Luminous Landscape Forum

The Art of Photography => Discussing Photographic Styles => Topic started by: welly on August 08, 2018, 11:02:17 am

Title: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: welly on August 08, 2018, 11:02:17 am
Interesting blog post on the technical aspects of composition.

https://antongorlin.com/blog/photography-composition-definitive-guide/
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Kevin Gallagher on August 08, 2018, 11:27:01 am
 Wow, very well written and IMHO, worth bookmarking. Thanks Welly and welcome to LULA!!
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: RSL on August 08, 2018, 11:29:20 am
Wow, all you need do is to take this article with you on your phone. Then, when you see people standing against the sea with a sailing ship in the background you can whip out your phone and consult it for the proper way to compose the shot. And if you blow it and haven't finished studying before the people walk away or the ship sinks, you may be able to "Improve your composition in editing" (cropping) using Photoshop's crop tool, taking into account the "rule of thirds," etc.

Welly, I don't mean to be too snide with my remarks, but I'd suggest a better way to learn composition is to study the work of the world's great artists, including especially the work of the great photographers. I'd also suggest that if you failed to compose properly on the camera, in most cases you're screwed. If you have to dork around in Photoshop to re-compose a shot the results usually show that you did that.

I do like your three trees, though.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 08, 2018, 12:08:51 pm
An excellent and quite comprehensive primer on composition. Thanks for the link.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 09, 2018, 07:58:29 am
Welcome to LuLa, welly.

I opened the link and almost instantly closed it: the self-promotion of the writer was just too hard to stay with, which I would have had to do, in order to learn what to do when God has been negligent in providing the right genes.

Personally, I would chuck all such guides onto a bonfire of collected photography-writer vanities. As Russ suggests, you see what it's all about by looking at monographs, surviving magazines and some selected websites. Find a shooter whose style you admire, that pulls you close, then just write his name into Google adding the magical word "images" though, living in Spain, Google likes me to type imagenes instead, and who am I to argue with Google?
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 09, 2018, 10:21:03 am
The desire to turn composition into an algorithm, a set of rules, is positively a plague in photography.

Good work on noting that Dynamic Symmetry is a bunch of crap. Now move on to Leading Lines and the Rule of Thirds, which are also crap. There is actual research here, Arnheim's book on Art and Visual Perception is pretty good, and suggests something like the Rule of Thirds but also makes clear that it's not that simple.

Just look. You see things pretty much the same way other people do. If it looks balanced, it is. If it looks off kilter, it is.

The key is not in knowing where to place the masses to create a sensation of tension (or whatever) but rather to know that it is possible to create a sensation of tension. This is what you get from looking at other people's pictures, as Russ suggests. You see, you react, you expand your ideas of what reactions are possible. Maybe you pick up a few hints about how to do it.

Rules of composition are a distraction. You lose the scene in front of the lens, because all you see is the leading line.

Just look, and be aware.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 09, 2018, 10:23:47 am
<shakes head in disbelief>
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: RSL on August 09, 2018, 10:48:48 am
<Nods head. Puts thumb up.>
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 09, 2018, 10:50:22 am
<sits, dumbly sipping his coffee>
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: hokuahi on August 09, 2018, 10:59:28 am
Say what??

I don't know... On first perusal it seems pretty interesting..

Worth a re-read for sure.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 09, 2018, 11:01:34 am
It does seem a little tongue in cheek in parts, which is nice to see.

Tip: There are two flow charts near the end. The first one isn't very useful. The second one is spot on.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: RSL on August 09, 2018, 11:02:21 am
Be sure to put it on your cellphone. That way it'll be right there where you can consult it when you're ready to frame your next picture.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 09, 2018, 11:06:01 am
Anton could make an app for your phone that talks you through it. A sultry voice whispering in your ear "does it align with a rule? does it align with a rule?"
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 09, 2018, 12:25:57 pm
About rules... reminds me of a discussion we had a couple of years ago on this forum, where a member known as "popnfresh" said the following:

"... People like to say that rules are meant to be broken, but I say that rules are meant to keep the clueless from looking like idiots. Only break a rule when you're good enough to know what you're doing."
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 09, 2018, 12:45:16 pm
The desire to turn composition into an algorithm, a set of rules, is positively a plague in photography.

Good work on noting that Dynamic Symmetry is a bunch of crap. Now move on to Leading Lines and the Rule of Thirds, which are also crap. There is actual research here, Arnheim's book on Art and Visual Perception is pretty good, and suggests something like the Rule of Thirds but also makes clear that it's not that simple.

Just look. You see things pretty much the same way other people do. If it looks balanced, it is. If it looks off kilter, it is.

The key is not in knowing where to place the masses to create a sensation of tension (or whatever) but rather to know that it is possible to create a sensation of tension. This is what you get from looking at other people's pictures, as Russ suggests. You see, you react, you expand your ideas of what reactions are possible. Maybe you pick up a few hints about how to do it.

Rules of composition are a distraction. You lose the scene in front of the lens, because all you see is the leading line.

Just look, and be aware.

I'd struggle to think of anyone I really admire who followed the rules.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 09, 2018, 02:27:24 pm
Paraphrasing from memory something that is attributed to various jazz musicians and in various forms... I remember this one as attributed to Miles Davis:

"First, learn everything there is to learn about jazz... then forget it all and play until you are dizzy."

It seems to me that some of you guys want to skip the first part and jump straight to the forgetting part. Or you are so far from the first part, years-wise, that you forgot it ever existed.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 09, 2018, 02:42:30 pm
Paraphrasing from memory something that is attributed to various jazz musicians and in various forms... I remember this one as attributed to Miles Davis:

"First, learn everything there is to learn about jazz... then forget it all and play until you are dizzy."

It seems to me that some of you guys want to skip the first part and jump straight to the forgetting part. Or you are so far from the first part, years-wise, that you forgot it ever existed.

I believe some of us put in many years learning on the job rather than from primers.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 09, 2018, 02:51:47 pm
I believe some of us put in many years learning on the job rather than from primers.

You never went to any art school? You just started painting?
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 09, 2018, 03:01:57 pm
You never went to any art school? You just started painting?

You think we learnt by rote, from primers or were encouraged to follow rules?

Far from it, we worked hard and were to encouraged to find our own way.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 09, 2018, 03:49:57 pm
There's a bunch of different things that tend to get conflated here, largely by photographers who because they tend to lean a bit technophile are charmed by the idea of algorithmic approaches to what are essentially emotional problems.

1. How to people perceive things, especially pictures of things?
2. What properties do pictures have?
3. What should I do when I take a picture?

The photographer in search of rules is interested, of course, in #3. People seeking to provide such rules to sell their book or promote their web site, gleefully gather up items from #1 and #2 and file the serial numbers off, presenting them as #3. Often, as in the case of Leading Lines and the Rule of Thirds, they haven't even got them from category 1, they're just made up entirely, but presented as if they were fundamental laws of perception.

Now, knowing how people perceive things, and understanding properties of existing good pictures, these are great ideas. You don't need to be able to apply words to any of it, though. You perceive things much the same way others do, so you can knock off #1 simply by paying attention. #2 requires that you actually look at pictures, and pay rather more attention. It doesn't hurt, here, to have some people point things out about pictures for you. Some stuff is there but it pretty hard to consciously notice unless you have someone pointing things out.

Turning all this material into a #3, well, you cannot algorithmize it. You can't just learn the properties of flour, water, salt, leavenings, sweeteners, and be a pastry chef. If you work away on existing pastries, make a bunch of pies and have people point out the properties of a good crust, and so on, you can learn to make a passable copy of existing pastries.

But there's no algorithm that's going to get you to a new pastry on your own. To get from copying to creating, you're just going to have to try some stuff out, throw a lot of stuff out, and exercise taste and judgement based on experience, and even then sometimes you just aren't the guy. You haven't got it.

Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: RSL on August 09, 2018, 03:56:06 pm
+1
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 09, 2018, 04:16:32 pm
... It doesn't hurt, here, to have some people point things out about pictures for you. Some stuff is there but it pretty hard to consciously notice unless you have someone pointing things out...

Really!? Who would have thought!?

Quote
...Turning all this material into a #3, well, you cannot algorithmize it....

And who ever said it could be or should be algorithmized!?

You (et al) are just gloriously defeating a straw man of your own making.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 09, 2018, 04:19:35 pm
You think we learnt by rote, from primers or were encouraged to follow rules?

Far from it, we worked hard and were to encouraged to find our own way.

I wasn't thinking anything along those lines, I was simply asking. By failing to answer, you are actually confirming my point: you first had to learn something from the collective historic experience of other artists in order to "find your own way."
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 09, 2018, 04:23:15 pm
I will point out that the original piece literally has a flow chart in it for composing pictures, apart from the usual rot about "put the subject here, put the subject there" that it is infested with.

I submit that I did not invent the idea of algorithmizing composition.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 09, 2018, 04:47:18 pm
You never went to any art school? You just started painting?

OK, in direct answer to your question, yes I went to art school and yes we were encouraged to do that, just get on with it. It was impressed upon us that very little could be taught and that we should find ourselves before finding our own way.

Very 60s but very effective.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 09, 2018, 05:25:11 pm
... we were encouraged to do that, just get on with it...

And it took four years of “just getting on with it”? Boy, what a waste of time and money. Just buy brushes and paint and “get on with it” on your own instead.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 09, 2018, 05:25:24 pm
There's a bunch of different things that tend to get conflated here, largely by photographers who because they tend to lean a bit technophile are charmed by the idea of algorithmic approaches to what are essentially emotional problems.

1. How to people perceive things, especially pictures of things?
2. What properties do pictures have?
3. What should I do when I take a picture?

The photographer in search of rules is interested, of course, in #3. People seeking to provide such rules to sell their book or promote their web site, gleefully gather up items from #1 and #2 and file the serial numbers off, presenting them as #3. Often, as in the case of Leading Lines and the Rule of Thirds, they haven't even got them from category 1, they're just made up entirely, but presented as if they were fundamental laws of perception.

Now, knowing how people perceive things, and understanding properties of existing good pictures, these are great ideas. You don't need to be able to apply words to any of it, though. You perceive things much the same way others do, so you can knock off #1 simply by paying attention. #2 requires that you actually look at pictures, and pay rather more attention. It doesn't hurt, here, to have some people point things out about pictures for you. Some stuff is there but it pretty hard to consciously notice unless you have someone pointing things out.

Turning all this material into a #3, well, you cannot algorithmize it. You can't just learn the properties of flour, water, salt, leavenings, sweeteners, and be a pastry chef. If you work away on existing pastries, make a bunch of pies and have people point out the properties of a good crust, and so on, you can learn to make a passable copy of existing pastries.

But there's no algorithm that's going to get you to a new pastry on your own. To get from copying to creating, you're just going to have to try some stuff out, throw a lot of stuff out, and exercise taste and judgement based on experience, and even then sometimes you just aren't the guy. You haven't got it.


"...and even then sometimes you aren't the guy. You haven't got it."

Praise be: I've been singing that song - if off-key - for as long as I have known LuLa.

It's an unfortunate truth that the entire photographic teaching world tries to hide from the keen amateur with a coin in his sweaty little hand.

For the wannabe pro, he discovers that early on when he gets a few first jobs with the same number of clients...

It could even be funny if it were not so sad: I play music pretty much all the time, but that's the limit for me - I can neither play an instrument nor sing. That doesn't make me go on a pointless adventure trying to change the ears that I have, even though for years I was so into it that I knew all about which folks played in which jazz bands (New Orleans jazz). I just accepted that loving something didn't imply being able to do it too.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 09, 2018, 05:32:20 pm
Paraphrasing from memory something that is attributed to various jazz musicians and in various forms... I remember this one as attributed to Miles Davis:

"First, learn everything there is to learn about jazz... then forget it all and play until you are dizzy."

It seems to me that some of you guys want to skip the first part and jump straight to the forgetting part. Or you are so far from the first part, years-wise, that you forgot it ever existed.

Maybe the quotation was meant with a capital d in dizzy?

I don't know... I did spent a long number of years doing a helluva lot of printing for people, and very little photography (for them).

Yet, that said, when I set out to do my own thing, I discovered that my very first fashion shoot presented me with no problems. I simply didn't think there would be any, and so there weren't. Ducks, water?
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 09, 2018, 05:55:49 pm
And it took four years of “just getting on with it”? Boy, what a waste of time and money. Just buy brushes and paint and “get on with it” on your own instead.

Which is exactly what I'd encourage any budding photographer to do.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 09, 2018, 07:17:06 pm
...You can't just learn the properties of flour, water, salt, leavenings, sweeteners, and be a pastry chef. If you work away on existing pastries, make a bunch of pies and have people point out the properties of a good crust, and so on, you can learn to make a passable copy of existing pastries.

But there's no algorithm that's going to get you to a new pastry on your own...

Perhaps it won't make you a new Michelin 3-star chef, but it might help you make some edible pastry for your kids for breakfast. What is wrong with learning how to make a passable copy of a decent pastry? Who says that the only worthwhile goal in life is to become the new Picasso of pastry (or photography equivalent)? Millions of photographers would be perfectly satisfied to make something reasonably passable, rather than the deluge of visual crap we witness daily.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 09, 2018, 07:25:14 pm
...
1. How to people perceive things, especially pictures of things?
2. What properties do pictures have?
3. What should I do when I take a picture?
...

To get from copying to creating, you're just going to have to try some stuff out, throw a lot of stuff out, and exercise taste and judgement based on experience...

And that experience is what 1 and 2 are the building blocks of, among other things. That includes primers, books, visits to museums, monographs, rules of thumbs, concepts, etc. All that at some point sinks in and is mixed and combined, with hopefully some talent/genes, into a unique mix that forms an individual approach. That is how you end up with the "taste and judgement based on experience."
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Alan Klein on August 09, 2018, 09:44:26 pm
The rules reflect what the brain already knows what is pleasing to it.  After a while, you move the viewfinder around to select what the brain finds most pleasing.  And there's your shot. 
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: fdisilvestro on August 10, 2018, 12:40:01 am
I agree with Slobodan on this issue, as long as you use the rules as a means and not as an end.

No rules and you end up with abominations such as vertical videos

Viewing the work of other photographers is ok, but I have seen many times that people just end up trying to copy someone else.

Use the rules as a guidance, practice and practice more and find your own way
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 10, 2018, 04:00:40 am
Wait, someone thinks that baking doesn't benefit from algorithms?  That you just randomly experiment until you get it right rather than being taught very clearly by more experienced chefs or cooks about ratios of ingredients and temperatures and so on?

What a lot of nonsense.

If someone wants to get into photography, why not read through a basic primer to get some ideas and then head on out to start learning and looking at masters and those whose work you like and admire?

I'm with Slobo - too many people here have either forgotten what it's like to learn (this is hardly the first thread to demonstrate that), or have such immense opinions of their own ability that they presume they were capable of training themselves to the level of master without and basic tips (and that such tips would have somehow sullied their creativity).
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 10, 2018, 06:10:52 am
Wait, someone thinks that baking doesn't benefit from algorithms?  That you just randomly experiment until you get it right rather than being taught very clearly by more experienced chefs or cooks about ratios of ingredients and temperatures and so on?

What a lot of nonsense.

If someone wants to get into photography, why not read through a basic primer to get some ideas and then head on out to start learning and looking at masters and those whose work you like and admire?

I'm with Slobo - too many people here have either forgotten what it's like to learn (this is hardly the first thread to demonstrate that), or have such immense opinions of their own ability that they presume they were capable of training themselves to the level of master without and basic tips (and that such tips would have somehow sullied their creativity).


Any judgement I make on any image maker is based on what they do, not what they say.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 10, 2018, 06:14:56 am
Wait, someone thinks that baking doesn't benefit from algorithms?  That you just randomly experiment until you get it right rather than being taught very clearly by more experienced chefs or cooks about ratios of ingredients and temperatures and so on?

What a lot of nonsense.

If someone wants to get into photography, why not read through a basic primer to get some ideas and then head on out to start learning and looking at masters and those whose work you like and admire?

I'm with Slobo - too many people here have either forgotten what it's like to learn (this is hardly the first thread to demonstrate that), or have such immense opinions of their own ability that they presume they were capable of training themselves to the level of master without and basic tips (and that such tips would have somehow sullied their creativity).

That's one point of view.

However, even within the domestic scene of cooking - let's leave pro cheffing work aside here - there are exceptions to hard rules. Of course, you have to try to differentiate the difference between seeing something done once or twice, reading about it in a book (cooking or otherwise) and having a natural talent for whatever.

I met my future wife when we were both teens in school. Even then, she'd come back to my family home after the movies or something, see what was available and rustle us up a meal for two. I don't remember her ever being taught how to cook anything - and she was only fifteen years old. She went on to make the most amazing meals throughout her life, give successful parties and even in a crisis, never lose her cool (I never will forget when the potatoes she had to hand did not translate well into the gnocchi my uncle had asked if she could make: as soon as she discovered they wouldn't work properly with the flour, she switched to something else entirely and her smile made even my disappointed uncle forgive and forget! The stew that was to go with it was still perfect). So yeah, anecdotal, but still a valid point about nature and what it lets you do.

A downside to this was that every time we went back visiting to the UK, to either parental home, she was instantly handed the apron.

But the point is this: I watched her cook day after day, this and the other, yet today, left to my own devices, I can't cook a goddam thing that's worth the electricity.

Photography isn't that far removed: basically, it is a simple matter of making an exposure, as we all know. Of course folks with agendas will translate it into a huge deal, and it can be until you learn the mechanics of digital cameras and basic Photoshop. But that isn't photography: that's mechanics, as I said, and certainly a thing that can be taught. Photography is about the grey matter inside your skull, and even a brain surgeon can't put talent into that space if talent ain't there.

David Bailey trained with John French, very well-known in fashion circles at the time. During an interview, Bailey remarked that he had to unlearn everything he'd learned at the French studio. In my own case, I dropped out of photographic night school when the tutor told me, face to face, that he'd abandon photography is he made pix like Bailey. What was I going to learn there? How to be redundant? I already knew more about where I was going than any tutor out there could teach me.

Of course, perhaps the use of the word talent is part of the problem: some without it see it as a word denoting superiority or an attitude of elitism. What it is really, is nothing more than the natural ability you have to perform a particular kind of task. Because one may have it in one sphere does not imply one may have it in any other, so a sense of a broader superiority can be very misplaced indeed.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 10, 2018, 06:20:54 am
Any judgement I make on any image maker is based on what they do, not what they say.

Which is exactly what commercial clients do, too!

It's all that matters.

Rob
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 10, 2018, 06:24:38 am
Which is exactly what commercial clients do, too!

It's all that matters.

Rob

Indeed, and for any given client we were/are only as good as our last job.

It's a tough gig.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 10, 2018, 07:52:45 am
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=UADOYRGGIp4

Anyone think you learn this in books?

You do it because you do it. Same with the girls: models stopped making silly geometrics back in the 60s.

Rob
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: RSL on August 10, 2018, 08:03:38 am
That's one point of view.

However, even within the domestic scene of cooking - let's leave pro cheffing work aside here - there are exceptions to hard rules. Of course, you have to try to differentiate the difference between seeing something done once or twice, reading about it in a book (cooking or otherwise) and having a natural talent for whatever.

I met my future wife when we were both teens in school. Even then, she'd come back to my family home after the movies or something, see what was available and rustle us up a meal for two. I don't remember her ever being taught how to cook anything - and she was only fifteen years old. She went on to make the most amazing meals throughout her life, give successful parties and even in a crisis, never lose her cool (I never will forget when the potatoes she had to hand did not translate well into the gnocchi my uncle had asked if she could make: as soon as she discovered they wouldn't work properly with the flour, she switched to something else entirely and her smile made even my disappointed uncle forgive and forget! The stew that was to go with it was still perfect). So yeah, anecdotal, but still a valid point about nature and what it lets you do.

A downside to this was that every time we went back visiting to the UK, to either parental home, she was instantly handed the apron.

But the point is this: I watched her cook day after day, this and the other, yet today, left to my own devices, I can't cook a goddam thing that's worth the electricity.

Photography isn't that far removed: basically, it is a simple matter of making an exposure, as we all know. Of course folks with agendas will translate it into a huge deal, and it can be until you learn the mechanics of digital cameras and basic Photoshop. But that isn't photography: that's mechanics, as I said, and certainly a thing that can be taught. Photography is about the grey matter inside your skull, and even a brain surgeon can't put talent into that space if talent ain't there.

David Bailey trained with John French, very well-known in fashion circles at the time. During an interview, Bailey remarked that he had to unlearn everything he'd learned at the French studio. In my own case, I dropped out of photographic night school when the tutor told me, face to face, that he'd abandon photography is he made pix like Bailey. What was I going to learn there? How to be redundant? I already knew more about where I was going than any tutor out there could teach me.

Of course, perhaps the use of the word talent is part of the problem: some without it see it as a word denoting superiority or an attitude of elitism. What it is really, is nothing more than the natural ability you have to perform a particular kind of task. Because one may have it in one sphere does not imply one may have it in any other, so a sense of a broader superiority can be very misplaced indeed.

