Pattern and Repetition
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| repetition | 重复 | chóng fù |
| pattern | 图案 | tú àn |
| motif | 母题 | mǔ tí |
| variation | 变化 | biàn huà |
Reusing an element
- Repetition 重复 reuses an element — a shape, colour, or line.
- A pattern 图案 is the repeated element arranged in a predictable way.
- Repetition builds unity and rhythm.
Reusing a shape, colour, or line is called ____.
Repetition builds unity and rhythm.
The motif
- A motif 母题 is the single unit that repeats to form a pattern.
- Patterns can be regular (a grid, a tessellation) or irregular.
- Changing the motif's scale or colour varies the pattern.
Repetition, pattern, or motif?
Match each example to the term it best fits.
The single unit that repeats to form a pattern is the...
A motif is the repeating unit of a pattern.
Select all ways a pattern can be used.
Patterns fill, texture, or become the subject; they do not erase repetition.
Match each term to its meaning.
Repetition = reuse; motif = unit; pattern = arrangement.
Pattern as subject
- A pattern can fill a shape, define a texture, or become the subject itself.
- Too much repetition feels monotonous.
- Variation keeps a pattern engaging rather than dull.
Adding variation to a pattern keeps it from becoming monotonous.
Variation keeps repetition interesting.
A pattern is more than random repeating — it has a predictable arrangement of a motif. But a perfectly uniform pattern can become monotonous; introducing variation (a change of scale, colour, or spacing) keeps it alive and interesting.
A single leaf motif repeated in a grid makes a wallpaper pattern. Keep every leaf identical and it feels flat; let the leaves slowly change colour across the wall and the same pattern gains life through variation.
Repetition reuses an element; a pattern is a motif repeated in a predictable arrangement. Patterns can be regular or irregular, and can fill, texture, or be the subject. Variation keeps repetition from becoming monotonous.