We investigated the role of local and global context on visual patterns produced by normal participants, examining the effects of both top-down context (framing) and bottom-up content (element-internal symmetry) in a computer-based experimental framework. In the first study, we allowed participants to generate rectangles of arbitrary proportions and found an effect of framing on width-to-height ratios of rectangles produced, demonstrating the importance of taking visual framing into account when discussing hunman shape preferences. In a second study, using FlexTiles, an interactive pattern-generation framework, we showed that the patterns humans produce are influenced by local symmetrical properties of pattem elements. Participants also had to indicate preferences between pairs of pattem variants. We found that in some cases, pattem preferences and pattem production lead to different results. We conclude that visual context, either in the form of visual framing or local symmetries, changes aesthetic patterns that humans produce and prefer in predictable ways. These differences between the productive and perceptual preferences highlight the importance of using multiple methods when studying the human aesthetic sense.