Photography for Beginners: Intro and Lesson 1: Rule of Thirds

in steemeducation •  7 years ago  (edited)

Photography For Beginners: Learn To Take Professional Quality Images!

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The photography challenges on Steemit have brought back my desire to teach beginners and amateurs how to improve their photography skills. I’ve taught private group lessons in the past and have really missed doing so.

I was thinking to myself late last night, why not bring this to the Steemit community?!

The basic format for each class was such: A brief lesson on an important technical aspect of photography to help students improve skills and then go out and practice the techniques we covered. I finalized the lesson with a viewing, review, discussion, and Q&A.

I would like to format the “classes” in a similar way here. I will cover an important technical aspect of photography to help you improve your images.

Then…

You can go out and practice the technique and submit your images throughout the week. I would love to recreate the fun and educational environment I had in my classes with you here on Steemit. Lets have fun with this! Get involved, share images, ask questions and give input to others.

I will start week 1 with a tip that I feel will improve your images more than any other. You will see a stark difference in your photographs once you incorporate this technique into your photography.

All classes can be “attended” with any type of camera! Classes will be geared toward beginners and amateur photographers looking to improve their photography skills.

Let’s start week 1!

Photography course for beginners: Lesson 1 - Rule of Thirds

Have you ever wondered why you like a certain photo or asked yourself what makes an image pop?

The answer is likely the photographer followed this rule of composition; The Rule of Thirds.

What is the rule of thirds?

Hold your camera up and look through the viewfinder or on your screen, depending on what you are using. Picture a tic-tac-toe board drawn over the image you plan to take. You want to put your subject into one of these thirds. When you do this it allows the eye to easily travel through a photograph. It allows movement through your image and is more pleasing to your brain and to the eye.

More often than not you will see something you want to photograph, pick up your camera, put your subject right smack dab in the middle, and start shooting. This often leaves you wondering why you can't capture the image the way you see it in your mind.

I want you to find opportunities to practice the Rule of Thirds this week. Pick up your camera and take a second to compose your image. Put your subject into one of these thirds and see what a difference it makes!

I’ll give you some examples.

Screen Shot 2017-11-08 at 12.39.27 PM.png

The focal point is near the top, left third of the image. This allows the eye to travel naturally through the photo from left to right. Whether you realize it or not, when you look at this image, you look at the models face and then your eye travels down her body and back around to her face. In a sense, this rule of composition "tricks" the brain into believing that this is a beautiful photo in the same way that the brain recognizes a symmetrical face as beautiful.

You can apply this rule to any type of photography.

Screen Shot 2017-11-08 at 1.01.33 PM.png

As you can see in this landscape, the focal point begins in the bottom left of the image and travels upward and along the tree line to the buildings on the right side. Landscapes bring up another important point with the rule of thirds. Do you notice how the water fills the bottom third of the photograph? And the sky the top two-thirds? You never want to put a horizon line in the center of your photo. You want to either focus on the land/water or the sky. Pick the more interesting one and give it more space in your photograph.

This is how the image would look if I had picked up my camera and focused on the monument and started shooting. Can you see the difference?
TidalBasinWashHDRsmartphonephotocontest.jpg
It may still be a pretty image but it is far less interesting and you will be more likely to pass it by without another glance.

It's time to take your camera out and practice!

Photograph plants, animals, people, architecture, any subject! Play with the rule of thirds. Put your subject into different portions of your "tic-tac-toe board" and see what you get as a result. Then post your images here for review and discussion!

I will leave you with something all photographers will say. Break the rules! Rules are meant to be broken... Sometimes you see something in your mind that goes against what you have learned. Try it! Sometimes it works and you end up with a phenomenal image.

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Good work :)

Thank you!

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Thank you! It's a great feeling to see something that you put a lot of time into pay off! Especially as a Newbie!! :-)

I'm looking forward to your series! This is good information and easy to understand. I'll be thinking of the law of thirds the next time I'm taking pictures.

Thank you! I’m glad you like this first one.
I’m already excited about the next. 😉 It’s going to cover lighting.

If you take any pics I’d love to see something. Feel free to share in the comments here.

