zaroori said:
how blades are designed to produce different pressure in each side
Its simply a matter of angle of attack and forward speed that ends up deflecting the air. You can take a flat board, angle it a bit upwards relative to it's velocity, and it will deflect the air downwards. The bottom surface of the board simply deflects the air downwards. As the upper surface of the board moves through the air, its downwards movment relative to the air causes the air to follow what would otherwise become a void (vacuum). Wiki's wording on this:
In that case a low pressure region is generated on the upper surface of the wing which draws the air above the wing downwards towards what would otherwise be a void after the wing had passed.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wing
So the forwards moving flat board ends up with low pressure above and high pressure below, coexisting with the downwards acceleration of air, drawing it downwards from above, pushing it downwards from below. The air senses this pressure differential at the speed of sound, so just before the board arrives through a volume of air, that air is initially accelerates upwards towards that low pressure area above the flat board, then is accelerated downwards as the board passes by, with a net downwards acceleration, corresponding to lift (and some forwards acceleration, corresponding to drag).
To reduce the drag, the leading edge of that flat board can be curved downwards to somewhat follow the expected flow that is initially upwards, and then downwards as it flows across the board. Next it's noticed that the downwards acceleration of air is in effect colliding with the trailing half of the board, so it's also curved downwards a bit, again to somewhat follow the expected flow of air. The result is a curved board that produces the same amount of lift but with less drag than the flat board. This is a crude description of the design of thin airfoils.
To further reduce drag, the aero guys know that tear drop like shapes have low drag, so efficient wings will end up looking like elongated tear drops that are curved downwards, and it turns out that these somewhat thicker tear drop based airfoils will produce the same lift with even less drag than thin airfoils.