Thursday, February 21, 2008

Landscapes



Photography has a couple of compositional rules we will work with this semester. First and most notable is the rule of 1/3. This states that an image can be divided into nine equal parts by two equally-spaced horizontal lines and two equally-spaced vertical lines. The four points formed by the intersections of these lines can be used to align features in the photograph. Additionally the horizon line should be placed on either the upper or lower deviding line.

For landscapes there should also be 3 prominant areas in the photograph, for/mid/background. This will add depth to your images and lead the viewer deeper into the photograph.

Your task is to shoot landscapes... lots and lots of interesting landscapes. Consider changing camera andgles, get closer, farther away, squat down, stand on something tall, and follow the rules above to find great success.

You need 24 fantastic landscapes by Monday Feb. 25.

1 comment:

Haje Jan Kamps said...

I'm honoured to have been linked to in your blog post, kind sir, good luck with the photography course!

I'd love to do an actual photography qualification at some point, it would be great motivation to actually go out and do a load of photography again.

Take care,

Haje Jan Kamps
www.photocritic.org