I'm not a photographer but I like to take pictures and your post really have a great impact on my journey.
Thankyou! I will give a try

Please do! Take your camera out and practice the Rule of Thirds. Submit some stuff and we'll help you get to considering yourself more of a photographer!

This is a very helpful guide and great idea. Totally following.

Thank you! I'm already super excited to put the next one together! It's going to be on lighting. Super important part of photography to learn. :-)

I hope to see some images from you!

My husband is the photographer, I write. But I also like to learn, even though he teaches me most the stuff. I still mix up aperture with ISO and shutter speed and Gods help me. :)

Ha ha. I remember how long it took to get all of those different numbers down and keep them straight. ;-) Then the whole aperture being backwards from what you naturally think it should be. Lol.
It's fun though.

Yes. It's why I sometime accompany him ( @mrlightning ) on his photoshoots.

Fun!
Thanks for his link. I'll check him out!

Hi! I just read your first lesson in photography, BTW im a way beyond being newbie, its just my first time in holding cameras ever since i joined steemit and i was inspired by people here who are submitting photos that are amazing!


If in anyhow , can you check my version of the 'rule of thirds'? I am open with intellectual criticism :)

sub ni com.JPG

Ok, @deeday31! First of all, Thank You for being the first to submit a photo!
You are so close in this one but I want you to picture this. I cropped the image some and I'll explain why.

DQmccCzShw2g9ZTmPBgfZ5XHHaB4rTjsDth29krsTdUCaGt_1680x8400.jpg

You've done many things correctly in this one. You have your stem coming up from the bottom left third. You have the out of focus flower in the background in the top third of that side, so you are framing your subject well. Take my crop and picture an inch added to the left side. Your main flower will actually be near the center but adding an extra inch to the left side and cutting off an inch on the right will allow the eye to travel through the photo a bit easier.

I would give just a touch more space on the top as well. The tip of the petal is so close to the edge that the eye wants to stop there. The way the petal is bent would help move the viewers eye back through the photo if there was just a touch more space. Not a lot, maybe one or two centimeters more.

Is this something you can retake because I would love to see it reframed to see the end result?!

Too, if you retake this, remember to keep the stem coming up from the bottom third of the photo.

  ·  7 years ago Reveal Comment

Thank you for the resteem! I hope to see some some images from you!

its a good post, besides i wanna be a travel photographer, so I can learn it from this post, thank you you much

I want to be a travel photographer too! That would be the perfect life. :-)

I can't wait to see some images from you with the Rule of Thirds in mind!

Please visit my post if you dont mind

Will head over!

Very nice! I hope you join us with discussion and photos in the comments.

Okay.. I will 😉

Great!

Great!

Thank you!

Before I start replying to all of you I just want to say thank you! I expected a handful of my followers to participate. I didn't imagine this post would circulate like it has. I'm really looking forward to this! It's going to be a lot of fun! So, thanks again to all who are participating. And, to all who upvoted and resteemed to make this course possible!!!

I like this post!
And the final warning is very important!
Upvote!
Follow me (if you want!)

Tip, not warning. 😉

Thanks for the comment and upvote. I’m heading over to check you out.

very informative. thanks for posting this :)

Thank you!

Very Interesting Article!!! Thnx for Sharing!!

Thanks for reading!
I’m looking forward to doing next weeks topic!

Such a great post... I've actually applied this in photos I've taken without knowing. I may have some sort of natural photography skill hahahah

Very nice. Yes, some people just have a natural talent for it.

Thank you so much for the advices! I like taking pictures, but I'm not really good at it. (In my opinion) I have a digital camera but in the future I want to learn more and maybe buy a new, better camera. :)

Practice with what you have now. Once you master that, then upgrade. :-)

Practice this technique and let me know if you see improvement in your images!
I would love to see and hear what you think after taking some images with the rule of thirds in mind.

I will, definitely! :)

I can't wait to see!

Wow..its a great idea to bring lesson in here, I following you and wait you the next lesson. Thank you for share you skill @jewels3 its really help me to understand.

I’m glad you feel like it helped. Practice some this week and show us what you get! I would love to see.

