Thursday, 8 March 2012

Compositional Shots ... OR ... The Rule Of Thirds.

Compositional Practice #1

Here I've taken a picture of a tree on an island in the middle of the River Wick. Because I've made the tree the focal point of the photograph, I've positioned it pretty much in the centre. I know the geographical context in which it was taken but there's not too much on the picture to really give anything away about it.

Aiming to improve the composition of this photograph, I used the Rule Of Thirds technique and took the picture again. The general idea is that you imagine splitting the frame into three rows and three columns (so nine segments). The points of intersection are the key points. Luckily, my camera has the option to show the grid, which is a good thing as my idea of spacial awareness etc is not up to much...

Here's the new and improved picture:

This picture shows a lot more of the context. The right hand third is almost completely taken up by the tree, and the sky takes up roughly the top third of the photograph. By just changing the angle from which the photograph was taken, the tree looks even more magnificent as it is put into its context by the presence in the photo of more trees and, mostly importantly, the river itself. Because the sky is mostly limited to the top third of the photograph, it also brings the viewer's focus back down to Earth, whilst still successfully framing the trees.

The intersection points roughly work out as the place where the branches on the tree begin and where they begin to thin out, and where the line of other trees begins a downwards curve.


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