Tag Archives: Single Point Composition

The 5 Most Abused Rules of Composition

There are many different rules of composition, and it’s hard to know how to use them all correctly. The fact of the matter is that most people never learn how to use most of them, and that leads to some very misused and abused rules.

We’re going to look at some of the worst. Abused either because people don’t know how to use them, or because they think they do.

Each of the subheadings will link to an article where you can learn more about them.

Rules of Composition

Single Point

In my video course, I argue that this is likely the most abused rule of them all, because people don’t really seem to understand that it exists.

The general rule is as follows:

The further you place a single point of interest from the center of the frame, the more interesting it becomes, but the more justifcation you need for it to be there.

When you place a single point in the center for the frame, such as a person’s face, it needs no justification for being there, but it’s by no means interesting.

Conversely, when you place a single point way off into the corner, then it will portray a very different feeling. Have a look at the photo below. I wanted to display a feeling of loniliness and a great expanse by placing the boat in the corner. This would not have been achieved if the boat was in the center of the frame.

 The 5 Most Abused Rules of Composition

Always consider what you’re trying to portray with you photos, as this will dictate your placement.

Rule of Thirds

This is likely the first rule that you ever learned, as it’s probably the most popular rule. The trouble is, some people treat it as gospel, when in reality, it’s just a good guide.

The rule is as follows:

Divide your frame up into thirds – two equally spaced horizontal and vertical lines. Then align important features in the frame with these lines, and the intersect points.

While it’s a very good rule, and it will help to make your photo more interesting, and add depth, it’s not a rule which should be followed blindly. Just because the rule says so, doesn’t mean that you should.

The truth of the matter is that it all comes down to placement, like it does with a single point. Too close to the center and it’s boring, too close to the edge and it’s too drastic. The rule of thirds is there to guide you to a safe area of the frame, where you’re not stepping on any toes, or making dramatic moves with your composition.

While it’s a great rule, and one that you should all know about, you need to consider what you’re trying to convey with your photo. It can start to look very structured if you follow the rule blindly, and that appears to be quite obvious.

 The 5 Most Abused Rules of Composition

Horizon Placement

All too often people think it’s a good idea to place their horizon in the middle of the frame, when in reality, this is just diving the photo in half, and making it look dull.

Here’s the general rule:

If you were to decide that the top half of the frame is much more interesting than the bottom, then you may want to adjust your composition so that the horizon is low in the frame. And vice versa. Find the interesting part of the frame, and adjust the horizon placement to emphasise this.

It’s a great rule, and one you should absolutely follow, although most people don’t.

Think about it. How interesting is a plain blue sky in your photo, compared to what’s happening on the ground? Not very.

 The 5 Most Abused Rules of Composition

Triangles

Triangle have a strong hold on your photos, although it seems that most people don’t quite understand exactly what they do. It all comes down to the apex (Latin for summit, peak, tip, top, extreme end) of the triangle, and where that’s positioned.

The general rule is as follows:

Lines, paths, and points of interest in a photo, are combined to create a triangle. The positioning and direction of this triangle can change the perceived stability of a photo.

Because a triangle has so much control over the stability, you need to be more careful about using the incorrectly, than not using them at all.

For a photo of a building, you would likely have a flat ground at the bottom, with an apex at the top, which appears to be very stable, but if you rotate the angle of your camera, this will start to appear less and less stable.

If you want to make your photo appear unstable, then this is a really powerful rule to be able to control.

 The 5 Most Abused Rules of Composition

Balance

There is some form of balance in every photo we look at, and it’s up to us to determine whether we want the photo to be balanced, or unbalanced.

Here is the general rule:

Balance is at the base of every composition; it determines whether the photo is pleasing and harmonious to look at, or rather uncomfortable and unresolved. It all comes down to visual weight and placement, which decides whether the left side is heavier than the right, or vice versa.

I won’t go into too much detail about balance, because you can read all about it here, but the general gist is that we look at a photo like a weighing scale. If there’s too much going on, on the left, then the photo is unbalanced to the left. Whether we want the photo be balanced or not us up to us, but it pays to know why you may or may not want it to be.

A balanced photo is pleasing and harmonious, and unbalanced photo is uncomfortable and unresolved. Which do you want your photo to be, and more importantly, why?

The more aware you are of the effects of balance on your photos, the better your photography will be, so it pays to think about how you want to portray your image before you pick up your camera. Degrees of balance is at the heart of every photo and can’t be ignored so use it wisely, and remember, that any technique, if used to excess, is going to lose its worth.

 The 5 Most Abused Rules of Composition

The 5 Most Abused Rules of Composition1 The 5 Most Abused Rules of Composition

How Learning Composition Will Dramatically Improve Your Photography

This is a post that I’ve had in me for almost the entire life of my website, which is nearing a year now, but I’ve never been able to put it into words before now. I always try to bring you varied content on this website, so I will look at what I haven’t written about in a while, and write about that to make the site more interesting. The problem is though, no matter how much I write about composition, people are just never as interested.

I can track how many people have been on my website, and where they’ve come from, where in the world they live, how long they stay on the site, how many pages they visit, and which are the most popular pages (this sounds a little creepy, but I can’t tell who you are, and this is common practice through Google software). Time after time, I’ve found that my articles on composition have been the least popular content, even though I regard it as some of the most important content to learn.Portfolio Export Print 14 How Learning Composition Will Dramatically Improve Your Photography

I’d like to change how you view composition.

