Visual Hierarchy

a photograph is not seen all at once

it is seen in order

first
then next
then next

that order is hierarchy

what hierarchy is

hierarchy is the path the eye follows

what is seen first
what holds attention
what is seen after

if everything competes there is no order

no order
no clarity

why it matters

the viewer does not choose where to look

the photograph does

a clear image gives direction

where to start
where to stay
where to move

without hierarchy

the eye wanders
attention splits
nothing stands out

the mistake

beginners include too many strong elements

each one demands attention

the image becomes a competition

nothing wins

what creates hierarchy

hierarchy comes from difference

something must stand apart

light
the eye goes to the brightest area first

contrast
light vs dark
sharp vs soft
large vs small

the greater the difference
the stronger the pull

position
centre
foreground
space around a subject

isolation strengthens importance

simplicity
choose what matters
leave the rest

framing
decide what enters the frame
exclude what does not belong

how to use it

before you take the photograph decide

what is first
what is second
what is not important

then adjust

move
reframe
wait
use light

until the order is clear

what to look for

when you look at the image

where does your eye go first
does it stay there
where does it go next

if the order is unclear
the hierarchy is weak

if you cannot describe the order

the viewer cannot see it

once you can guide the eye
the photograph is no longer accidental

next: simplicity in photography
previous: visual hierarchy
related: direction of light in photography