Beautifully put, Rob. I've seen this in fields other than art. Music, of course, is a classic example. I also found that in computer programming the same thing applies. Either you have it or you don't have it. That has nothing to do with intelligence or even hard work, though both may be necessary to exploit your inborn talent. I also can tell you that some brilliant programmers are dumb as rocks in other areas. I suspect the same thing's true of musicians and composers.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 10, 2018, 08:30:29 am
...Because one may have it in one sphere does not imply one may have it in any other, so a sense of a broader superiority can be very misplaced indeed...

Absolutely.

I give thanks to the Gods that from a very early age I had a passion for image making and could see no other way forward. The truth is without that passion I'd have been lost and no doubt a looser.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 10, 2018, 09:11:41 am
Wait, someone thinks that baking doesn't benefit from algorithms?  That you just randomly experiment until you get it right rather than being taught very clearly by more experienced chefs or cooks about ratios of ingredients and temperatures and so on?

What a lot of nonsense.

Yes, yes, that would be nonsense. Which is why nobody said that.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 10, 2018, 10:13:48 am
...I don't remember her ever being taught how to cook anything - and she was only fifteen years old...

If one thinks that teaching how to cook only starts after the age of 15... How about age six? My daughter also had cooking classes in middle and even high school. But I am sure that today, when she prepares something tasty, she would attribute that to her... talent ;)

Btw, every one of us has used algorithmized cooking, even when putting a frozen meal into a microwave: it is known as "instructions for use" on the back of the box. Follow it and you won't stay hungry that night. Or you can use your talent and guess the time and temperature... delivery is just a phone call away ;)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 10, 2018, 10:17:25 am
Yes, yes, that would be nonsense. Which is why nobody said that.

:-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 10, 2018, 10:26:23 am
If one thinks that teaching how to cook only starts after the age of 15... How about age six? My daughter also had cooking classes in middle and even high school. But I am sure that today, when she prepares something tasty, she would attribute that to her... talent ;)

Btw, every one of us has used algorithmized cooking, even when putting a frozen meal into a microwave: it is known as "instructions for use" on the back of the box. Follow it and you won't stay hungry that night. Or you can use your talent and guess the time and temperature... delivery is just a phone call away ;)


Well, I have never met your daughter, Slobodan, and so for me to comment would be foolish. As I didn't meet my wife before I met my wife, that period will forever be shrouded in mystery. Having said which, she told me she used to spend summer holidays working in her Dad's office doing duodecimals etc. (he had a surveying business, and she was disappointed when he discouraged her from it as career; no country for fine ladies, apparently) after that, she turned to chemistry. And to me, thank goodness!

I don't imagine she spent much time at the cooker with Mum; that would have meant two summer jobs!

:-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 10, 2018, 10:27:00 am
Yes, yes, that would be nonsense. Which is why nobody said that.

Early onset of dementia much?
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: 32BT on August 10, 2018, 10:36:29 am
Early onset of dementia much?

I know this is the internutz, but could we here at LuLa perhaps recalibrate to a more civil form of discourse?
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 10, 2018, 10:41:41 am
I know this is the internutz, but could we here at LuLa perhaps recalibrate to a more civil form of discourse?


Even better: how about some more pictures from you?

:-)

Rob
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 10, 2018, 10:42:39 am
What I said was, of course, more complicated and subtle than "baking doesn't benefit from algorithms" but on the Internet the standard method of discourse is to read whatever the other fellow said in the stupidest possible way, dropping words, ideas, and paragraphs as necessary, and then respond as if the other fellow said that stupid thing.

Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: 32BT on August 10, 2018, 10:50:36 am
Paraphrasing from memory something that is attributed to various jazz musicians and in various forms... I remember this one as attributed to Miles Davis:

"First, learn everything there is to learn about jazz... then forget it all and play until you are dizzy."

It seems to me that some of you guys want to skip the first part and jump straight to the forgetting part. Or you are so far from the first part, years-wise, that you forgot it ever existed.

My interpretation is that people here are saying this:

Learn all there is to learn about composition by example, not by rules. Avoid the rules like the plague. Learning composition is like learning language. The rules, even as mere guidelines, don't help one iota in forming comprehensible sentences, and certainly not in forming meaningful poetry.

Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 10, 2018, 10:52:15 am
... on the Internet the standard method of discourse is to read whatever the other fellow said in the stupidest possible way, dropping words, ideas, and paragraphs as necessary, and then respond as if the other fellow said that stupid thing.

Which is exactly what happened to the OP.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 10, 2018, 10:54:46 am
What I said was, of course, more complicated and subtle than "baking doesn't benefit from algorithms" but on the Internet the standard method of discourse is to read whatever the other fellow said in the stupidest possible way, dropping words, ideas, and paragraphs as necessary, and then respond as if the other fellow said that stupid thing.


Regarding LuLa though, it's not as bad today as it used to be some years ago: there were people who, to my best guess, didn't ever read the PO and just leaped in with their flame throwers on. Most seem to have been fired (no pun etc.) or just left of their own accord as natural wastage.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: 32BT on August 10, 2018, 10:54:57 am

Even better: how about some more pictures from you?

:-)

Rob

Just me? I miss some from most participants here, including you Rob. Give me some dark industrials to grind my teeth on. And Slobodan: more architectural oversaturation please. Keith, do that Leica thing.

That 'll teach them composition.

Rules? Yeah, LuLa rules, if we manage to stop the bickering.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 10, 2018, 10:55:35 am
My interpretation is that people here are saying this:

Learn all there is to learn about composition by example, not by rules. Avoid the rules like the plague. Learning composition is like learning language. The rules, even as mere guidelines, don't help one iota in forming comprehensible sentences, and certainly not in forming meaningful poetry.


You are correct, some people here are saying that. Some other people here are fighting that notion like the plague.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 10, 2018, 10:58:24 am
...And Slobodan: more architectural oversaturation please...

Now I am hurt ;)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 10, 2018, 11:52:59 am
... Learning composition is like learning language. The rules, even as mere guidelines, don't help one iota in forming comprehensible sentences, and certainly not in forming meaningful poetry.

You sure about that?

As someone who speaks five languages (however elementary), Slavic, Romance, and Germanic, I can assure you that knowing linguistic rules surely helps in forming comprehensible sentences.

As for poetry... try haiku without following the rules.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 10, 2018, 11:56:58 am
My point, which to be honest I have already stated clearly, is that "rules" are at best a starting point, and are certainly not the endpoint.

Secondarily, much of what passes for "rules" in photographic circles are outright nonsense.

The Rule of Thirds is essentially saying that you can reliably make a delicious cookie by simply adding salt to eggs until a stiff dough results, and then baking this at 7000 degrees for 10 seconds.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 10, 2018, 12:37:15 pm
My point, which to be honest I have already stated clearly, is that "rules" are at best a starting point, and are certainly not the endpoint...

Where?
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 10, 2018, 12:41:44 pm
Where?

I will not be drawn into an endless circle jerk of quoting myself with expanding remarks. Read what I wrote.

Also, your intent is clear. It is to waste my time, to provoke, to irritate. Are you planning to grow up some day, or is this pretty much just it?

ETA: You know what, I'm just muting you. Nothing personal, but I shan't be responding to you further.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: fdisilvestro on August 10, 2018, 12:56:34 pm
Where?

I had the same question.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 10, 2018, 12:58:32 pm
... ETA: You know what, I'm just muting you. Nothing personal, but I shan't be responding to you further.

To continue with your culinary metaphors:
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 10, 2018, 01:01:56 pm
I had the same question.

Funny thing, Andrew was actually quoting you (but quickly forgot who said what):

I agree with Slobodan on this issue, as long as you use the rules as a means and not as an end...
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 10, 2018, 01:20:32 pm
Let's put an end to this childish bickering.

For opgr, that Leica, going on Hasselblad, thang. The Women's Refuge, Jodhpur, India.

(http://www.keithlaban.co.uk/The_Womens_Refuge.jpg)

;-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: RSL on August 10, 2018, 01:34:51 pm
Perfect timing, Keith.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 10, 2018, 03:12:12 pm
I had the same question.

Very well. Post #19.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 10, 2018, 03:14:21 pm
Here's a picture which, as nearly as I can tell, obeys exactly zero "rules" of composition, and yet somehow remains somewhat appealing to the eye. I consider it among the best single photographs I have ever made.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 10, 2018, 03:16:59 pm
Here's another in my fake risograpphs series, which at any rate my wife finds thoroughly delightful. Honestly, everyone seems to adore these ridiculous things.

I guess there's some sort of diagonal thing going on. But mostly people enjoy the bright colors, and don't give much of a damn about how the forms lie in the frame.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 10, 2018, 03:21:02 pm
This is easily the best street photograph I have ever taken. Those with longer memories will recall it, I think. It is literally the only one I have.

There is no concept of composition at all in here. What is compelling, if anything, is the human drama in it. Content rules over form. I could have straightened it, but it is a straight-up fake Winogrand in several different ways, made wilfully by me before I decided that I didn't have the patience for the form, and maybe lacked the skill (it's hard to tell between just being bad, and just being impatient, the keeper rate is so low either way).

I suppose there might be some rule of composition, or some theory, with which this complies, but I assure you that I was thinking no such thing. At best there is a certain sense of not-quite-balance that is about right which you could ascribe to it, if you were generous. But in the end, I'm just copying Winogrand.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 10, 2018, 03:37:36 pm
Here's Robert Frank.

Again, I suppose you might find some rule or theory of composition that captures some of this, there's certainly nothing obvious and it clearly defies a lot of ideas. And yet, it works perfectly as a mood piece. It's a little bit tone and a lot of composition and it captures some essence of emotion.

Frank was looking and he was seeing and he was feeling and he did it all over again at the contact sheet and again at the enlarger, and he came up with a finished piece. Composition be damned, trust your spirit.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 10, 2018, 04:56:46 pm
Perfect timing, Keith.

Russ, not sure if your comment was related to my attempt to end the childish bickering or was directed towards the image, but either way, thanks.

;-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 10, 2018, 05:47:27 pm
I know this is the internutz, but could we here at LuLa perhaps recalibrate to a more civil form of discourse?

When it comes to medical conditions and forum etiquette, I am only following the lead of Michael Reichmann:

Are you being deliberately rude and insulting toward me, or are you just off your meds at the moment?

If you feel the need to be an obnoxious ass, please do it somewhere else.

Michael

Coincidentally (or perhaps not), the above was in response to the user "amolitor"  :)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: RSL on August 10, 2018, 07:47:25 pm
Russ, not sure if your comment was related to my attempt to end the childish bickering or was directed towards the image, but either way, thanks.

;-)

Actually, it was directed toward the image. There's no way to stop the bickering. It'll go on forever. :(
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: fdisilvestro on August 10, 2018, 09:37:42 pm
Actually, it was directed toward the image. There's no way to stop the bickering. It'll go on forever. :(

Or until big brother closes the thread  ;D
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: 32BT on August 11, 2018, 03:20:13 am
You sure about that?