It sort of feels like you’re in school when you’re learning about composition, because there’s a lot to learn, and a lot of theory to go with it. Along with this theory, you need a fair about of practice to start seeing results too.

People seem to be afraid of hard work, and to be honest, I’m not surprised. It’s just the world we live in these days. If we want something, then we will Google it, and find out the answer in a matter of moments. We’re so used to having this wealth of knowledge on demand that sitting down and studying something seems like so much more of a chore. Even when there is so much to be gained from studying something, it just doesn’t seem worth the effort. For most at least.Portfolio Export Print 45 How Learning Composition Will Dramatically Improve Your Photography

But what if you were different? What if you went the extra mile?

There’s a video that I would like to quote; it’s the last lecture of Randy Pausch. I hope you’ve seen it before, because it really opened my eyes (which is rare), but if not, then here is the video.

The quote I would like to reference, or at least paraphrase is:

“The brick walls aren’t there to stop you, they’re there to stop the people that don’t want it bad enough.”

Now I’m not here to get all deep and meaningful on you, but I would like to pose a question to you: What if you went the extra mile and put in the work and practice that other people seem to think is so hard (it’s not)? If they got stopped by the brick walls (studying composition), but you powered through, then what does that leave you? Well, it leaves you with a less crowded market of better photographers, which you can be a part of.

Studying composition is not hard, but it does take extra effort that most people don’t seem to be willing to put in, so you’re already at an advantage if you do decide to pursue it.

Portfolio Export Print 471 How Learning Composition Will Dramatically Improve Your Photography

“There are no rules to composition”

Technically, no, you’re right, there are no rules to composition. There are no rules to any artform, but there are guides, and we call these guides, rules, just to make things easier for us. So when I say that you should follow the rules of composition, what I really mean is that you should study the rules so that you have them in your knowledge and use them to your advantage.

Mixed Messages

If you’ve just bought your camera, then it’s pretty standard practice (at least I hope it is) for people to start learning about exposure when they buy their first camera, and them move onto slightly more complicated aspects of their camera, such as metering modes and white balance. This is good and it’s all in my beginner’s guide to photography. If you want to make the most out of your camera, you need to do this. This is what I teach with my beginner’s guide to photography, and I would suggest you look at it if you haven’t already.

Now that’s out of the way, lets have a look at what people seem to be doing next…

Well, mostly, it would seem that the answer is not a lot. I’m usually pretty happy if people make it this far, because learning from the internet is hard enough as it is, and if I can get my reach to go just that far, then it’s happy days around here. I want to reach further though, because the content is here, and that’s why I do it, so that people will learn. If you take on the full package, and start learning composition, then you’ll really start to see the big changes.

Here it goes…Portfolio Export Print 21 How Learning Composition Will Dramatically Improve Your Photography

The Rules of Composition

In my tutorial archive, you will see plenty of tutorials on composition, which I’ve written over the past year. I count around 20 different articles to get you started with the basics, moving onto more complicated aspects. If you’re just getting started, then I would suggest looking at my beginner’s guide to composition.

You will cover the basics such as the rule of thirds, and visual weight, and move onto dynamic tension and juxtaposition. You will start to understand more than just how to take a photo, but how to think about your photos, and what to do before you take them. This will change where you stand, how you crop, how to balance the photo, and how you view the scene, and so on.Portfolio Export Print 3 How Learning Composition Will Dramatically Improve Your Photography

How will it change my photography?

Well, I made a pretty bold claim with the title of this post, saying that it will dramatically improve the quality of your photos, and I stand by that. I can’t say exactly what it will do to your photography, but here’s what it’s done for mine, and if this isn’t enough to convince you, then I dont know what is:

  1. I think MUCH more about a photo before I take it.
  2. I think MUCH faster about the potential photo.
  3. I see with the eyes of a photographer, rather than those of a bystander.
  4. I look for depth in a photo.
  5. I see dynamic tension with ease, where as the viewer just feel it, which is exactly how it should be.
  6. I frame my photos so that they stay interesting, and so that they’re 3D, rather than 2D.
  7. I’ve stopped trying to make a boring scene interesting, and easily see potential in scenes that I would have missed before.
  8. My progression from a bad photo to a good photo is a lot faster.
  9. I’ve learned how to focus the attention of the viewer to where I want them to look.
  10. I’ve started to fix my mistakes while I’m taking the photos, instead of getting back to the computer and seeing what I should have done.
  11. I know how to balance a photo to evoke a certain feeling.
  12. I can make much more from a single point.
  13. I can create invisible lines with eye-lines.
  14. I can use a variety of lines to change how the viewer sees and feels about a photo.
  15. The list goes on and on… I could be here for hours.

Portfolio Export Print 14 How Learning Composition Will Dramatically Improve Your PhotographyI really hope that this has helped to convince you to focus your learning onto the right aspects of photography.

Separate yourself from the competition by learning composition today. How Learning Composition Will Dramatically Improve Your Photography1 How Learning Composition Will Dramatically Improve Your Photography