Golden ratio
Proportion can be used for aestheticRelating to beauty and visual appearance. effect as well as for realism.
The Golden Ratio is a proportion that occurs in nature. It reflects the rate and pattern in which many things grow – shells, ferns, even galaxies. We are used to seeing the Golden Ratio in the world around us, so using it to compose art and design can make a work look natural, calming and ‘right’.
The Golden Ratio can be written mathematically as 1:1.62. Objects are related by the Golden Ratio when one is 1.62 times the length of the other.

The Annunciation, Leonardo da Vinci, 1472-75, oil on panel, Artepics / Alamy Stock Photo
The composition of The Annunciation (Leonardo Da Vinci, 1472) uses the Golden Ratio as a relationship between many measurements:
- The position of the stonework at the corner of the building in relation to the edges of the frame
- The line of the top of the wall in relation to the top and bottom of the frame
- The position of the ornament in relation to the edges of the tabletop
- The spacing between groups of trees
- The height taken up by the yellow sash, red bodice and blue skirt of the Virgin Mary’s clothing