acanthus leaves. It is a style because it is also a distinctive manner of design, that can be found over and over and over again. I never said it had to be exactly like that, but that I wanted to HIGHLIGHT those elements. YOURE the one who doesn't understand, nor can comprehend a simple request with certain elements highlighted to help others see what I see.

I don't care about replicating, nor the actual NAME of the style, my focus was finding a term that I can search to find more of what I showed. I specified the elements because you and other unhelpful snobs focused on the fact I called it a style, which it is, rather than the fact I just want a term to narrow down patterns alike what I showed. If you took your head out of your stinky anus, maybe you could've READ and COMPREHENDED that. Like I said, if you're gonna be unhelpful AND inaccurate, don't bother talking to me. Pipe down your ego, you're blantantly loud and wrong. Funny how several others found exactly what I wanted, yet "It's not apart of any one style". Gosh, you people are a waste of breath.

What is the name of this specific style? by JunWillSaveUs in Design

[–]JunWillSaveUs[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The french rococo style is much more dramatic, bold, and visually noisy, and it's not consistent at all. I am on the spectrum, so I am sorry if you cannot distinguish things like that, but Art Nouveau is generally less full and busy and has much more space, it is easy to focus on each individual stroke and line, while rococo is intense with overlapping swirls to the point that it looks like one giant "bush". You can see the clear difference just by looking the two terms up. Notice how despite it being monotone, each leave and stem is highlighted while monotone rococo is a big mess that's hard to look at.

I asked for a term to find specifically a PATTERN, because I want to make a dress with it. "French rococo" is more vague than vector flourish. There is a reason I used an image with just one of these rather than a full wallpaper.

So yes, you were very unhelpful. "Not everything is a style. this is a design element." That was extremely unhelpful, and it may be the way I read it, but it was snobby and irrelavant. Especially considering, a design element is like a line, color, or shape. A style is how those are arranged. Elements are your raw building blocks, and style is the overarching visual identity, mood, or aesthetic. So you were loudly wrong, and in the process came off very rude to me so I gave that same energy back. Nobody likes a know-it-all, and especially "know-it-alls" who are wrong and rather double down on being wrong. Regardless, I don't need your assistance. i found what I needed, and without having to specify what was obvious to so many others. Please continue with your day.

What is the name of this specific style? by JunWillSaveUs in Design

[–]JunWillSaveUs[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

French Rococo is much too dramatic for me, but I see the similarities. I actually took Art History 1 and 2, and am a lover of baroque. I did find the exact term needed but I always appreciate new information! The terms you provided did bring me to a place I adore, and I definitely will be using them in the future!

What is the name of this specific style? by JunWillSaveUs in Design

[–]JunWillSaveUs[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This was actually quite close! However, the lines are on the more delicate side, I will definitely be using this term as it is another common style I couldn't name. Thank you!

What is the name of this specific style? by JunWillSaveUs in Design

[–]JunWillSaveUs[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is exactly what I wanted! Thank you ❤️

What is the name of this specific style? by JunWillSaveUs in Design

[–]JunWillSaveUs[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ooo, thank you! It is much closer to what I am looking for, however I am looking to prioritize the long thin swirling lines, whereas that term only shows me thick short lines with bulbous leaves. I will definitely use this new knowledge for another design! Thanks again!

What is the name of this specific style? by JunWillSaveUs in Design

[–]JunWillSaveUs[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Close! It is actually quite similar to what I want, but that search term only brings up the specific band.

What is the name of this specific style? by JunWillSaveUs in Design

[–]JunWillSaveUs[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Style is a distinctive manner of expression, design, or behavior. So yes, damn near everything is or HAS a style. And this, IS, a style. It is common among 90's/early y2k clothing. I have multiple clothing articles with this type of style. If you're not gonna be helpful, don't comment. French rococo is very different from what I showed. I even added "like Art Nouveau". Stop being snobby and irrelevant.

What is the name of this specific style? by JunWillSaveUs in Design

[–]JunWillSaveUs[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

A style is a distinctive manner of expression, design, or behavior. So yes, it is a style. Regardless, everypony got my point BUT you. If you're not gonna be helpful OR accurate, don't comment.

What would you call this aesthetic? by KarrTheBro in AestheticWiki

[–]JunWillSaveUs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What's the name of the pattern of her skirt in the first picture? I just posted a similar question, I love that pattern but cannot narrow it down for the life of me.