Principles:MakingDesign
Work
Balance
Somepicturesachievetheir
effectswith
veryformalandobviouslybalancedde-
signs
—
animagewith
identicalhalves,
forinstance.Otherphotographshavea
subtler,asymmetrical
balanceproduced
byinteractionsofvisualcomponents.
Balanceneednotdependon
matching
sizesorshapes.Instead,itmayresult
fromtherelativeweightthe
photographer
accordseachpictorialingredient.Pictori-
alelementsachievevisualweight
—and
demandviewerattention
—
accordingto
size,color,locationorinterest.
Andthese
demandsmayadduptoequilibriumby
perceptualcalculationsalmost
impossi-
ble
toexplaininwords.Butnomatter
howbalanceisachieved,it
evokesa
sensation
ofstabilityandcomfortinthe
viewer—andthisresponse
maywellsuit
thephotographer'spurposes.
Bothofthepictureson
thesepages
are
asymmetricallybalanced.Inthepho-
tographofthehousebehind
thefenceat
right,
equipoisehasbeenestablishedby
ingeniouslyplayingoffsize
againstvisual
interest.
Almostallofthepictureistaken
jpbythefence.Buttheold-fashioned,
angular
houseismuchmoreintriguing
:hanthefence,whichisblank
exceptfor
a
wavelikechalkline.Thissize-versus-
nterestrivalryfortheviewer's
attention
3ndsin
astandoffthatisstablebutdefi-
nitelynotstatic.
Atleft,visible
throughaNewYorkCity
apartmentwindow,isafrieze
ofsilhouet-
ed
skyscraperslackingthevisualweight
omatchthedarkshadowsofCentral
D
arkinthe
foreground.Butasthesun
slicedacrossthewindowframeitturned
alonebuilding
onthehorizonintoa
gleamingwhitespire.Thissinglesun-
strucksurface
wasallthatwasneededto
counterbalancetheshadowsdominating
heforeground.