As someone who speaks five languages (however elementary), Slavic, Romance, and Germanic, I can assure you that knowing linguistic rules surely helps in forming comprehensible sentences.

As for poetry... try haiku without following the rules.

I'm sure the women really dig that, when you speak romance... ;-p

The rules don't help diddly-squat. Having mastered at least one language prior to learning other languages is what enables comprehensible use.

Haiku is a classification. I have no idea what that is supposed to illustrate except that it is a good example where you have to really master the form before you can confidently break it.

You could just as well use poetry itself as an example. It is also a classification. Apparently then its form is governed by rules. The question is what rules? And which of these rules helps one to create meaningful poetry?

Avoid the rules. You internalize poetry by reading it. A lot of it and by living life and experiencing it.



Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 11, 2018, 03:23:17 am
Any judgement I make on any image maker is based on what they do, not what they say.

That sounds awfully erudite in an artistic way, I suppose, but does it preclude you from listening to someone explain how they did something that you judge as being worthwhile?  If, as I imagine, that is not the case then it directly rebuts you.  Alternatively, if that's actually the case, then why is it you would think that we would listen to you about anything?  Either way, I don't think your comment withstands any sort of scrutiny.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 11, 2018, 03:24:51 am
But the point is this: I watched her cook day after day, this and the other, yet today, left to my own devices, I can't cook a goddam thing that's worth the electricity.

So you agree with Slobo and I?  If she had actively taught you the basics, you would have been better off because left to your own devices you were incapable of learning how to cook?
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 11, 2018, 03:27:45 am
Yes, yes, that would be nonsense. Which is why nobody said that.

It's the essence of what you said.  You chose a particularly bad analogy of a pastry chef because such a professional absolutely relies on being taught and provided with primary information at some point, which suggests there is value in such things contrary to your assertion.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 11, 2018, 03:31:24 am
What I said was, of course, more complicated and subtle than "baking doesn't benefit from algorithms" but on the Internet the standard method of discourse is to read whatever the other fellow said in the stupidest possible way, dropping words, ideas, and paragraphs as necessary, and then respond as if the other fellow said that stupid thing.

There was little subtlety in what you said, but certainly there was more to it than the aspect to which I responded.  Nonetheless, you did comment to show support for your original assertion that there is no value in the photography primer in question.  So the essence of your argument, devoid of the sophistry, is what I continued to discuss and, instead of providing some counter to that you simply dismissed it in your infinite wisdom in the same way you did the photography primer.  A self-referential appeal to authority, in effect.  So the dropping in the standard of discourse is yours, and not mine. 
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: 32BT on August 11, 2018, 03:34:15 am
When it comes to medical conditions and forum etiquette, I am only following the lead of Michael Reichmann:

Ha, i'm sure "following our dear leader" is ingrained in your character... Not.

Our dear leader was trying to elevate us to ever higher photographic nirwana. Clearly he wanted us to abide by the rules, and not take his example. Oh wait...
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 11, 2018, 03:39:40 am
Ah, yes, when they can't substantiate their arguments they post pretty pictures (and they are nice photos, let's be honest).  The honesty in the photography just seems absent in the debate, which is a pity.

The OP made a reference to a site useful as a primer and was roundly snubbed and "put in his place" by a few posters who feel that such things are beneath them (and that does not mean everyone who put a counter to my thoughts by any means).  That's what happened.  Apparently they, and I (and a few others), are not worthy in their eyes.  I can't tell you how much of a relief that is.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 11, 2018, 04:16:03 am
So you agree with Slobo and I?  If she had actively taught you the basics, you would have been better off because left to your own devices you were incapable of learning how to cook?


No, I do not accept that assumption.

I am speaking from the experience of standing in the kitchen, doing the slave work with the used pots and pans wihlst she wove the magic with the temperatures and the blends (I told you somewhere that she was an analytical chemist!); that was possible because my second studio in Britain was at home, purpose-built alongside the house, resulting in much quality time together when there was nothing more pressing in the work department. From when we moved out to Spain, it was pretty much 24/24 together (not in the kitchen!), and that felt too brief...

So yeah, I saw her cooking and baking everything she did cook and bake, and yet nothing stuck in my head. They say you learn by example: some things, if they interest you, you sure do. Others, not so much.

And do you tell somebody you love: hey, just in case you die, how about teaching me survival skills for when you become memory?

;-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 11, 2018, 04:24:37 am
And do you tell somebody you love: hey, just in case you die, how about teaching me survival skills for when you become memory?

Well, no, I wouldn't word it quite like that :-)

But do you really think that if someone had shown you some basics, or given you a stepping guide, that you couldn't have learned had you been inclined to do so?  The masters of anything create new work, regardless of the field - we all agree on that.  The contention is the rubbishing of the OP and the link on the basis that no one should ever need a starting point or reference.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 11, 2018, 04:33:31 am
Or until big brother closes the thread  ;D

I don't think that will happen.

This isn't political, but it sure is developìng into the absurd, which is only to be expected from minds that believe they can be taught to be something they patently are not. I guess if I look at enough flying magazines I shall soon be able to pilot my own jet. Not that I have one, but you know what I mean.

But, for sure, those magazines will allow me to understand which model of jet appeals to me the most in its beauty of seductive design! Just like yachts!

Which, of course, is why I recommend looking at monographs and websites. You* won't really learn how to do anything much, but you will be able to discover the kind of work/genre that appeals to you the most. And trust me, that's one huge step forward!

(By "you" I do not, of course, refer to you personally, Francisco. I refer to the neophyte world at large for whom these "primers" are constructed.)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 11, 2018, 04:48:52 am
Well, no, I wouldn't word it quite like that :-)

But do you really think that if someone had shown you some basics, or given you a stepping guide, that you couldn't have learned had you been inclined to do so?  The masters of anything create new work, regardless of the field - we all agree on that. The contention is the rubbishing of the OP and the link on the basis that no one should ever need a starting point or reference.

Almost, but not quite!

Everyone needs and somehow finds their own starting point and references; the problem arises with people who set out to monetize that stage of original development by manufacturing snake oils of one kind or another.

Truth is, we are into the murky waters of what constitutes art, and for some guru to offer proposals that will guide one safely through said swamp is disingenuous in the extreme, especially when there are no rules, and when every image stands on its own merits, regardless of its procreator. The fact that so many great pictures follow no prescribed rules should, to anyone paying attention, ring the alarm bell that says hey, if this exception works, maybe all is exception, and rules but a figment of a marketing imagination setting up the perfect straw man built upon the uncertainty of the new supplicant. Follow the money?
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 11, 2018, 05:51:35 am


Ah, yes, when they can't substantiate their arguments they post pretty pictures (and they are nice photos, let's be honest).  The honesty in the photography just seems absent in the debate, which is a pity.

The OP made a reference to a site useful as a primer and was roundly snubbed and "put in his place" by a few posters who feel that such things are beneath them (and that does not mean everyone who put a counter to my thoughts by any means).  That's what happened.  Apparently they, and I (and a few others), are not worthy in their eyes.  I can't tell you how much of a relief that is.

I've no idea if you're worthy or not.

That sounds awfully erudite in an artistic way, I suppose, but does it preclude you from listening to someone explain how they did something that you judge as being worthwhile?  If, as I imagine, that is not the case then it directly rebuts you.  Alternatively, if that's actually the case, then why is it you would think that we would listen to you about anything?  Either way, I don't think your comment withstands any sort of scrutiny.

If they can walk the walk I'll listen to them talk the talk.

It is of course your choice if you listen to me or not, but as I don't have any knowledge of you or what it is you do then why would I care?
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 11, 2018, 06:12:33 am
I guess if I look at enough flying magazines I shall soon be able to pilot my own jet. Not that I have one, but you know what I mean.

Flying a small aircraft isn't that difficult.  The first flying lesson I took, under instruction of course, I taxied, took off, flew around, landed, and taxied back.  The instructor handled the radio.  Prior to that I'd been a passenger and I loved most things aeronautical, but I'd never flown or been in a real simulator (flight sim games weren't at that level).  But with a large amount of reading, and an understanding of the physics involved, with minimal direction I was able to fly the aircraft (in perfect weather, and a simple circuit and so on, of course).  Did the reading make me a pilot?  Of course, not.  But I did start at a more advanced point than I otherwise would have.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 11, 2018, 06:17:49 am
It is of course your choice if you listen to me or not, but as I don't have any knowledge of you or what it is you do then why would I care?

I'm quite happy to listen to you.  I can parse what you say and evaluate it against my own experiences and I can consider the logic of it and I can look for other sources to support or refute it.  I can do all that without knowing anything about you.

If you read the OP's link and felt that what was being said was factually incorrect or misleading or what have you, then of course you could say so, but the discussion is the dismissal of it was being unecessary or inappropriate or even damaging.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: 32BT on August 11, 2018, 06:26:41 am
Rules of composition.

Isn't that an idea spawned in medieval times when mathematics and geometry were attributed mystical and divine properties?
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: fdisilvestro on August 11, 2018, 06:40:51 am
Rules of composition.

Isn't that an idea spawned in medieval times when mathematics and geometry were attributed mystical and divine properties?

That persists today, just look at the Fibonacci sequence, which is almost a religion for some
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Martin Kristiansen on August 11, 2018, 07:03:10 am
I believe there is a craft and an art to photography. Seems obvious to me. Learn the craft then work like hell and if you have any talent and feel and anything to say perhaps the art will manifest itself.

Musicians generally learn to read music and enough of the language of music to be able to communicate with other musicians. Writers certainly learn the craft as I attempted with several writing courses. If you want to make gelato there is certainly a science to it which you could label the rules, a way of making this amazing essential foodgroup which is actually quite complex.

Yet so many photographers think they have so much innate talent that as long as they can speak about bokeh, Nyquist point and argue endlessly about esoteric aspects of colour management that surely the great images will happen by themselves. The evidence certainly seems to indicate otherwise. I would suggest finding out what the rules are, why they are, assimilating them and then moving beyond them if you have the stamina and the talent.

I find myself mostly agreeing with Slobodan on this topic.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 11, 2018, 07:12:46 am
That persists today, just look at the Fibonacci sequence, which is almost a religion for some

I looked at a video about it just now; if anything, it confirms my fears that all are far from being created equal!

That, or I suffer from curiosity deficiency. I could never find those facts gripping. My wife, on the other hand, would have watched all the videos available on the topic. For all I know, perhaps she already knew all about this stuff but didn't want to make me feel inadequate by bringing it up...

She shouldn't have worried: I developed the art of the blank expression back in boarding school: never let the buggers know what you are thinking! Even when you are not thinking.

:-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 11, 2018, 07:26:13 am
I believe there is a craft and an art to photography. Seems obvious to me. Learn the craft then work like hell and if you have any talent and feel and anything to say perhaps the art will manifest itself.

Musicians generally learn to read music and enough of the language of music to be able to communicate with other musicians. Writers certainly learn the craft as I attempted with several writing courses. If you want to make gelato there is certainly a science to it which you could label the rules, a way of making this amazing essential foodgroup which is actually quite complex.

Yet so many photographers think they have so much innate talent that as long as they can speak about bokeh, Nyquist point and argue endlessly about esoteric aspects of colour management that surely the great images will happen by themselves. The evidence certainly seems to indicate otherwise. I would suggest finding out what the rules are, why they are, assimilating them and then moving beyond them if you have the stamina and the talent.

I find myself mostly agreeing with Slobodan on this topic.


Ref. your penultimate paragraph: I don't think the symptoms you describe have anything to with photography. They have everything to do with digital processing which is something separate, far more separate than was wet printing from shooting a subject.

Wet demanded a symbiotic, visceral link entirely absent from digital manipulation after the event. You may well be correct, though, in picking out this guru group as being lacking in the social graces of the image or even, for that matter, of its making. I can't, off the cuff, think of anyone other than Nick Knight who has made me sit up and take positive - if a little anxious - notice of what digital skill can produce.

Thing is, for me, the best images are almost invariably simple ones. Whether this is from a natural appreciation of the nitty gritty, the essence of an image and not its prologue, or just because of my personal, uncomplicated way of working all my life, is moot.

Perhaps photography too easily loses its way today, trying to be something else as well as everything else.



Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: 32BT on August 11, 2018, 07:29:35 am
Perhaps herein lies the problem: there is science to flying, there is science to cooking. If there is science involved then it helps to learn the rules.

There is no science involved in composition.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 11, 2018, 07:42:06 am
Perhaps herein lies the problem: there is science to flying, there is science to cooking. If there is science involved then it helps to learn the rules.

There is no science involved in composition.
.


I think that's right: composition is not science, it's emotional aesthetics.

Rob
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: fdisilvestro on August 11, 2018, 07:45:50 am

Thing is, for me, the best images are almost invariably simple ones.

"Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication" - Leonardo da Vinci
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Martin Kristiansen on August 11, 2018, 08:00:08 am
Perhaps herein lies the problem: there is science to flying, there is science to cooking. If there is science involved then it helps to learn the rules.

There is no science involved in composition.

It might not be a science but there is what I would call a phychology. Perhaps not a great term but the best I can do at the moment. 

I will give an eaxample. We are hardwired to see cooler colors as further away. It is believed to have developed as a result of distant objects in nature appearing more blue. We can use this “rules” to make the warm face of a portrait pop off the blue background of a sky or select a blue backdrop for a portrait to achieve a more three dimensional feel. Perhaps you use this instinctively but it is useful to know. I can offer other examples using lines and shapes but its a fairly obvious case that I am making.

I think these concepts or rules or whatever are useful and are a way to improve my photography. After so many years taking photos, more than 40, composition is largely instinctive but I am still aware of the rules.

Rules represent orderlyness and the known and safe. The negative of that is boring and dull. Outside of the rules is freshness, novelty, excitement. Also chaos and an inability to communicat effectively. The balance of the two is for me the sweet spot. Hard to find and an ever moving target depending on my knowledge and my intended audience.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: fdisilvestro on August 11, 2018, 08:32:15 am
Rules represent orderlyness and the known and safe. The negative of that is boring and dull. Outside of the rules is freshness, novelty, excitement. Also chaos and an inability to communicat effectively. The balance of the two is for me the sweet spot. Hard to find and an ever moving target depending on my knowledge and my intended audience.

+1
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 11, 2018, 08:37:19 am
"Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication" - Leonardo da Vinci

Well then, I'm happy he agrees with me!

;-)   ;-)

Rob

P.S.

Here's a musical equivalent of "simple" and beautiful.

https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=ace+cannon+blues+stay+away+from+me&view=detail&mid=8CCAC0FEE6AE5FDE7E228CCAC0FEE6AE5FDE7E22&FORM=VIRE
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 11, 2018, 09:33:18 am
While it is always disappointing when someone misses the a small but vital step in what you're said, my experience is that when someone has climbed into a "YOU ARE WRONG" foxhole it is impossible to correct them, no matter how politely or rudely, carefully or carelessly, you walk them through the details of your remarks.

I'm sorry you've misunderstood me, Farmer, but I  decline to try to sort it out for you.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 11, 2018, 09:58:07 am
"cooler colors seem farther away" strikes me as a classic "rule" of the sort that's simply wrong. I mean, there *might* be a paper somewhere that outlines a careful study, but I have not seen it, and it doesn't pop up on google, and I have mislaid my copy of Arnheim.

It's probably a bastardization of the methods used to paint things which are distant, which more resemble desaturation, or reduced vibrancy, but which are not quite that. It strikes me as similar to the way you make audio sound distant by boosting the mids. With the brush, you just have to feel it, in the end, although to be sure your teacher can give you some suggestions.

Properly filed away, this "cooler colors" sort of thing could be useful, as a property of a picture it's something to note, something to think about (see post #19).

If you file it, rather, as a rule, and attempt to make pictures by directly applying the rule as a method, an algorithm, you're going to tend to focus on whether you have the background cool and the foreground warm, rather than focusing on the actual question which is "does the background look farther away."

It is absurdly common to run in to people who will, when you say the equivalent of "this looks X" will cite a rule and say "no, I did Y which produces the opposite of that effect, so you are wrong" which is extremely weird. They're been distracted from the things that are in front of them by the procedure they are following. They're mixing up a batch of muffins, and refuse to taste them to see if they forgot the salt no matter how often you say "there's no salt in these, they kind of suck."

Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 11, 2018, 10:08:05 am
I've looked high and low for a copy of the tome Photography: The Rules. Couldn't find one anywhere but got in touch with a very elderly gentleman whose father recalled seeing one in his youth. Apparently all he could remember about it was rule Number One There are no rules.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 11, 2018, 10:13:53 am
There are many books with rules IN them ;) Just look in the remainder bin of any large bookstore for how-to-take-photos books!

I have noticed that the lower down the food chain you go, the more rules there are in the books. If it has some smiling jackass on the front holding a big black camera, you can bet that it will tell you more than you want to know about the Golden Spiral, and of course web sites are usually quite close to 100% this sort of thing. As you go up to more scholarly, more serious, more, dare I say it, artistic, books you will find nothing of this.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: elliot_n on August 11, 2018, 10:25:31 am
Show me a kitchen without a recipe book.

Or a pastry chef who doesn't measure ingredients.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Martin Kristiansen on August 11, 2018, 10:34:33 am
Show me a kitchen without a recipe book.

Or a pastry chef who doesn't measure ingredients.

Or a photaographer unable to articulate any useful information about how composition works.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 11, 2018, 10:37:43 am
Why do people keep insisting that I am against recipes for cooking things? I never said that.

Seriously. Post #19. Go read ALL THE WORDS and think a little bit. It's not that hard.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 11, 2018, 10:41:41 am
"cooler colors seem farther away" strikes me as a classic "rule" of the sort that's simply wrong. I mean, there *might* be a paper somewhere that outlines a careful study, but I have not seen it, and it doesn't pop up on google, and I have mislaid my copy of Arnheim...

Google “warm colors advance cool recede.” There are pages of links.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 11, 2018, 10:49:41 am
Why do people keep insisting that I am against recipes for cooking things? I never said that...

Then you must be the most misunderstood poster in the history of LuLa. You argue you never said something, people quote you, you argue you didn’t mean that.

You either have to teach us how to read your mind (maybe even write a primer on that) or learn how to express yourself clearly (there are primers for that too). You are obviously missing the talent for that.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: elliot_n on August 11, 2018, 11:05:30 am
Why do people keep insisting that I am against recipes for cooking things? I never said that.

Good. I hope we can all agree that algorithms (i.e. recipes) are central to cookery, both amateur and professional.

Quote

Seriously. Post #19. Go read ALL THE WORDS and think a little bit. It's not that hard.


Ok. So you're talking about a truly 'new' pastry; not a chocolate eclair, a ring doughnut, or an almond slice, but something unheard of. By definition, that won't be found in a recipe book. However it seems unlikely that anyone up to the task would not have had a solid grounding in following recipes.

Many photographers are happy to make the equivalent of chocolate eclairs. The linked article on composition seems harmless enough (and is not entirely uninteresting). It won't be of much use if you want to be a contemporary artist, but it could help you pick up some gongs at your local camera club. I don't understand why it's causing so much aggro.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 11, 2018, 11:25:29 am
Precisely so, Elliot.

And thank you for re-reading and grasping my point, in spite of my querulous tone! An unexpected delight, and one I did not earn.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 11, 2018, 12:20:32 pm
Just look in the remainder bin of any large bookstore for how-to-take-photos books!

Or charity shops in the clown clone tome section.

;-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 11, 2018, 12:23:09 pm
Seems to me that teaching rules (of composition, among others) is not too far from raising kids, especially teenagers. You try to instill some wisdom and experience, but all you get is an indifferent stare, if they even heard you behind the earbuds and headphones. Or, at best, "Yeah, dad, whatever" or "Cool story, bro." They might ignore you, mock you, curse you even.

At some point in the future (be it the next day or years later), you realize they actually heard you, internalized it, and even acted on it. And sometimes they would even admit it: "That's how you raised me, dad." And you think: "Really? You actually heard me and remembered it from (days, months) years ago? Wow!"
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: RSL on August 11, 2018, 12:23:48 pm
I'm sure glad we got rid of politics. Now there's nothing on LuLa that could lead to an argument.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 11, 2018, 12:29:09 pm
I'm sure glad we got rid of politics. Now there's nothing on LuLa that could lead to an argument.

Hey, Russ, there's always someone who's wrong on the web thingy who needs correcting.

;-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 11, 2018, 12:38:26 pm
Good. I hope we can all agree that algorithms (i.e. recipes) are central to cookery, both amateur and professional.

Ok. So you're talking about a truly 'new' pastry; not a chocolate eclair, a ring doughnut, or an almond slice, but something unheard of. By definition, that won't be found in a recipe book. However it seems unlikely that anyone up to the task would not have had a solid grounding in following recipes.

Many photographers are happy to make the equivalent of chocolate eclairs. The linked article on composition seems harmless enough (and is not entirely uninteresting). It won't be of much use if you want to be a contemporary artist, but it could help you pick up some gongs at your local camera club. I don't understand why it's causing so much aggro.


Now you've said something!

The slight extrapolation into photography explains it all.

No more worrying about that vexatious thing called originality or even, dare I mention  it - cousin-once-removed art!

