Frame to Frame

For frame to frame, I immediately thought of my car and how the windows naturally frame the side mirrors. In fact you can even see pillars in the mirror frame the lighting inside of it.

Creatively Staged

In order to creatively frame this miniature boat figure. I decided to line up mini perfume bottles I had so the caps would reflect light and look like mini golden waves.

Viewpoint

Often we don’t look at what we wear enough and appreciate the textures of different clothes. It’s satisfying seeing the cotton denim on my jeans and how it’s faded gracefully overtime.

Color Theory

I find it interesting how my macbook may be one color, but because of the matt surface it appears to change color in the light. It also may appear a different color depending on what background it’s on. 

angle

From this angle of the park it looks like the trees are framing a novel book scene. The composition is focused on the people walking along the park and the shadows allow for contrast against the bright sky. All together displaying a beautiful park.

Rule of Odds

The rule of odds is that a picture looks more balanced is there’s an odd number of subjects. This strategy is common in food ads, graphic design, and…architecture! I always get fascinated when I observe different graphic design strategies in buildings and how the details add to the feel of a building seamlessly.

Symmetric Holiday

This holiday season my mom has gifted me a polar bear pop socket. She said the texture reminded her of my childhood stuffed animals and that the cute bow made the bear quite gentlemanly. She told me “if this little bear were on your phone every day, maybe he’d be a new talisman”. That made …

Leading Lines

While the photo may seem almost like a water painting, it’s because it the reflection of fall trees in a large puddle after some morning rain. The ripples and long tree branches create leading lines to the big dark green tree in the bottom left area of the photo.

Rule Of Thirds

This photo is a picture of my dog Phoebe and I aligned her on the bottom third line to lead viewers’ eyes from her stomach to her paws, and to her face. I also put her head on the power points to the left in the rule of thirds to make her relaxed facial expression …