front 1 How the elements are arranged in your photograph. | back 1 Composition |
front 2 Compositional guideline that breaks an image down into thirds (both horizontally and vertically) | back 2 Rule of Thirds |
front 3 The red dots on the intersecting lines of a rule of thirds grid. These dots signify where to place the main elements of your subject. | back 3 Power Points |
front 4 The empty areas around your subject. | back 4 Negative Space |
front 5 The person/object/thing that is the focal point of your photograph. | back 5 Subject |
front 6 The photography concept that things that should naturally be horizontal should be horizontal, not tilted. | back 6 Level Horizon |
front 7 When the subject of a photo fills the camera screen and makes the subject the most important thing. | back 7 Fill the Frame |
front 8 Moves the camera lens farther from the image sensor, magnifying the image that reaches the sensor without decreasing the resolution or image quality. | back 8 Optical Zoom |
front 9 Shoots a cropped view of the image and then enlarges it to fill the frame by making the pixels larger. Can result in a blurry, blocky appearance. | back 9 Digital Zoom |
front 10 The area around and behind the subject. | back 10 Background |