I’ve been spending a lot of time thinking about composition lately. I am really trying to push myself to get beyond the rule of thirds and try out some new methods.
The method I’m experimenting with now is called the Golden Spiral. It’s based on of all things an ancient sequence of numbers that often repeats in nature.
0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144
The sequence is often called the Fibonacci numbers and is named after Leonardo Fibonacci who was an Italian mathematician. He didn’t actually invent the series (it’s though to have originated from the HinduArabic numeral system.
The sequence is based on adding the adding adjacent numbers in a string, then carrying the results.
0+1=1, 1+1=2, 1+2=3, 2+3=5, 3+5=8, 5+8=13, 8+13=21, 13+21=34 (and so on)
If you draw circular arcs to connect the opposite corners of squares, you end up with an approximate shape of the golden spiral. This shape actually takes on the exact look of a nautilus and expresses the number Phi (or golden ratio).
Okay, enough match class… but you have to admit it’s a little creepy how often this appears in nature… the most obvious is here.
But it shows up in lots of other places too… by using this ratio, you can often add some energy into the composition. The good news is that you can also get here trough cropping in Photoshop or Lightroom.
- Open an image with Photoshop or Lightroom.
- Choose the Crop tool.
- Press the O key to cycle through the crop methods.
- Press Cmd+O (Ctrl+O) to rotate the asymmetrical options.
- Crop as desired using the Golden Spiral as a guide.
There you have it… the Golden Spiral applied to postproduction as well. Give it a shot and see that you think. Aim for in-camaera composition for the best results, but use the Crop tool where needed.
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FYI, on Windows it’s Shift-O, not CTRL-O to rotate the circular grid
John, is that in Photoshop or Lightroom?
If I am not mistaken from my art classes — the rule of thirds is a simplified version derived from the golden ratio.
i.e. 1/1.618… = 0.618… is too hard to estimate on the fly, so instead people started using 2/3 and called it the rule of thirds.
Great post. I only thought of Fibonacci numbers as retracements (in technical analysis of stock charts). It will be nice to try to apply this to photography
I’m using Lightroom 4, and couldn’t find the Golden Ratio or Spiral
Richard, using Lightroom it is Shift-O to rotate on a Mac.
Sorry I missed your reply on Friday Richard, it’s in Lightroom 4 on PC.
Reblogged this on fabioandroider.
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FYI, on Windows it’s Shift-O, not CTRL-O to rotate the circular grid
If I am not mistaken from my art classes — the rule of thirds is a simplified version derived from the golden ratio.
i.e. 1/1.618… = 0.618… is too hard to estimate on the fly, so instead people started using 2/3 and called it the rule of thirds.
John, is that in Photoshop or Lightroom?
Richard, using Lightroom it is Shift-O to rotate on a Mac.
I’m using Lightroom 4, and couldn’t find the Golden Ratio or Spiral
Great post. I only thought of Fibonacci numbers as retracements (in technical analysis of stock charts). It will be nice to try to apply this to photography
Sorry I missed your reply on Friday Richard, it’s in Lightroom 4 on PC.
I just could not leave your web site before suggesting that I extremely loved the standard information an individual provide to your guests?
Is going to be again incessantly in order to check out new posts
Reblogged this on fabioandroider.