turreted church tower
Thomas Mews
K-type pillar box
bussing down Morrell Avenue
Port Mahon
ugly new street furniture
canal boat colours in the green
double lamppost
Faculty of Music
College Cruisers 2013
remaining infirmary wall
red brick terrace house
Manzil Way crossing
St Paul's without Blavatnik
Virgin balloon
fading blossom on the wall
pink blossom in a blue sky
red door on Woodstock Road
house in the evening sun
exclusive roots
university blocks by the railway
disused railway swing bridge
Ruskin extension for demolition
houses in spring
Cowley Road oak
Cornmarket Street sign
captive young audience
new blocks by the railway line
university carbuncle blocks
old entrance to the Eagle Works
Lucy weathervane
canalside in blue
ugly metal bins and info board
Old Bill of Ripon
Dreckly from Bristol
from Bristol to Jericho
Beerstalker narrowboat
College Cruisers 2021
blue November
Tara No.2
Thames Path at Cripley
Network Rail signage clutter
boring Feathers Hotel sign
Woodstock deli
Maybury textiles
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blossom in Magdalen Road
Magdalen Road, East Oxford
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Light areas catch the eye and draw the eye towards them, whatever the main focus of the picture is meant to be, and for that reason vignetting is used deliberately to keep the eye within the frame.
Why must you have rules for everything?
2. As we've discussed, such "rules" (like natural "laws") are not strictures; they are descriptions of what happens naturally, including what the human eye does when confronted with a particular composition and how the brain perceives what the eye sees. In that surely they're useful. And they're not "my" rules; Roy in fact is the first to apply them to MY pictures.
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