Ha ha. I was going to send you to the same website.
Basically when you set up your photo into nine equal parts, there should be 4 points where the line's cross. The main focus of your picture should cross at least 2 of those points.
You can also look here for more examples. http://digital-photography-school.com/blog/rule-of-thirds/
Kamie's is the best desciption. If you drew two evenly spaced horizontal lines, and two evenly spaced vertical lines, you'd end up with nine squares and four intersecting points on your photo yeah? The thing you are taking a photo of then should cross over two of those intersecting points...so I guess it would be the second photo.
May 1st - Clouds May 2nd - Photo of Choice May 3rd - Night May 4th - "L" Composition May 5th - Rule of Thirds Composition May 6th - Pyramid Composition
May 7th - Locks May 8th - Complete Stranger May 9th - Photo of Choice May 10th - Another's Perspective May 11th - Aging/Old
May 12th - Modern May 13th - Black & White May 14th - Love
May 15th - Children May 16th - Photo of Choice
May 17th - Design Through Cropping (manmade)
May 18th - Monochromatic
May 19th - Vehicles
May 20th - Landscape/Nature
May 21st - Design Through Cropping (nature)
May 22nd - Reflection
May 23rd - Photo of Choice
May 24th - Light May 25th - Self Portrait May 26th - Eyes
May 27th - White on White
May 28th - Movement
May 29th - New
May 30th - Photo of Choice
May 31st - Animals
4 comments:
This is what I looked at lol
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_thirds
Wish I could help ya babe but alas, I wouldn't have a foggiest
Ha ha. I was going to send you to the same website.
Basically when you set up your photo into nine equal parts, there should be 4 points where the line's cross. The main focus of your picture should cross at least 2 of those points.
You can also look here for more examples.
http://digital-photography-school.com/blog/rule-of-thirds/
Kamie's is the best desciption. If you drew two evenly spaced horizontal lines, and two evenly spaced vertical lines, you'd end up with nine squares and four intersecting points on your photo yeah? The thing you are taking a photo of then should cross over two of those intersecting points...so I guess it would be the second photo.
Post a Comment