Elements Of Photography By: Madison Bowman Line PERSPECTIVEPERSPECTIVE Depth of field Rule of thirds
If you were to put thirds on this picture than it would almost be perfectly in thirds and the sun centered makes it look even better. Owner: Eduardo Amorim License information: Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike Photo Credit or URL: photo credit: Eduardo Amorim via photopin cc
Rule of thirds Its split up into thirds by the field, then the boy, and the field. Owner: Brandon Christopher License information: Attribution Non-Commercial Photo Credit or URL: photo credit: Brandon Christopher Warren via photopin cc
Perspective The picture is taken at an angle. The bird is not right in the middle and its in the corner. Owner: Alexandre Dulaunoy License information: Attribution Share Alike Photo Credit or URL: photo credit: Alexandre Dulaunoy via photopin cc
Perspective This picture is taken at an angle where you can see the net, other side, the setter and the hitter. Owner: West Point License information: Photo Credit or URL:photo credit: West Point - The U.S. Military Academy via photopin <a
Depth of field The Starbucks cup is focused and the background is not focused. Owner: Visual Panic License information: Attribution Photo Credit or URL: photo credit: visualpanic via photopin cc
Depth of field The middle of the pizza is being focused and the outside is blurred, therefore its depth of field. Owner: Will Reign License information: Attribution Non-Commercial Photo Credit or URL: photo credit: Peregrino Will Reign via photopin cc
Line The black lines on the basketball draw my attention the most. Owner: fabbio License information: Attribution Share Alike Photo Credit or URL: photo credit: fabbio via photopin cc
Line The lines on the Eiffel tower draw my attention the most. The first thing I look at is the lines. Owner: Werner Kunz License information: Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike Photo Credit or URL: photo credit: Werner Kunz via photopin cc