How To Use the Golden Ratio To Improve Your Photography

Learn what the Golden Ratio in photography is, how it compares to the Rule of Thirds and how to use it for photography composition.

The Golden Ratio has been used as a powerful composition tool for centuries. It is a design principle based on the ratio of 1 to 1.618. Hailed as ‘the perfect number’, the Golden Ratio can assist in creating images that have a strong composition, which will attract viewers to your photograph.

golden ratio in photography
Article: © 2014 Sarah Vercoe. All right reserved. Phi Composition – Grand Prismatic Spring in Yellowstone National Park Canon 7D, 24 – 70mm 2.8 L series lens at 24mm, ISO 100, f/8, 1/80 sec.

The reason for this is simple, the Golden Ratio allows for a composition that is perfectly balanced from a viewer’s perspective, creating a photograph that is most pleasing to the human eye. We naturally prefer to look at an image that is balanced and harmonized, and the Golden Ratio provides this.

Famous works of art such as the Mona Lisa, the Last Supper, and The Birth of Venus, among others, are all rumoured to have been composed based on the Golden Ratio. In fact, the Golden Ratio has also been called ‘natures number’ because it is said to appear everywhere throughout nature, from the nautilus shell to the sunflower.

Using the Golden Ratio in photography as an element of design is a great way to achieve a strong composition in an organic way. This will draw viewers to your photograph and ensure viewer-interest from the beginning. The Golden Ratio will also allow your viewer be circuitously guided around your photograph.

This is what we as photographers should strive for. Your viewers do not want to work to see a beautiful photograph, they just want to see it.

Photography is about creating something that is visually appealing, and using the Golden Ratio as a design principle is just one way we can achieve this.

 

The Golden Ratio in Photography And The Fibonacci Spiral

Graphic of Fibonacci Spiral for Golden Ratio photo composition by Sarah Vercoe.There are many interpretations of how we can use the Golden Ratio in photography. Two of the most common compositions when applying it in photography are the Phi Grid and the Fibonacci Spiral.

It is said that sometime around the 12th century A.D. a mathematician named Leonardo Fibonacci devised a series of numbers that will produce an aesthetically pleasing composition. This composition is known as the Fibonacci Spiral.

The Fibonacci Spiral was created from a series of squares using Fibonacci’s numbers, with the length of each square being a Fibonacci number.

A series of diagonal points on each square will then create a path for which the spiral can flow through the frame. Using the spiral as a tool to compose a photograph will allow the viewer to be led around the image in a natural flow.

the golden ratio in photogrpaphy
Spiral Overlay – Vancouver Art Gallery and Fairmont, Vancouver, Canada Canon 5D Mark II, 24 – 70mm 2.8 L series lens at 24mm, ISO 200, f/16, 1/60 sec.

 

Graphic of Phi Grid for Golden Ratio photo composition by Sarah Vercoe.The Phi Grid looks very similar to the Rule of Thirds principle yet it has one very important difference. Instead of dividing the frame into equal thirds of 1:1:1, the Golden Ratio is applied to divide the frame into sections resulting in a grid that is 1:0.618:1.

This results in a set of intersecting lines that are much closer to the middle of the frame.

There are no right or wrong versions of the Golden Ratio as a principle of design in composing a photograph, each is unique and can be applied as such. Each version has the potential to complement different scenes and can help to improve your overall image.

While the Fibonacci Spiral might work well when composing a portrait, for example, the Phi Grid might work well for a landscape. The beauty is these guides for composing an image are flexible and not limited to any one scene.

As with all things in photography, experimentation and creativity are key factors. Never let a design principle dictate how you photograph a scene. Simply use it as a tool to guide you in achieving a strong composition, a way to complement your own creativity.

 Why not just use the Rule of Thirds?

The most common design principle applied in photography, the Rule of Thirds, is thought to be a manifestation of the Golden Ratio in photography. Essentially, it is said that the Rule of Thirds was designed as a simple way for photographers to locate the sweet spot, the point at which the human eye is first drawn to, of the Golden Ratio.

Whether or not this is how the Rule of Thirds came about, the simple nine-sectioned grid allows a photographer to compose an image based on the easy-to-locate focal points at which the interesting aspects of a scene can be placed.

While the Rule of Thirds works well for many situations in photography, the Golden Ratio can often be a more pleasing design concept to apply. This is primarily because the ratio allows for a more balanced image.

Oftentimes the Rule of Thirds, particularly in landscape photography, can leave certain elements of a scene such as the horizon line in an awkward position. The simple division of a frame into thirds means that the placement of a horizon line can look a little too obvious. When using the Golden Ratio, however, the balance can often appear more natural and less rigid.

Take the following two images of Jackson Lake in Grand Teton National Park as an example. Using the Phi Grid as a guide for where to place the horizon line shifted the balance of the scene, allowing the foreground to have more impact in the photograph.

The horizon line also blends into the image instead of standing out as a distraction. The foreground and the horizon line, in my opinion, are too divided using the Rule of Thirds in this case.

hi Composition Horizon Line Example – Jackson Lake, Grand Teton National Park Canon 7D, 24 – 70mm 2.8 L series lens at 24mm, ISO 100, f/11, 1/30 sec. Manfrotto 190xprob tripod and shutter release

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Rule of Thirds Composition Horizon Line Example

Composing for the Golden Ratio

Although the math itself can seem quite complex, applying it to your photography is not.

The simplest way to compose an image to apply the Fibonacci Spiral is to visualise a small rectangle from one corner of your frame then bisect it from corner to corner so that an imaginary line crosses your entire frame diagonally.

The line will cross over several focal points associated with the Fibonacci Spiral within the rectangle. From here you can envision a spiral leading out from your main focal point in a wide arc leading out of the frame.

