Dated: 15 June 2025
Photography composition can make or break a shot. Whether you’re shooting in the backcountry or close to home, how you frame the scene plays a huge role in the final image. Here are five simple tips to help sharpen your eye and improve your results.
1. Balance is Everything
Rule of thirds, centre frame, golden spiral—it doesn’t matter which you choose if it feels unbalanced.
Use your instinct: Does the image feel weighted too far to one side? Balance helps draw the viewer in and hold their attention.
2. Straighten That Horizon
It sounds basic, but it’s often missed. A crooked horizon can ruin an otherwise perfect shot—especially with seascapes, landscapes or wide-angle scenes. Quick fix, big payoff.
3. Stop and Ask: “What’s One Thing I’d Fix?”
Before you move on, pause. Really look. Is there one thing you’d change? A distracting element? Crooked framing? Objects overlapping the subject?
This one small change can improve everything.
4. Check the Edges
Look around the edges of your frame—anything sneaking in that shouldn’t be there? Fingers, straps, branches, bins? Give your subject space to breathe, and remember: you can crop later, but you can’t un-crop.
5. Use Leading Lines
Find natural or man-made lines—paths, fences, rivers—that guide the eye into your frame. Leading lines create flow, depth and visual interest. Let them pull your viewer into the scene.
Keep these tips in mind next time you’re out shooting—they’re simple, but they can make a real difference to how your images come together.
Photographers — this is your moment! Now online and ready to book.Join me, Julie Fletcher, for an 8-day Red Centre photography adventure you’ll never forget.Capture the raw beauty of outback, and more — with hands-on guidance to elevate your photography.It’s immersive, inspiring, and designed to take your skills to the next level. Hope to see you there.
Above is a customers image that I post produced…………………. “Thank you so much for the edited image and video. The result from such an underexposed image is quite remarkable. This shot was from I was using my bird settings with auto ISO. The editing video was really useful to watch. I use LR extensively in […]
Know your camera well, free your creativity. Knowing where and how to adjust your camera settings is one of the most valuable skills a photographer can have. Out in the field, conditions rarely stay the same for long—light shifts, clouds roll in, wildlife moves, or the scene unfolds faster than you expect. If you have […]
The Red Centre photography workshop was a great success, with four clients joining me on an unforgettable journey through one of Australia’s most striking landscapes. Across eight days, we explored a variety of locations, from giant River Red Gums to the dramatic rock formations at sunrise to the vast desert skies after sunset. A diverse […]
Spending three months photographing Cradle Mountain in winter sounds like the dream—snow-capped peaks, frosty mornings, mist rolling over alpine lakes. But behind those peaceful, moody images lies a whole lot of planning, persistence, and cold fingers. This season I committed to chasing winter across Tasmania’s highlands, basing myself around the iconic Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair […]