Composition Basics: Framing and the Rule of Thirds
Learn the simple framing tricks that turn a snapshot of your robot into a photo people actually want to share.
Sign in to track progress, earn XP, and save lessons.
What composition is
Composition is how you arrange everything inside the edges of your frame: your subject, the background, and the empty space around them. A phone shoots fine photos once you control composition. A few repeatable rules will sharpen every shot you take at an event, whether it's the robot on the field or a teammate at the mill.
The rule of thirds
Picture a 3x3 grid over your frame, two vertical and two horizontal lines like a tic-tac-toe board. Place the important parts of your scene along those lines or on the four points where they cross, instead of dead center. Off-center subjects read as more dynamic, and your eye naturally lands on those intersections. Turn on the grid overlay in your camera app and shoot to it.
FRC examples:
- Robot on the field? Put it on the right vertical line with the field opening up to the left, so viewers sense where it's heading.
- Driver at the station? Put their eyes on the upper horizontal line. Eyes high in the frame is the most reliable portrait move there is.
- Wide team photo? Line the top of the bumpers (or the horizon) up with a horizontal line instead of cutting the image in half.
Framing
Framing uses objects already in your scene to build a border around your subject, which focuses attention and adds depth.
- Shoot through the field railing, a doorway, or the pit-tent opening to frame the robot.
- Use teammates' shoulders in the foreground to wrap the action at the driver station.
Leading lines
Leading lines are lines in the scene, real or implied, that pull the eye toward your subject.
- The edges of the field, carpet seams, or a row of pit tables all aim toward your robot.
- A teammate's outstretched arm or gaze is an implied line pointing at whatever they're watching.
Putting it together
These stack. One strong shot can use a doorway (framing), a hallway floor (leading lines), and the robot on a third-line intersection (rule of thirds) at once. Habits to build:
- Turn on the grid and shoot to it.
- Fill the frame. Step closer or zoom before you press the shutter.
- Watch the background. A pole growing out of someone's head or a cluttered pit ruins an otherwise good shot.
- Then break the rules on purpose. Dead-center symmetry is powerful for a head-on robot reveal. The rules are a starting point, not a cage.
Key takeaways
- Composition (how you arrange the frame) matters more than gear for a compelling photo.
- The rule of thirds places subjects on a 3x3 grid's lines or intersections instead of dead center.
- Framing uses in-scene elements like doorways or railings to border and focus your subject.
- Leading lines (field edges, carpet seams, a pointing arm) guide the viewer's eye to the subject.
- Learn the rules first, then break them intentionally, such as centering a symmetric robot reveal.
Go deeper
Lesson quiz
RequiredAnswer all 3 questions correctly to complete this lesson.
1.Where does the rule of thirds suggest you place your main subject?
2.Shooting your robot through the pit-tent opening so the opening borders it is an example of what?
3.What is the best description of leading lines?
Answer every question to submit.