Balance in Composition

balance determines how shapes sit together

shapes and proportions create balance

within the frame they carry

position
weight
tension

balance is what holds the image together

or pulls it apart

what balance is

every shape in the frame carries weight

not physical weight

visual weight

some shapes draw the eye immediately
others hold it
others pull it away

balance is how these forces settle across the frame

what creates weight

visual weight comes from what stands out

bright areas feel heavier than dark ones
contrast draws attention
sharp detail pulls the eye
faces and text dominate everything

size matters too

larger shapes carry more weight

but a small bright shape can outweigh a larger dull one

the centre and the edges

the centre feels stable

shapes placed there feel grounded

move a subject off centre

and the image shifts

now balance must be created elsewhere

an empty space
a second shape
a line that leads back

without this the image can feel unsettled

symmetry and tension

symmetry creates stability

both sides of the frame mirror each other

the image feels calm
resolved

asymmetry creates tension

weight is unevenly distributed

the image feels active
unstable

neither is better

they create different kinds of balance

the direction of attention

balance is not just where shapes sit

it is where the eye moves

a bright shape near the edge can pull the eye out of the frame
a strong line can lead it across
a face can hold it in place

good balance keeps the eye within the image

what to look for

when you compose ask

where does the eye go first
where does it go next
does it leave the frame

if the image feels off adjust

move slightly
reframe
wait

small changes shift balance

framing defines the boundary

selection decides what remains

balance determines how shapes sit together

balance stabilises
visual hierarchy directs

next: visual hierarchy
previous: framing in photography