But then we won't even need the manual, just the cookie cutter and a bag of pre-mix gunge. Once upon a time you could even buy pre-exposd film to develop all by yourself! I think those products might have been marketed to the terminally shy male. (As this was before the era of gay abandon, I don't think women would have been expected to send in the vouchers.)

;-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 11, 2018, 01:10:10 pm
I'm sure the women really dig that, when you speak romance... ;-p

Pillow talk they do dig ;)

I assume you meant the above in a humorous way. In case you didn't:
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 11, 2018, 01:21:42 pm
Pillow talk they do dig ;)

I assume you meant the above in a humorous way. In case you didn't:


Sometimes, anything to delay the inevitable.

Funny about the male: no sooner does he get expelled from one, but he then spends most of the rest of his life trying to get back into one. Quite often, hindsight can be so very cruel.

I wonder what's on tv tonight.

;-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 11, 2018, 01:22:37 pm
You started a great thread, welly!
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: 32BT on August 11, 2018, 01:40:44 pm
Pillow talk they do dig ;)

I assume you meant the above in a humorous way. In case you didn't:

Yes, i did, though escpecially because of the ambiguities and colloquialism associated with it. Think about the rules that would be required to even remotely start to understand what is written there...
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 11, 2018, 05:21:23 pm
Why do people keep insisting that I am against recipes for cooking things? I never said that.

Seriously. Post #19. Go read ALL THE WORDS and think a little bit. It's not that hard.

Why do you keep pointing to a single post as if it was made in isolation and not a follow on from your first post which set the context of your argument?

"The desire to turn composition into an algorithm, a set of rules, is positively a plague in photography."

And, yes, in #19 you are suggesting that originality cannot come from an algorithm, but you continued to gloss over (perhaps with an egg wash?) that part where the artist has learned prior to the point of original concept and that there is value in that.  There is value in a priming.  There's value in learning "rules" (and the term is poor, certainly, just as "laws" was a poor term in science).  They give you a simple template to explain why certain things are commonly effective.  If you have no concept of 1/focal length (before we had IS in various forms) then the basic physics of photography are going to confound your artistic attempts.  An artist has control over their tools in order to bring to life their vision.  Primers tell you about the tools and in ways that relate to artistic interpretation.  They help you to grasp primary relationships and from there you can expand.

So having made your initial assault on the piece and in "algorithmic" approaches, we have all read ALL THE WORDS that you have written in their context.  Not just the ones where you choose a pretty average analogy.  That's why your message is confused, because you seem to forgotten ALL THE WORDS that you wrote in the first instance.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 11, 2018, 05:25:11 pm
Google “warm colors advance cool recede.” There are pages of links.

Indeed.  Even in choosing a paper and looking at the white point, cool and warm makes quite the difference in presenting depth (or lack thereof).  Of course, if someone wants to print dozens or hundreds of prints to work it out for themselves instead of reading a primer, that's their call and good luck to them.  Knowing that there is a possible impact in the first instance, though, seems far more likely to set free a creative spirit and provide a better base from which to achieve a particularly artistic vision.

Sometimes I think that the folks who eschew these things feel that they are very special keepers of ancient wisdom.  The irony, of course, is that if you can't explain it to others effectively then you probably haven't actually mastered it (you or someone else said pretty much this earlier).
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: fdisilvestro on August 11, 2018, 05:29:34 pm
There is a rule that the majority of photographers (including those that predicate no rules) follow most of the time:
“Keep the horizon level”
This rule of course can be broken, but if not done successfully will likely ruin the image
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 11, 2018, 05:39:55 pm
I always keep the horizon level, except when it should not be level.

http://shifter.media/print-manifesto-by-andrew-molitor/

As for "warm colors advance" I look the liberty of performing that search just now. I have found that such searches tend to turn up a lot of photography web sites furiously copying from  one another, and gradually accreting errors until nobody know what anything means any more, AND occasionally a painter. So I click on the painters. This was about the third item:

https://watercolorjournal.wordpress.com/tag/do-warm-colors-advance-and-cool-colors-recede/

which, lo and behold, actually cites research, which research is summarized as:

"the results of tests conducted were inconclusive"

but the piece has more to say than just that, and has some excellent examples which are worth a perusal.

In general, the gap between what painters say online and what photographers say online is both startling and interesting. Notably, when a click-seeking photography teacher wannabee copies some material from  some other web site, not infrequently he will tuck in a "painters have known for centuries..." if whatever claptrap he's cribbing doesn't already say it. Painters in  turn will say things like "this is complete BS, we have never heard of this, what on earth are you talking about?"

Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 11, 2018, 05:53:04 pm
When I read something like Arnheim, say, I get to some page of white rectangles with black circles in them. He moves the circles here and there relative to one another, summarizing various research, and gives commentary. Such and such an arrangement feels "balanced" to the average viewer, and you look at it, and you say to yourself "yes, it feels balanced."

The technophile makes a note: Place the Big Mass Here and the Little Mass There to accomplish a balanced image.

People like me think about this a little and say "Wait, why not just move the camera around until the image looks balanced?"

You can skip the intermediate step of the "rule" about where to stick subjects because, it turns out, you can directly perceive a balanced frame. If that's what you want to achieve, just do it. Stop worrying about rules and guidelines, they'll just distract you. Your pictures will look like cookie-cutter crap, and sometimes you'll fail completely because you were too focused on the rule and not enough on what you were actually trying to do.

Once I had that epiphany reading Arnheim, I completely stopped trying to take pictures according to technical details of the placement of forms, masses, lines, and so on. Just look. Arnheim teaches, first and foremost, that seeing works. While it's fun and sometimes instructive to take things apart after the fact, all you're really doing is dissecting a dead thing to see why.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: fdisilvestro on August 11, 2018, 06:05:58 pm
I always keep the horizon level, except when it should not be level.



Exactly! That’s the spirit of the rules and you don’t lose originality because of them. It is only when you think you must obey the rule at all costs that it becomes an issue.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 11, 2018, 06:08:23 pm
Still self-referencing as an appeal to authority, I see?  Yet you still demonstrate that a primer on the topic was valuable.

Anyway, regarding cool/warm - try this as a better search:

https://scholar.google.com.au/scholar?as_vis=1&q=warm+colours+advance+cool+colours+recede&hl=en&as_sdt=1,5

That's mostly peer reviewed and has references that look at the topic from various angles and fields, and it's the best I can do since I can't link you direct academic articles courtesy of searching via my university access.  Actually, there is one article relating to cinematography which I found particularly interesting and which does mention this effect (among so many others), and I'll quote just a small portion of it:

"The most general guideline was that background information should be carried by cool colors of low saturation, leaving warm, saturated hues for the foreground. Narrative interest should coincide with the point of greatest color contrast. The practice accorded with the still widely held view in the arts and design that cool colors recede while warm colors advance toward the viewer, but it spoke to the more basic perceptual fact that accents, or isolated points of color contrast within a restricted palette, will ineluctably draw attention. With this principle in place, color would perform as an adjunct to more central spatial cues such as diminution, contour, lighting contrast, and depth of field. All of which is to say that color was assigned a relatively low rank in the hierarchy of visual cues that define cinematic space."

That's slightly misleading without the context of the entire article because it over emphasises that one particular aspect (obviously, being an isolated quote).  For those who can gain access look for Higgins, S. (2008). Color accents and spatial itineraries. Velvet Light Trap, (62), 68+.  Google Scholar only finds this at a glance https://search.proquest.com/openview/3a4d39113542f5e7/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=6499

Anyway, very interesting.

Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 11, 2018, 06:13:08 pm
Referencing myself is hardly an appeal to authority. Perhaps there are other reasons I might refer to my other work, though.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 11, 2018, 06:53:22 pm
Referencing myself is hardly an appeal to authority. Perhaps there are other reasons I might refer to my other work, though.

You put yourself as an example of "right" and the technophile as "wrong".  You are attempting to support your argument by virtue of you as the example.  That is self-referential appeal to authority.

Of course you can refer to work that you have done by way of example, but when you decide to try to win an argument by labelling yourself and your opponents then you've failed because you're not longer providing evidence.  Now, some robust exchange is fine and of no harm to me, but when you don't provide the evidence as well it becomes fallacious and pointless.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 11, 2018, 07:19:56 pm
Your ongoing research into the many ways in which I am wrong is riveting. Pray, continue.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 11, 2018, 07:40:29 pm
... a "painters have known for centuries..." if whatever claptrap he's cribbing doesn't already say it. Painters in  turn will say things like "this is complete BS, we have never heard of this, what on earth are you talking about?"

You just made that up, like most of your "proofs."
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 11, 2018, 10:49:57 pm
Your ongoing research into the many ways in which I am wrong is riveting. Pray, continue.

I'm not the one who said I was going to stop and then kept going, but now that you mention it there's probably enough material for a PhD in terms of the ways in which you are wrong.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: amolitor on August 11, 2018, 11:44:31 pm
I have no idea where you keep getting these bizarre statements you attribute to me. It certainly isn't from this thread, though.

It is mildly irritating to be constantly attacked, needled, and wilfully annoyed. Since moderation doesn't seem to really be in effect as long as nobody swears,  I guess I'll just mute you as well. I am sure everyone is looking forward to your inevitable "neener neener I win" post, but I'm not.

It has been charming.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 12, 2018, 12:13:51 am
I have no idea where you keep getting these bizarre statements you attribute to me. It certainly isn't from this thread, though.

It is mildly irritating to be constantly attacked, needled, and wilfully annoyed. Since moderation doesn't seem to really be in effect as long as nobody swears,  I guess I'll just mute you as well. I am sure everyone is looking forward to your inevitable "neener neener I win" post, but I'm not.

It has been charming.

Enjoy not reading this, then.

"Are you planning to grow up some day, or is this pretty much just it?"

But others are attacking you, right?

"You know what, I'm just muting you. Nothing personal, but I shan't be responding to you further."

And you didn't say you weren't going to play anymore (to Slobo), right?

And just like you haven't been referencing yourself in order to conclude that you're right:

"The technophile makes a note: Place the Big Mass Here and the Little Mass There to accomplish a balanced image.

People like me think about this a little and say "Wait, why not just move the camera around until the image looks balanced?""

As if people "like you" are right because they are "like you".  There's no externality to support your claim.

Should I go on to show you all the things you say you don't do?  No, because you're not reading this - you don't enjoying standing in the light of your own words, the ones you implored us to read "ALL THE WORDS", even though you have a fetish for skipping the ones that you don't like after the fact.

At least now you're appealing to an authority other than you own, calling on the moderators to quiet me (and others) for deigning to present a different point of view and to do it quoting your own words.  If you're as clever as you seem to insist, and if we're as basic as you also seem to imply, I'm not entirely sure how you're having so much difficulty.