Yes I will..thank you

desoto-26small.jpg

Submitting my for rule of third. Let me know what you think :) Great article.

I like it. You’ve got a good separation of thirds. I like the depth of field. I want to see more though. You’re sharpest point is that bottom left corner. Then the eye travels up the photo but stops.

Do you see where it stops? You want to include all the bulbs. Especially with the way they start to curve to the right. This will help lead the viewer through your image.

Try it without cutting the top portion off and the eye will travel up the photo and then through the photo which is the goal in a photograph!

If you make another attempt at this one try some different angles too. You could have a lot of fun with this simple tree. 😊

I really like the color the dried leaves add to it as well.

Looking for more videos

?

this is just what I need! I am just starting out with photography so I will definitely be following you and hopefully improving my skills! thank you :)

I’m glad you found it then!
I just checked you out. You have talent! And the beautiful country side you have to photograph. I’m jealous. 😉

awww thank you, that is kind of you to say :) yes I am lucky to have such beautiful surroundings, plenty of subject matter to play with! :D I'm honoured that you like my work too, thank you :)

I’m looking forward to seeing more of it!

I have been out and put these things into practice today! I'd love to know what you think if you get time to pop by and have a look at my 2 new posts :)

Absolutely!
I want to see because as far as I can tell you already follow this rule. I want to see if I can tell a difference. 😊

Alright, everyone needs to check out your post! You did an amazing job with the rule of thirds! The images are exactly what you want to be able to capture!

Something new for me.

Yay! I hope you enjoy the classes and are able to get a lot out of it!

this information is very valuable to me, because I like in the art of photogaraphy, I am waiting for the next lesson ,, thanks.

Thank you @ albuluhi. I’m glad you find it helpful.

Thanks for the explanation, very good article, I follow you with pleasure

Thanks for reading! I’m glad you found it helpful.

Awesome idea for a series! Definitely a must read!

I'm already working on the next dozen or so tips! This will be a much more fun adventure than I originally anticipated. :-)

Awesome! As a portrait photographer this is a great refresher, I'll be followed for your next lesson

Great! I’m glad you found it helpful.
The next is going to be lighting so a must for portraits!

Nice Photo

Very Insightful! This reminds me of the old Disney cartoon 'Donald in Mathmagicland.'

Lol! So funny this lesson made you think of that. I can see why.

Very informative. Followed & up voted!
Do visit my profile for some creative stuff, follow and up vote, cheers

Thanks! I’ll check you out!

you're welcome!

Thank you for posting lots of content and effort in all the posts you do on steemit 👌🏼look forward to the next post ....... Keep up the good work from @devosdevosi

Thank you so much.

Thanks for the helpful tips! I’ve been reading more about the role of thirds, but I think the way you described it makes the most sense! I especially liked the tip on keeping the horizon in in one of the third instead of the middle... i’ll have to play around with that.

I hope you continue doing more photography lessons! Having quality photos is one of the biggest factors to having an attractive looking blog and it something I’m actively trying to learn. :-)

I'm so glad to hear! I try to break things down so that are more easily understood.

I'm working on the next right now! Should be out by tomorrow. :-)

Awesome! I’ll keep my eyes open for it. :-)

Thank you for this free tutorial ma'am!!! Photography is my newly found passion and I really want to pursue it and have my own camera. As of now, I'm just using my huawei p10. I'm still very new to this and this is my entry for the lesson one rule of thirds.

IMG_20171115_150606.jpg

This is the raw, I didn't do any enhancement and such. If you could evaluate my entry, it will be highly appreciated!

Thanks for sharing with us! I love the color of this flower. You've got good detail in the image and have the Rule of Thirds going on.

I think I would just experiment with this one. Try shooting it at different angles and see what you end up with! Get down on the same level, step around to the front of it. I look at the image and I automatically want to walk around to the front of the flower, crouch down a little, and photograph it. I think changing your angle some will help pull the flower out. Keep the second set of blossoms in the background too and that will make the image pop even more and will help the eye to flow through smoothly.

Repost if you photograph this again! I would love to see what ends up being your favorite angle to shoot this from.