Photography
composition - Your photo as a story |
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| "If
you, an artist, the one who cannot manage figures, you look like an orator who cannot manage words." Leonardo da Vinci |
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| Photo composition
rules What is a photograph? It is a story. What is a story? It is is a series of sentences connected to each other. The same is true about photography. To create a photograph, it is not enough just to take an image of something. The first impression from a photograph is determined by the composition balance of an image. To increase the expressiveness of your digital pictures, apply the picture composition rules while taking the photos or modeling their edges. Rule of Thirds Your landscapes will be optimally pleasing to the eye if you
apply the Rule of Thirds when you place your horizon line.
To get a clearer sense of these special "Golden" composition points, imagine a picture divided into nine unequal parts with four lines. Each line is drawn so that the width of the resulting small part of the image relates to that of the big part exactly as the width of the whole image relates to the width of the big part. Points where the lines intersect are the "golden" points of the picture:
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| Diagonal rule One side of the picture is divided into two, and then each half is divided into three parts. The adjacent side is divided so that the lines connecting the resulting points form a diagonal frame. According to the Diagonal Rule, important elements of the picture should be placed along these diagonals: |
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| Linear elements, such as roads, waterways, and fences placed diagonally, are generally perceived as more dynamic than horizontally placed ones: | |||
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Tips
for beginners |
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Tips Courtesy Color Pilot.com |










