RULE OF THIRDS

 -This compositional rule is perhaps the most well-known and commonly employed photographic and cinematographic technique. The rule provides a reliable guideline for framing your shots. It's also an excellent starting point for beginners who hope to dip their toes into the many rules of composition.

-This is a process of image division into a third, using two horizontal and two vertical lines. This imaginary mesh gives nine segments with four junction points. When you set out the most important elements of your image at these intersections, you create a much more natural image. It is also suggested that any horizon be placed on the upper horizontal line or the lower horizontal line. The non-center composition is pleasant to the eye as it is usually where the eyes go first. When an object or object is out of the center, it also gives viewers the opportunity to interact with that space between them. This also allows you to interpret the conversation between the subject and the background, not the fully focused thing.

                                                     






IMPROTANCE

-Not only does the rule of thirds make the shot more aesthetically pleasing, it also creates movement and context. If you center the subject on one of the outer vertical invisible lines and capture the image so that subject is facing the center of the photo, it will create that movement.



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