Anyway, you won't read this, so it's all for naught, right?
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: LesPalenik on August 12, 2018, 03:29:57 am
The rules reflect what the brain already knows what is pleasing to it.  After a while, you move the viewfinder around to select what the brain finds most pleasing.  And there's your shot.

I fully agree with Alan. In most cases, my initial shot is quite adequate and I also take a few variations when it comes to the photographed scene or lens used. I seldom need to recompose my images in PS, although I crop some horizontal images to additional vertical formats. Usually, I am quite satisfied with my initial composition (although some critics might not be). When it comes to leading lines, it's one of the most overused and useless words in the vocabulary of the photography book or article writers. I never pay explicit attention to leading lines when framing a scene, but sometimes I discover them in the image during post processing.   

The other thing is that the individual tastes are very different. Both, for photographers and buyers. Not mentioning the museum curators and contest judges.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: LesPalenik on August 12, 2018, 03:57:46 am
Here's a picture which, as nearly as I can tell, obeys exactly zero "rules" of composition, and yet somehow remains somewhat appealing to the eye. I consider it among the best single photographs I have ever made.
I fully respect Andrew's opinion that he considers it as one of his best photographs (a nice flower in the lower left corner of the picture in post #65). To me, the flower looks way too small and misplaced. And most probably, if I photographed the same flower, Andrew wouldn't like it. Attached is a photo of mine where the main subject is even smaller, but there is a certain dynamic and action (the car was driving towards me) which makes the photo appealing to me (despite the central placement of the car, imbalanced composition in the horizontal dimension, almost equal division between the sky and ice, and no leading lines).

Just to show how our tastes and composition ideas differ. Also the geographic conditions in which we shoot.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 12, 2018, 03:58:00 am
Jeez, you guys are unbelievable!

You take a natural ability and try to force it into girdles totally unnatural.

WYSIWYG is the bottom line: if that's too difficult, if you require Mama to hold your hand and lead you along the path you are already supposed to have had imbedded in your brain since you did your first swimming exercises in the womb, then I have sad news for you: not only are you on the track not meant for you, but in persisting to try and see that to which you were born blind, you display extreme symptoms of masochism. But that's fun too, right?

As somebody mentioned, politics is far from being the only dangerous zone in LuLa. I feel pretty much ready to bid the lot of you guys adios: this is turning into a frustrating drudgery, not the shared interest in what some still believe to be a form of visual self-expression. And no, abandoning this thread is no answer either: the malaise is everywhere these days.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Martin Kristiansen on August 12, 2018, 05:45:22 am
Really what a load of rubbish. We call them the rules like the rule of thirds and so on but only a moron thinks they are actual rules They are not actual rules brcause you can do as you want, no one will bother you about it, well except on a forum perhaps. Stop pretending we think they are rules and so you can show your superiority by being beyond rules. The rules are suggestions and no doubt help the beginners and those who don’t have a natural feel for composition. They are also things you can poke fun at in subtle ways by breaking the rules. It’s not complicated.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 12, 2018, 05:56:02 am
As somebody mentioned, politics is far from being the only dangerous zone in LuLa. I feel pretty much ready to bid the lot of you guys adios: this is turning into a frustrating drudgery, not the shared interest in what some still believe to be a form of visual self-expression. And no, abandoning this thread is no answer either: the malaise is everywhere these days.

I've never had a problem quitting LuLa, done it many a time ;-)

And that's the problem, LuLa is a drug, with drug crazed penmen - and it's always bloody men: where's the women when you need 'em - running amok. It's tearing LuLa apart.

But hey, in the words of the late, great, Tony S, 'whaddya gonna do?
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: RSL on August 12, 2018, 06:55:54 am
In spite of the arguments, what matters is what comes out of your camera. Arguments about composition are meaningless. Pictures aren't.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 12, 2018, 08:01:56 am
I've never had a problem quitting LuLa, done it many a time ;-)

And that's the problem, LuLa is a drug, with drug crazed penmen - and it's always bloody men: where's the women when you need 'em - running amok. It's tearing LuLa apart.

But hey, in the words of the late, great, Tony S, 'whaddya gonna do?


I hope it isn't an omen, but Tony died in Rome of a heart adventure; he was but fifty-one years old. At his best period. Okay, there was a million possible future episodes to be shot, but unlike Superman, he remained solidly non-interchangeable even though the only other character in the series I'd thought had stood the stresses and tests of time was the psychiatrist. Mature sex appeal and projected sophistication with a suggestion of vulnerability - what more can any man ask? The others just remained the anonymous characters they always were to me, despite enjoying their screen presence - I felt they held no gravitas, just stereotypical stances.

LuLa as drug is not so far-fetched. I've been addicted for several years, as my numbers embarrassingly suggest to me. But yeah, where else to post and get rapid response? It's part of present photographic reality for me - the only place to talk a little shop with some expectation of reasonable response. That aside, insofar as digital is concerned, the Internet has also been a place where practical information seemed available. I bought a couple of books on the applications of PS but found they assumed too much existing knowledge. Unlike them, the web provided direct answers to specific problems. For which, muchas gracias!

Whither the women, you ask? Doing what they usually do: paying attention to what matters and letting the rest float past like old leaves in a stream. Why the hell is Teresa so determined to be the exception?

Rob
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 12, 2018, 11:57:51 am
Rob (in another thread; emphasis mine):

... Compositional Rules

1. Hold camera with viewfinder at eye;

2. move camera until eye is happy;

3. press button.

Russ (in response to Alan Klein):

... I ran across the suggestion that what you should do is raise your camera and then move the finder around until what you see is the balance you want. If you don't see that balance before you raise the camera, you're lost...

You guys should coordinate your attacks on us less talented :)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Martin Kristiansen on August 12, 2018, 12:34:06 pm
In spite of the arguments, what matters is what comes out of your camera. Arguments about composition are meaningless. Pictures aren't.

I have seen plenty of meaningless pictures. In fact I see very few pictures that aren’t meaningless. Perhaps if they followed the rules hey Rus :)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 12, 2018, 01:04:28 pm
I have seen plenty of meaningless pictures. In fact I see very few pictures that aren’t meaningless. Perhaps if they followed the rules hey Rus :)

Pretty much every picture that is not shot to order is meaningless. Most paintings are meaningless too, and the "old master" ones only had meaning when they referred to matters religious, to Leda and her randy Swan, to Venus/Aphrodite doing her Ursula Andress, or to depicted heads of state, of family or something official of that nature.

All the rest of art, broadly speaking, is about emotional reaction to beauty or horror, and that has no precise meaning at all. If you want to direct "meaning", then you usually have to add copy.

I think this partly explains why so little of my own, current photography is, in my own view, for hanging on the wall as decoration. It is not intended as decoration - it is intended as personal trip into something that caught my eye and that makes me want to see where it can go - much as with Winogrand's "...to see how it looks photographed." line. It doesn't even demand a print. The answer to the question of where and how is there, at the end of the processing journey, gazing back at me on the monitor.

It's a point I should perhaps have made more lucidly on my recent couple of lines on the state of film/digital imaging, and whether they are actually in the same family anymore. I concluded that they are not.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Eric Myrvaagnes on August 12, 2018, 01:06:27 pm
Rob (in another thread; emphasis mine):
...
Russ (in response to Alan Klein):
...
You guys should coordinate your attacks on us less talented :)
But if they coordinated their attacks, what would we all squabble about?   :o
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 12, 2018, 01:20:00 pm
Rob (in another thread; emphasis mine):

Russ (in response to Alan Klein):

You guys should coordinate your attacks on us less talented :)


Attacks? Where?

Telling it like it is is not attack; it's that strange, rare thing called honesty.

If anything, it offers relief, releasing one from the wasted energy of trying to be someone other than oneself.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: RSL on August 12, 2018, 02:35:12 pm
I have seen plenty of meaningless pictures. In fact I see very few pictures that aren’t meaningless. Perhaps if they followed the rules hey Rus :)

I'd certainly agree that the vast majority of pictures on LuLa are meaningless, but that has nothing to do with rules of composition and everything to do with an inability to see.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 12, 2018, 03:32:13 pm
"Knowledgable members answering should remember what things were like when they were starting out."

I remember when Michael created that forum because too many "knowledgable" (sic) members treated new comers quite badly and harshly.  Seems things haven't progressed.

Russ is right about the inability to see.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 12, 2018, 04:58:18 pm
"Knowledgable members answering should remember what things were like when they were starting out."

I remember when Michael created that forum because too many "knowledgable" (sic) members treated new comers quite badly and harshly.  Seems things haven't progressed.

Russ is right about the inability to see.


Phil, this is not a nursery; there's a section for newbies and I assume they get given all the help that there is. I also hope their minds are not stunted by rules and nonsense about how to be a photographic artist.

As with my entry into the digital world: I was in dire need of practical instructions, not lessons on visual morality and rightness. Such matters are personal, and nobody else has a right to tell another how to be himself.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 13, 2018, 03:10:57 am
It doesn't need to be a nursery, but neither does it need to be a place where deigning to speak without an invitation results in a backlash.

That's the problem.  People can criticise something to their hearts content, but there's no need to be abusive about it or to categorise others as somehow being lesser being for having the audacity to take a different approach or to see benefit in things like primers.

"...nobody else has a right to tell another how to be himself."

And yet we have people in this very thread telling others they are inadequate because they want to understand or share some technical basics or provide some general guidelines, as if that's not telling another how to be themselves.

That old line about teachers was dropped earlier.  What a load of rubbish.  Those who can do but refuse to teach, or insist on bowed before first, are the lowest of the low.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 13, 2018, 03:47:23 am
Perhaps the article and this discussion wouldn't have been quite so contentious had it been titled something other than the Definitive Guide?

;-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 13, 2018, 04:09:06 am
Perhaps, or perhaps if people just said, "I don't think it's well titled - it's hardly definitive - but it's a good primer.  I would recommend taking those basics and then experimenting for yourself and understanding why these are useful starting points, oh, and try reading this, this, and that...".

Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 13, 2018, 04:27:12 am
1.  It doesn't need to be a nursery, but neither does it need to be a place where deigning to speak without an invitation results in a backlash.

2.  That's the problem.  People can criticise something to their hearts content, but there's no need to be abusive about it or to categorise others as somehow being lesser being for having the audacity to take a different approach or to see benefit in things like primers.

"...nobody else has a right to tell another how to be himself."

3..And yet we have people in this very thread telling others they are inadequate because they want to understand or share some technical basics or provide some general guidelines, as if that's not telling another how to be themselves.

4. That old line about teachers was dropped earlier.  What a load of rubbish.  Those who can do but refuse to teach, or insist on bowed before first, are the lowest of the low.



1.  So where does one apply for the permit to speak out, or, perhaps, should that be: where does one apply for a permit to disagree with Phil?

