Untitled Slide
how many visual elements? internal complexity?seperation of elements? primary vis element
One, it's very simple, there's only two components, right, the background and the tree. So that definitely satisfies the less than or equal to four. Internal complexity, background is flat black, the tree has a lot of detail but because the detail is very visible it's not complex and that's the difference, you can have lots of detail so long as it's complex.
We'll see some images where that's not true. Separation, great separation between the beautiful white tree and the background, and obviously there's a primary visual element. So this is a fairly easy image, a simple image to critique. Let's move on and look at some others. This is one of the images we looked at in the first presentation, this is that powerful Kodiak wave, and we look at why this image is successful, and let's break it down into these four components. One - one, two, three elements. Internal complexity, they're all internally simple, detail is visible but it's all very visible and distinguishable.
Well-separated image components, a wave, from the mountain, from the sky. Primary visual element, absolutely, it's the wave, and that's why this image is successful. So you have three to four well-separated elements and good eye lines, which we'll talk about later, and a nice primary element.