Bogie_Cyan

Leif Norman made this on fabric. He used the leading lines of the pins and the framing with the blue. The space and colors of the pins capture your eye and make you want to stare at it for hours. Because of the way they are pointed, the movement captures them and makes you stare.



Charles F. Harrington created this piece on paper. He used the leading lines of the tracks to guide the viewer deeper into the photograph. The elements used were space because of all the items that were pictured and the variety of things that easily worked in harmony to make the piece unified.



Anna Atkins made this piece on watercolor paper. The way the border is thrown across the piece creates a beautiful frame of a piece that fills the frame. The form of the dancer makes the emphasis of her limbs really strong and powerful.

[[image:http://alessandrahull.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Cyanotype-5.jpg width="252" height="269" align="left" caption="Image result for cyanotype"]]
For the two plant pictures below I was going to have my concept be that man cannot shape art into nature, for it shapes itself. Then, for the last picture (which I wanted to create the most into a cyanotype) I decided my concept would be that things will tie you down, and for a reason. But what you're looking for might be right behind you. For the first picture my compositional technique was level horizon which is why it's slanted. The second was a fill the frame photo while the last picture was a rule of thirds technique with putting them on the lines instead of the center.