2.  Where has anyone in this thread abused anyone else? (I think of the term abuse in its traditional form, not the politically correct one popular today, where to disagree is to abuse. If it's your definition, then there's nowhere left for any discussion with you to go.)

3.  Nope, nobody is calling them inadequate; if you read it better, the suggestion is that those peddling the superior understanding of how to be whatever, are the offenders selling the best oil of snake. What I would suggesrt, and do, is that the hopeful, wannabe person realises early on that he's being milked.

And before you go any further into the realm of straw sculpture, realise that I have always advocated the learning of photographic mechanics, which is essential to everyone wanting to get somewhere in the discipline. However, photographic mechanics do not make photographers. God makes good photographers as he makes good musicians, good authors, good cooks or successful growers of pretty flowers.

4. I think you'll find the answer in my 3. above, unless you prefer to look the other way instead. Our last dog did that every time she saw something she thought a threat. We loved her so much we never felt able to replace her; but she was a pooch
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Farmer on August 13, 2018, 04:39:48 am


1.  So where does one apply for the permit to speak out, or, perhaps, should that be: where does one apply for a permit to disagree with Phil?

2.  Where has anyone in this thread abused anyone else? (I think of the term abuse in its traditional form, not the politically correct one popular today, where to disagree is to abuse. If it's your definition, then there's nowhere left for any discussion with you to go.)

3.  Nope, nobody is calling them inadequate; if you read it better, the suggestion is that those peddling the superior understanding of how to be whatever, are the offenders selling the best oil of snake. What I would suggesrt, and do, is that the hopeful, wannabe person realises early on that he's being milked.

And before you go any further into the realm of straw sculpture, realise that I have always advocated the learning of photographic mechanics, which is essential to everyone wanting to get somewhere in the discipline. However, photographic mechanics do not make photographers. God makes good photographers as he makes good musicians, good authors, good cooks or successful growers of pretty flowers.

4. I think you'll find the answer in my 3. above, unless you prefer to look the other way instead. Our last dog did that every time she saw something she thought a threat. We loved her so much we never felt able to replace her; but she was a pooch

1. Are you kidding?  I haven't told anyone to stop speaking and I didn't attack a new poster.  I rebutted some tired old nonsense from a couple of people who responded with little more than waffle.

2. Again, are you kidding?  Calling people names, names which the callers clearly consider to be derisive, is being abusive.

3. Ah, I see.  You either have it or you don't.  Again, nonesense.  Most people can become good at most things.  Greatness?  That's more limited, but it's hardly predestined that you can only be great at one particular thing.

I never suggested that you have ever advocated otherwise and, I agree with that approach.  I don't agree with way in which some of the people expressed their disdain for anyone who might read to learn something before they embark on practicals

4. Oh, dear.  I bet you think this song is about you, don't you?
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 13, 2018, 05:07:50 am
1. Are you kidding?  I haven't told anyone to stop speaking and I didn't attack a new poster.  I rebutted some tired old nonsense from a couple of people who responded with little more than waffle.

2. Again, are you kidding?  Calling people names, names which the callers clearly consider to be derisive, is being abusive.

3. Ah, I see.  You either have it or you don't.  Again, nonesense.  Most people can become good at most things.  Greatness?  That's more limited, but it's hardly predestined that you can only be great at one particular thing.

I never suggested that you have ever advocated otherwise and, I agree with that approach.  I don't agree with way in which some of the people expressed their disdain for anyone who might read to learn something before they embark on practicals

4. Oh, dear.  I bet you think this song is about you, don't you?


That made me smile! Thanks for some levity this morning, I'll now go and have my shower and try not to sing that number in the echo chamber.

(I know I can't sing, hence the concern with upsetting the good, patient folks in the apartment above.)

;-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 13, 2018, 08:19:24 am
Perhaps, or perhaps if people just said, "I don't think it's well titled - it's hardly definitive - but it's a good primer.  I would recommend taking those basics and then experimenting for yourself and understanding why these are useful starting points, oh, and try reading this, this, and that...".

...start from a blank sheet, look at the world and find something that inspires you, something that you are passionate about. Express yourself and learn from your own mistakes. Above all be yourself and true to yourself.

It's certainly the approach I would take if ever I found myself in the extremely unlikely position of being a mentor. Would it result in prizes at the camera club or kudos on a workshop, a forum, or deliver qualifications, I don't know and care less, it's simply the way I learnt. Esoteric enough?

Your approach is perfectly valid and is no doubt the more conventional but I believe there is room for other pathways.

Perhaps another way of saying you're not going to turn my head and I doubt I'll turn yours. End of.

;-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 13, 2018, 09:00:58 am
...start from a blank sheet, look at the world and find something that inspires you, something that you are passionate about. Express yourself and learn from your own mistakes. Above all be yourself and true to yourself.

It's certainly the approach I would take if ever I found myself in the extremely unlikely position of being a mentor. Would it result in prizes at the camera club or kudos on a workshop, a forum, or deliver qualifications, I don't know and care less, it's simply the way I learnt.

Your approach is perfectly valid and is no doubt the more conventional but I believe there is room for other pathways.

Esoteric enough?

Perhaps another way of saying you're not going to turn my head and I doubt I'll turn yours.

;-)

That, Keith, is the key to it all.

Without the drive in a specific direction you are just walking in circles. It is exactly why I never felt any problems with getting into photography (other than the inconvenient one of finding people to pay me to do and keep doing it): I already knew where I was going to go, and that gave me all the guidance I needed other than learning how to be a better printer.

Time and again it returns to olde Donovan's "the greatest problem for the amateur is finding a reason to make a photograph." That original indecision (sin?) undermines the entire process and opens the doors to the soothsayers who try to sell you their patent bill of goods.

It doesn't matter what kind of picture it is you're seeking: just get the hell out there and try it for yourself, by yourself, and as far away from other photographers - especially more experienced ones - as you can get.

That's how you discover who you are, and what you can do.

The rest, at the risk of boring myself with repetitions, is mechanics. Without being condescending, if you have no greater drive, use your cellphone: it gives you more than you will probably ever need.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Slobodan Blagojevic on August 13, 2018, 09:06:58 am
...start from a blank sheet, look at the world and find something that inspires you, something that you are passionate about. Express yourself...

All fine, but nothing to do with composition.

Quote
... and learn from your own mistakes...

Learn!? How dare you trying to improve on God’s work? Blasfemy!  ;)

Besides, as the saying goes, learn from other people’s mistakes, life is too short to make them all yourself.

Quote
... Above all be yourself...

The worst first-date advice ever  :D
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 13, 2018, 09:26:38 am
All fine, but nothing to do with composition.

It's simple, compose as you see fit.

;-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Ivo_B on August 18, 2018, 03:13:13 am
How could I mis this conversation .....


I have a nice collection of old books about photographic techniques. Some inherited from my father and some found on flee markets.
I learned a lot out of these books and it helped me to understand how photography moved along during social en technical changes in the past decades.

One of this nice books is a post WWII (1945) Dutch School book: "Compositieleer in de fotografie" Composition theory in Photography.
Very interesting lecture about what elements in the scenery can be used to make the composition. Contrast, graphic, key, DOF, etc etc. (Color is not mentioned because the age of the book) Good reading. And then the book gets serious.
It get's clear the book is written by a math teacher who is passionate about his camera. The book overshoots tremendously towards a trigonometric explanation of dividing the planes, composing the lines, etc etc. One section is devoted to explain the compositions of the renaissance painter, this is a very painful section. I guess the author had to pull out all his mathematical knowledge to draw all those silly lines over one of the explained works.

Another examples is a shot of a bath suit girl, The girl was directed into the ideal composition according the circle deviations he had in mind. See below......... Judge yourself.
And the most painful aspect of the book is that there is no single one interesting picture in the book. All are utterly boring, but perfectly matched to the rules of composition....

It is here where thing go wrong. If rules or definitions get the overhand the blind spot grows until the level that the image doesn't matter anymore, as long it obeyes the rules and/or definition.

I believe it is good to understand rules, definitions, technical stuff and all the other laws circling around photography (and any other expression form). If you are not a virtuoso, they will help to make something technically correct.

You can only put the soul in things with virtuosity, and this is a gift the most of use don't have.


It is a photo club thing, judging pictures on the rules and definitions.....
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: KLaban on August 18, 2018, 04:52:23 am
(https://forum.luminous-landscape.com/index.php?action=dlattach;topic=126272.0;attach=182592;image)

There you go, Rob, all that angst over all those years of shooting models in the great outdoors when all you really needed was a simple diagram!

Ivo, just kidding.

;-)
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Ivo_B on August 18, 2018, 05:46:05 am
(https://forum.luminous-landscape.com/index.php?action=dlattach;topic=126272.0;attach=182592;image)

There you go, Rob, all that angst over all those years of shooting models in the great outdoors when all you really needed was a simple diagram!

Ivo, just kidding.

;-)
Ab-So-Lu-Te-Ly
(http://www.infinitestatue.com/data/upload/hd/oliver-hardy2.jpg)

And with a nifty tool like this in the pocket, you can't go wrong.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Rob C on August 18, 2018, 07:00:38 am
(https://forum.luminous-landscape.com/index.php?action=dlattach;topic=126272.0;attach=182592;image)

There you go, Rob, all that angst over all those years of shooting models in the great outdoors when all you really needed was a simple diagram!

Ivo, just kidding.

;-)


I know, Keith; I progressed along the geometry guide as far as using a checked screen - sometimes. However, as I also needed to use the split-image "tool" most of the time, I was ever caught with a foot either side of the volcanic divide: Nikon didn't make the combination for fast lenses, though nobody ever told me why. What a pity Garry wasn't around to help me!
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: Hans Kruse on August 20, 2018, 12:10:21 pm
Interesting discussion and crossing of swords :)

I sometimes provoke my workshop students by saying that composition is the most overrated concept in photography!

What do I mean by that? Basically even the best composed photograph does not spark any interest in viewers (IMHO) unless there is some content that sparks the interest. Composition is just presentation. Technique, the technical taking of the picture is a given and can occupy many soles and some seem to think this is very important. It is, but it does not make a photo. Similar with composition. It is important but does not make the photo. Content does and for e.g. landscape photography, the content is the landscape with the light, the visual objects that the photographer would like to show to the viewer. Composition is the arrangement of the visual objects inside the frame. Basically the presentation and the content is what the photographer sees and gets awed by so he wants to compose a shot. Even a lesser composed shot can be way more interesting than a perfectly composed shot of something uninteresting. Some may include more or less in what composition is.
Title: Re: "Photography Composition: The Definitive Guide"
Post by: farbschlurf on August 20, 2018, 01:14:16 pm


One of this nice books is a post WWII (1945) Dutch School book: "Compositieleer in de fotografie" Composition theory in Photography.


Hilarious!