In the rule of thirds, photos are divided into thirds with two imaginary lines vertically and two lines horizontally making three columns, three rows, and nine sections in the images. This is so you can get the best results when taking a photograph and when you come to edit it, you don't have to crop most of the image and avoid the reduction in quality of the image.
With the following images that I have taken, I uploaded them all to Photoshop and put the guidelines in. All of the following images have not been edited, I did this first as to see if any of the images needed to be cropped.
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| Because this is a photo of flowers, I don't really think that you could find a centre of the image, as long as there is only flowers within the frame. |
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| Because this photo was taken while the roundabout was moving, it would have been impossible to get it directly in the middle of the frame. |
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| This photo is more or less lined up in the middle of the frame, so I don't think that this needs editing as everything is evenly spaced around it. |
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| Because of this image being portrait instead of landscape... |
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| If this image was taken a little bit more right I think that this would have been perfectly in within the Rule of Thirds grid. But when I come to edit this photo, I will make it bigger so that the subject - of me jumping of the swing - will be in the middle. |
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| This photo is more of less perfectly in the middle of the grid, if anything I think it could be moved over just a little bit. |
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| With this image, I think that it needs to be zoomed and and then moved up a bit as then we would be sitting within the middle row of the grid. |
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| This image does not really have a centre feature, but I think when it is edited I could cut the lady out of the frame. |
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| This image is again more or less in the middle, even though it id between the middle square and top middle square. When I run this through Photoshop, I will zoom it in and make make sure that it is in the centre square. |
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