The rule of thirds is a "rule of thumb" or guideline which applies to the process of composing visual images such as designs, films, paintings, and photographs.[1] The guideline proposes that an image should be imagined as divided into nine equal parts by two equally spaced horizontal lines and two equally spaced vertical lines, and that important compositional elements should be placed along these lines or their intersections.[2] Proponents of the technique claim that aligning a subject with these points creates more tension, energy and interest in the composition than simply centering the subject.[citation needed]
I'd like this image because it follows the rule of third. and two

is very sharp. The colour is very outstanding on this image.
This image is from Sebastiao Salgado. He is the Brazilian photographer whose nightmarish pictures of teeming, dirt-swamped gold miners electrified the world's media in the mid-1980s.
This image is follows the rule of third. The one of point is on the left side is the miner standing in the water, and another point is the fire one the right side. This is a quite story image.
Wender tacles various perious of Salgado's work with an efficient balance of information and effect, as interested in feeling the image as explaining them.
This image is follows the rule of third. The point of the rule of third is the sculpture. And the triangle shape of the stair on the bottom is a great way of grouping together three points of a photograph and organising them to portray a certain feeling such as stability, agression, instability,etc. we can use them as invisible features of a photo to evoke strong feeling in the viewer.
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