Sky and its limit

"The grid provides a structure for organizing fields of color that frame and overlap each other. Complexity emerges against a simple armature." (Lupton and Phillip, 177). It is just a sky photo but it has the power to bring voice to live and you can read the emotions that the photographer was trying to express. Also the grids set a limit the sky, which is believed to be unlimited, to draw the viewers' attention to its beauty during such precious moment. The sky brought out its best look, in such wonderful hues of a color palette. A simple, regular sky emerges out of its box by limit itself within the irregular window grids.

Yes, clear blue skies can add a wonderful vibrant splash of color to your landscape photos, but they can often end up as a large expanse of boring empty space in your picture. This can make your photo look unbalanced as there’s nothing in the sky to balance the detail in the foreground. However, the window grids add depth and composition to the sky because the sky was divided into blocks, like a 3D pixel puzzle. Each block is different with distinguished parts of the clouds and mixture of colors: blue, orange, purple and white as well as the soft layers from far away. 

Cloud formations add interest and detail to what would otherwise be a big empty space in your image that catch the viewer’s eye and balance out the subjects in the bottom part of the frame. Clouds aren’t just found during bad weather though. You’ll often find white fluffy or wispy clouds in the sky during a beautiful like this.

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