Digital photo composition

Read the scene before you press the shutter.

A working reference on framing, balance, leading lines and natural light, written for amateur photographers shooting everyday scenes across Canada — from a winter street in Montreal to a lake at the edge of the Rockies.

A photograph with the subject placed along a rule-of-thirds line
Subject placed off-centre along a thirds line. Source: Wikimedia Commons (CC).

Articles

Three composition fundamentals

Each article focuses on one idea, with concrete examples you can try on your next walk outside. No gear talk and no presets — only what the frame is doing.


A short method

Four checks before the shutter

A repeatable order of questions that takes a few seconds and prevents the most common framing mistakes.

01

Find the subject

Decide what the photo is about in one short phrase. If you cannot name it, the frame has no anchor yet.

02

Place it off-centre

Move the subject toward a thirds line. Centre it only when symmetry is the point, such as a still reflection.

03

Check the edges

Scan the four borders for a cut-off limb, a bright distraction, or a tilted horizon before you commit.

04

Read the light

Note the direction and softness of the light, then decide whether to move around the subject or wait.

These ideas are summarised from widely documented composition principles. For background reading, see the references listed in the footer, including the composition (visual arts) overview.


Contact

Questions or corrections

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