2) Rule of thirds- the subject of the picture is shifted from the center of the picture to the sides
Balancine Elements- for example if you have a horse on one side of the picture, you have another on on the other ice of the picture
Leading Lines- the viewers eyes are attracted to the lines on the picture leading to the subject
Symmetry and Patters- bring a sense of visual rhythm and harmony to photographs
Viewpoint- angle,direction,or stance from which you choose to take a picture
Background- having a simple background, without a lot of "distraction" in it
Create Depth- you make your photo much more engaging and interesting to viewers eye
Framing- using the things around the subject to make a frame or square looking things around it
Cropping- removing of outer parts of an image
Mergers and Avoiding them- not busy edges, where you don't crop out any part of the image
3) Aperture- controls the amount of light admitted through an opening
ISO- controls the speed of light coming trough
Shutter Speed- the length of time when a digital sensor inside the camera is exposed to light
4) Acceptable- taking away any blemishes like acne, or possibly whitening their teeth
Not Acceptable- changeling around their while body, making body parts bugger or thinner,
changing face and making it skinnier or changing eyes by making them bigger or a different color
5) Environmental Portrait- has subject where they normally would be, or outside
Self Portrait- Where you take the photo yourself, and it has you in it
Casual Portrait- where the subject of the photo isn't in a suit or anything, and they are just doing
something they would normally do
6) Exposure- amount of light per unit area
Depth of Field- distance between nearest and farthest objects
Focal Length- distance from mm from the optical center of the lens to the focal point
7) Early Magazine- dedicated opening page to a title and a table of contents
Poster Magazine- mainly just a big photo on the front, and the title, nothing else was on the front
Married to Type Magazine- relied heavily on cover lines to draw readers inside than the art on the
cover could accomplish
Forest of words- covers integrate intense photography with amazingly large number of vivid cover
lines, there is a lot more writing on the cover, and the writing overlaps the photo
8) Paul Kitagati Jr. discovered that his father was among thousands of Japanese-Americans confined to internment camps during World War Two led him to seek out survivors who had been photographed by Dorothea Lange.
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