Graphic of rectangle and diagonal line to start the composition of an image in order to apply the Fibonacci Spiral by Sarah Vercoe.
Composition Example
Graphic composition example of the Fibonacci Spiral by Sarah Vercoe.
Composition Example with Fibonacci Spiral

 

When capturing this image of a path along the Sea Wall in Vancouver, Canada I used the Fibonacci Spiral as a guide to compose the photograph.

Image of fog on the sea wall, Vancouver, Canada using the Golden Ratio spiral composition by Sarah Vercoe.
Spiral Composition – Fog on the Sea Wall, Vancouver, Canada Canon 5D Mark II, 24 – 70mm 2.8 L series lens at 32mm, ISO 100, f/11, 1/30 sec. Manfrotto 190xprob tripod and shutter release

 It was a foggy, late afternoon during fall and I wanted to capture the colours of the sunset that were filtering through the fog as well as the beautiful crimson colour of the fall foliage.

I aimed to incorporate one person who stood out walking along the path, the fall foliage in the foreground, and the tree line as the central point of focus in my frame.

To do this I positioned these aspects in the centre of my imagined rectangle, knowing that it contained several of the key focus points associated with the ratio, and incorporated the fog into the scene along the wide arc of the spiral.

the golden ratio in photography
Spiral Overlay

When composing for the Phi Grid envision the frame divided into nine just as you would with the Rule of Thirds, only instead of composing equal weights for the grid, you will compose a grid that is weighted as 1:.68:1, so more weight is given to the four corner rectangles.

This results in your intersecting lines falling slightly closer towards the middle of the frame.

Image of Lighthouse Park West Vancouver, Vancouver, Canada showing a Phi overlay composition by Sarah Vercoe.
Phi Overlay – Lighthouse Park West Vancouver, Vancouver, Canada Canon 5D Mark II, 24 – 70mm 2.8 L series lens at 24mm, ISO 100, f/11, 1/60 sec. Manfrotto 190xprob tripod and shutter release

As with everything in photography composing for the Golden Ratio takes practice, just like composing for the Rule of Thirds once did. Once you become familiar with the general location of the important focal points in the Golden Ration, seeing them in your viewfinder will become second nature.

Perfecting the Composition

I use Adobe Lightroom to perfect my composition of the Golden Ratio during post processing. The photo editing software has a range of crop overlays available including an overlay called the Golden Spiral that is based on the Fibonacci Spiral.

When using the crop tool move between the different types of crop overlays by using the shortcut key [o], and [shft] + [o] to toggle between the different angles and varieties of the overlay that are available.


The Golden Ratio at work

Here are some images that apply both of the Golden Ratio compositions I have discussed. Can you see how the Golden Ratio with its spiral composition has been applied to the composition of each photograph?

Image of sunrise at Muri Lagoon, Rarotonga, Cook Islands using the Golden Ratio spiral composition by Sarah Vercoe.
Sunrise Muri Lagoon, Rarotonga, Cook Islands Canon 7D, 24 – 70mm 2.8 L series lens, ISO 100, f/22 HDR merge of three images at various shutter speeds 1/4, 1/10, 0.6 sec. Manfrotto 190xprob tripod and shutter release
Image of a tree in Stanley Park, Vancouver, Canada using the Golden Ratio spiral composition by Sarah Vercoe.
Tree in Stanley Park, Vancouver, Canada Canon 5D Mark II, 24 – 70mm 2.8 L series lens at 32mm, ISO 400, f/8, 1/40 sec.
Image of The Bridge, Great Ocean Road, Victoria, Australia using the Golden Ratio spiral composition by Sarah Vercoe.
The Bridge, Great Ocean Road, Victoria, Australia Canon 7D, 24 – 70mm 2.8 L series lens at 24mm, ISO 100, f/22, 1/13 sec. Manfrotto 190xprob tripod and shutter release
Image of Sunrise Kailua Beach, Oahu, Hawaii using the Golden Ratio spiral composition by Sarah Vercoe.
Sunrise Kailua Beach, Oahu, Hawaii Canon 7D, 24 – 70mm 2.8 L series lens at 24mm, ISO 100, f/22, 1/2 sec. Manfrotto 190xprob tripod and shutter release

Using the Golden Ratio as a way to help position points of interest when you are composing an image can help create impact in the scene overall. It will assist in leading viewers through the scene to explore any points of interest you choose to incorporate in your photograph. It will also provide a natural balance to the scene, one that we are used to seeing throughout nature.

Article: © 2014 Sarah Vercoe. All right reserved.

All written content (and most images) in these articles are copyrighted by the authors. Copyrighted material from Apogee Photo Mag should not be used elsewhere without seeking the authors permission.

13 Comments on How To Use the Golden Ratio To Improve Your Photography

  1. I am a beginner. Wish you had included same shots with the respective overlays. That would have been very helpful! Interesting ideas. New ways of looking. Thanjs.

  2. thank you!
    The first article I found a clear answer how to actually use Golden ratio while taking a picture, and special thanks for short keys! I used Lightroom so long, never knew there are different ratio aspects.

  3. Hey Admin. Thanks for your efforts to providing a best content. I am also an photographer and I run a business of Event Booth Rentals but I don’t know about the Golden Ratio this is super. Today I will try!

  4. Thank you for the valuable tips you are sharing. Such a great content! Every time I learn something new! Keep up the great work !

  5. Thanks for sharing the great article about how to use the Golden ratio to improve your photography. Your content helps the photographer and the photo editor.

  6. Thanks for sharing the post about using the golden ratio to improve photography. You are sharing great informative tips. Learning new things is always interesting.
    Keep sharing.

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