Assignment #4 - Rules of Thirds
I can use rules of thirds to capture a balanced photographic composition with an emphasis on leading lines.
Camera Setting: mode M
Photos: 10 images of leading lines
Total of 10 images (Best images yet - completely different)- Rule of Thirds
Camera Setting: mode M
Photos: 10 images of leading lines
Total of 10 images (Best images yet - completely different)- Rule of Thirds
- Position – Place the object in a prominent position.
- Focus – Use DOF to enhance your image.
- Blur – Control your shutter speed to create a blurred background
- Size – Allowing the object to fill the view finder.
- Color – Using contrasting colors can also be a way of setting your point of interest apart from it’s surroundings.
- Shape/Texture – Similarly contrasting shapes and textures can make a subject stand out – especially patterns that are repeated around a subject.
-Creative Composition using all 3 Elements (Aperture, Shutter Speed, ISO) - Rule of 1/3 (Windmill example), Perspective, Organization and Proximity (POP) - Creative shots - Guide on writing about your photographs.
**Display the grid rule of thirds on the Canon T2i - Menu Function (2nd yellow tab with the wrench)> Live View function settings (at the bottom)> Grid display>Select Grid 1. The grid will only appear when you are shooting in LIVE MODE.
Assignment:
Capture 10 different subjects with "leading lines", which are lines within an image that leads the eye to another point in the image, or occasionally, out of the image. Anything with a definite line can be a leading line. Fences, bridges, even a shoreline can lead the eye. If can pair leading lines with a subject that is placed according to the rules of thirds your image should be very strong. Examples
Turning it in:
Use Google Classroom
Labeling images:
Last Name
**Display the grid rule of thirds on the Canon T2i - Menu Function (2nd yellow tab with the wrench)> Live View function settings (at the bottom)> Grid display>Select Grid 1. The grid will only appear when you are shooting in LIVE MODE.
Assignment:
Capture 10 different subjects with "leading lines", which are lines within an image that leads the eye to another point in the image, or occasionally, out of the image. Anything with a definite line can be a leading line. Fences, bridges, even a shoreline can lead the eye. If can pair leading lines with a subject that is placed according to the rules of thirds your image should be very strong. Examples
Turning it in:
Use Google Classroom
Labeling images:
Last Name