Describe the photos you took: The photos I took were supposed to capture line and shape. In doing this, I looked in and out of school for interesting lines and shapes that could create the perfect picture perfect. I found many of these intriguing pictures at the Somerset boat ramp and the school. The law of thirds very much helped in making the images more appealing to the eye. What is the distance in the shot? (How close or far away are you from your subject?) In the second picture, I am really close to the first chair, however moving down the table they get further and further away which I found made the photograph interesting. In the photograph in the three, I got super close to the tree in the tree picture in order to see the detail within the bark. Then, the trees in the background made synthetic lines in the distance. What was your point of view when you took the photos? (from above, below, straight on...)? In different photos there were different shots. The 5th photo was from above, the last photo was from below, while the others were straight on. In order to make them interesting they had to be shot at different angles. If I had shot the monkey bars at eye level, the effect of the lines moving up would have been completely vanished. As we discussed in class, how did you "make the ordinary extraordinary?" Everyday I walk by that house (in picture one), however by not taking the photo and centering it, it made it much more interesting to look at. The telephone falls on one of the vertical thirds and the plant falls on one of the horizontal thirds. The picture takes an ordinary house and makes it something that looks vintage and unique. Did you consider the rule of thirds to compose your shots? In which photos? Describe. In every picture I considered the rule of thirds. In the first photograph, the telephone pole and the plant fall on one of the thirds. On the second picture the chair falls on the vertical third and one of the beams in the library, too, fall on a third. On the 3rd picture, the bar in the middle falls on a third and a bar on the right. On the fourth picture, the pole in the far background falls on a third, and two of the three trees fall on a third. On the fifth picture, the bolt connected to the poles falls on the center of a vertical and horizontal third, and the bars too fall on vertical thirds. On the last picture, the money bars fall on a horizontal third as well as the two sides of the playground. The picture that excites it the most is the one on the water because the pole in the middle is very interesting. Which one of your photos is a dynamic composition that successfully leads the viewer’s eye through the work? The picture that is most dynamic in composition is the picture on the water. The viewer's eye is first going to look at the bar moving across the photograph and then follow the triangles down the ramp and into the water. There is also a small buoy in the water, which is quite interesting. Also the detail on the metal is very interesting and unique.