What We Expect to See: When to Crop Limbs in a Portrait
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One of the rules of portrait photography is to crop somewhere other
than through a person’s joints. Many of the rules of photography are
amenable to being broken, but this is not one of them. Cutting a person
off at the joints creates a disturbing and distracting sense that the
person in the photograph has been amputated. Even the best portrait with
perfect expression and lovely pose will suffer if badly cropped.
There
are diagrams and general rules that suggest where a person might be
cropped for a portrait, but the guides are not absolutes. You must judge
each pose and portrait for yourself and decide where to crop. To help
you make these decisions, I am going to explain how we see and why
cropping a person through a joint is disconcerting. With that
information, you will be able to confidently decide with each portrait
where to crop.
How We See
What we
see is a combination of what our eyes see and what our mind contributes.
Our minds are strong and persuasive contributors, and can aid or trick
us. For example, when presented with an incomplete drawing, our minds
will close the visual gaps, rely on what is familiar, and tell us there
is a complete object. In the drawings below, our minds close the gaps
and we see the sketches on the left as a circle and a square even though
the lines are broken and the shapes are incomplete. Our minds rely on
what we’ve seen before to close the gaps and tell us the image on the
right is a tree. If
there isn’t enough information in an image, our minds struggle to close
the gaps. Instead of seeing a complete object, our minds are distracted
with trying to sort out and fill in what’s missing. Without enough
information, our minds often trick us, misinterpreting what we see.
What We See
When
we look at a cropped photograph of a person, our minds tell us the
person is complete. We may not see complete bodies, but our minds draw
on what’s familiar, fill in the visual gaps and imagine the person as
whole. Our minds are at rest, confident that what we expect to see is
there just outside the edges of the photograph.
When we look at a
photograph of a person whose limbs have been cropped at the joints - at a
shoulder, elbow, wrist, knee, or ankle - our minds are uneasy,
struggling to interpret what we’re seeing. We can see some of the
person’s limbs so our minds begin by considering what is complete. For
example, if a person is cropped at the knees, our minds begin by
considering “thigh” and “knee,” not “leg.”
Our minds then search
for some information to determine what comes below the knees. If the
person has been cropped at the knees, the photograph doesn’t provide
enough information for our minds to imagine the rest. Our minds
misinterpret the lack of information as something missing. Even though
we may know differently, our minds trick us and see the person’s legs as
amputated.
In the photograph below, because the person’s legs are
incomplete, our minds begin with what is complete: the person’s thighs
and knees. There isn’t enough information for our minds to begin
imagining lower legs. Instead, our minds misinterpret the lack of
information and tell us the person’s lower legs are missing. Similarly,
because of how he is posed, the person’s left arm is incomplete. We see a
complete shoulder but there isn’t enough information for our minds to
begin imagining an arm. Our minds misinterpret that to mean the person’s
whole arm is missing. We may know that the person has complete legs and
both arms, but our minds have tricked us into seeing the person’s legs
and arm as amputated.
What We Expect to See
Our minds are also lazy. When we are offered lots of visual information, our minds expect to see all of the information.
In the photograph on the left, we see all of the person’s right arm and almost
all of her left arm. Because the photograph provides so much
information about the person’s left arm, our minds expect to be given
all of the information. Instead of filling in the gaps, our minds become
distracted with what’s missing: a tiny sliver of arm and a few
fingers. In
the photograph on the right, we see a good portion of the person’s
upper and lower arm, but there is a small piece of information missing
to complete the image of her arm. Also, as with the photograph on the
left, the person is missing just the tips of her fingers. Our minds are
distracted with the separation of her upper arm from her lower and focus
on what's missing: her elbow and fingertips.
Applying the Principles
When
you are next taking a portrait, consider how we see and apply the
principles to your decisions about where to crop. Include enough
information that our minds are able to fill in the gaps but not so much
information that our minds are distracted by what’s missing. We want our
minds to easily imagine the rest of what would be outside of the frame
and not be busy trying to determine what’s missing in the frame.
If
you are still not confident about where to crop a portrait, take the
photographs with plenty of room around the person. You can then make
your cropping decisions during post-processing. You can always cut off a
bit more but you can’t add what isn’t there.