Hi there!
Lately I've read up quite a lot on what techniques you can use to make your photo/composition more interesting, but I didn't seem to encounter a summary of the possible techniques with a short description of possible use. Let alone in one place.
So I felt like making a list of what I found and could come up with myself and hereby I present to you my 'composition glossary'.
It's conveniently split up in 2 parts (first "subject", then "lines") rounded off with an expression.
But first a guideline that, if not used, makes all the other techniques useless in my opinion:
Have an interesting subject!
Although sounding obvious it might not be. "This wide landscape" or "that random macro flower" doesn't cut it. Your eyes want to go somewhere to enjoy them when looking at a picture, give it to them.
Now, enough with the introductions!
Techniques involving subjects:
Rule of Thirds
- where you place your subjects
- the amount of subjects (meaning: don't overdo it, 3 is often a great amount)
- placement horizon
Visual Weight: subjects that draw the attention of the viewer
- eyes
- text
- size, colour, contrast
- emotions (erotic, horror,...)
Balance: placement of the visual weights
- spread them to create a nice and balanced feeling
- concentrate them to fill the photograph with 'tension' between a heavy and a light part of the picture
Juxtaposition: ties in nicely with balance, but not through the use of visual weights but of objects that are not subjects
- fill the picture with a 'faux' subject that doesn't draw attention to create a tension towards the smaller but attention drawing subject
- make the picture more complete by filling gaps
Levels: filling a foreground, middle scene and background (emphasis on the and)
- wide landscapes look flat with only one (often far away) level
Single Point: one, small object as subject; no real other objects of interest to speak of
- lends itself great for a calm and relaxing picture
- good focus on the subject while it only fills a small part of the frame
Frame: adding objects along the sides of your picture
- forcing focus into the frame
- easy way to provide a nice foreground
Frame in a Frame
- adds depth
- forces eyes to follow the frames (or arches) inside
Techniques involving lines*: (you can always choose to mentally add "imaginary", if you feel like it)
Depth
- The use of (converging) lines to create more than a flat, 2D looking picture
Eye lines
- first drawing attention to the eyes themselves and then following the line of sight
- bonus points of this line can follow another lines (e.g. some branch, hillside,... in the back)
Triangles; using (imaginary) lines to tie subject together often make for an interesting picture
- use them to give form or/and draw attention
- base down triangles (pyramid style) tend to leave a stable picture
- top down tend to leave more fragile/unstable pictures
Dynamic Tension: using movement or lines that go all over the place to draw the attention out of the picture
*Lines can be pretty much what you like them to be: from the obvious pillar or horizon over the subtle extension of a long shape (e.g. a ship) to absolutely imaginary line the body language of a person might suggest. The frame within a frame is a good example of this as well. It's all yours to go out, try it and enjoy it.
~If it doesn't add, it takes away
(my second version: add more of it)
Why am I twisting it around like this? Sometimes removing those annoying leaves in the foreground may leave a flat photo that's actually worse than what you started with. Adding some more might provide a nice frame instead.
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This list shouldn't be viewed as 'rules for good photography' but more as a mnemonic device to help us when shooting and the picture doesn't come out that great.
I also find that if I manage to add more rules in my pictures that the end result looks better. Or conversely: when selection my good pictures the best ones always contain a lot of them while the deleted ones shine in their absence of these rules
Any opinions, remarks or techniques I looked over are absolutely welcome!