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Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

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Page 1: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

Design and Composition

Project

Written by: Samantha MacKay

Page 2: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 3: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

This Picture is In horizontal format.

Page 4: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

When you look at this picture you can see the lines in the picture which help to make it horizontal.

Another way is the way that the animals are looking. You can see the angle and the position of the picture which all helps to

make it a horizontal format.

Page 5: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

This picture is also in horizontal format. In this picture, if it was in any other format, there would be no way that you could get all the mountain in the picture. Although it is the background it is also very important. The people in the front form a line which is like a horizontal line.

Page 6: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 7: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

This picture is done in vertical format. A picture which goes from top to bottom in format. Each person in this picture is standing up right, almost giving a “follow the lines” effect. Some grass areas are in vertical format, and in the distance you can see the trees are in vertical format.

Page 8: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

This picture is in vertical format. The buildings are tall and they go up wards. In the distance, many buildings start to travel upwards, with few to no horizontal lines.

Page 9: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 10: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

This is leading physiological space. As you can see, there is a fair distance between the man and the end of the page of which he is facing. This means that there is a ‘space’ of which the person can feel comfortable and can see off past the edge of the photo.

Page 11: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 12: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

Foreground background interplay, is the object in the front having a relation to the object in the back. The Person which comes to view first in this photo, has a distinct relation to that

Of the machine in the back. The people in the back are the same type of people as that person in the foreground.

Page 13: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

The person in the foreground is pulling on the truck in the background. Since this action takes place there is a very strong relationship between the two objects.

Page 14: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 15: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

A high angle picture is when you are at a birds eye view looking down at stuff below. In this picture, you are looking down at the people.

Page 16: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 17: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

A low angle picture is done from a person looking up from a level which is lower from the view point. In this picture you can see the person is up a level higher then what the actual level of the picture was taken. Even though you look at the picture from an even level, you still see the picture from a lower level.

Page 18: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

In this picture you are still looking up at the person or object from a lower level. So your focus is upward instead of eye level.

Page 19: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 20: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

What is evident in this picture is the fact that every object in the photo is at the viewers eye level. As you can see, the horizontal lines allow it to be in horizontal format. Also as you view this picture you will notice that there are no angles. You don’t see them from another angle, but straight on.

Page 21: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 22: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

Unlike horizontal FORMAT, horizontal lines are photos that have distinct horizontal lines within it. In this photo, in the back area of the picture, you can see the lines in the bricks.

You might also notice that the picture is actually in vertical format. Still you can notice that the picture can have horizontal lines which will make the viewer look from side to side.

Page 23: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

A symbol of red stripes and bright stars, which represents the country of United States of America. Within this picture, the focal point is the flag. Not only is this picture in horizontal format and goes from one side to the other, but the very strong lines in the flag, also run from Left to right in horizontal format.

Page 24: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

The point of horizontal lines is to help the viewer catch the way the picture is suppose to go. Some can be in horizontal format, some can be in vertical format. In this picture the lines in the fabric, help the viewer to look at the top area of the fabric, working one way to another, and eventually working down the picture.

Page 25: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 26: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

Verticle

Page 27: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 28: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

Diagonal lines in photos are usually taken from angles. Some of the the objects in the picture show the lines strongly.

Page 29: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

The trees have some strong diagonal lines. The bats that hang off the trees are on a slight angle, but hang more so straight.

Page 30: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 31: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

Leading lines are lines that link two objects together, that may or may not have any distinct relationship at all. In this case, the car that we are viewing out of, following the leading lines connect to the cars that may be really far up ahead.

Page 32: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 33: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

Although this is a drawn picture instead of a photograph, you can see where the geometric shapes are. In the roof of the building in the center, the windows in the hotel, the towns peoples stores and the cylinders holding the center building together.

Page 34: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

In the castle, you can see that there are many types of Geometric shapes.

Page 35: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 36: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

A distinct pattern which is in the rock or sand picture here. It has repeated colours and shapes which continue on and on and on.

Page 37: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 38: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

Texture is when a picture ‘blends’ in with everything else in the photo. In this picture the rocks, water and slight land are all blended together. This is a relationship with rock and water, through this texture.

Page 39: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 40: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

A symbol of a picture is something that represents something else. In this picture, there is a Canadian flag, which represents Canada. (symbol)

Page 41: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 42: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

High Contrast is 2 colours. Most of the time, Black and white, but it can also be blue and black, red and black, yellow and black etc. In this picture the two objects are in solid black. All the other objects around it are white or black.

Page 43: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay
Page 44: Design and Composition Project Written by: Samantha MacKay

Low contrast, is a picture which is in black, white and gray. In this picture there are gray areas, white areas, and some (being few) areas which have solid black areas.