A focal point is the center of a design. It is the most important part (or parts) of a piece.
A scrapbook page benefits from having a focal point because without some variation in emphasis among the elements on your page, everything takes on the same level of importance, and the viewer has to find some way into your page on their own.
When you’ve got three photos and want one of them to be the focal point, your first instinct might be to make it larger. You’ve got other options for making a focal point, though, including: 1) appeal, 2) adding weight by coupling with other elements, 3) contrast, and 4) structure.
Our creative team took the challenge to make pages three same-sized photos and to make one of them the focal point of the page.
emphasize with placement and added weight
Sue Althouse says, “The bottom photo on ‘Mt. Pilot’ is the focal point and I’ve drawn attention to it in four ways.”
- I matted the photo and adhered it to the page with raised adhesive (decoration).
- I placed the photo on the vertical patterned paper in a “sweet spot” of intersecting lines (rule of thirds).
- I placed my title on the photo.
- I placed journaling and embellishments around the photo.
emphasize with appeal and added weight
Marie-Pierre Capistran says, “My youngest daughter has had speech delays, and we had to get help, and the situation suddenly became a very big deal. Here, I recorded some of the cute things my daughter is saying as she is starting to talk more and more.”
“I used three photos of her, and the close-up of her face is the focal-point of the page. It’s emphasized by its appeal (her cute face), its framing a polaroid frame, and its placement coupled with the title. I added a small caption “and suddenly, she started to speak right on the frame.”
emphasize with added weight
Amy Kingsford says, “On ‘Our Nature Nerd’ I duplicated a favorite photo of my son three times in a photo strip. The viewer’s focus is drawn to the center photo with because of the framing brackets, and the embellishing cluster next to it.”
emphasize with contrast and added weight
Katie Scott says “These photos are of the kids playing outside after Thanksgiving. My son created a swing from a rope.”
“I used three photos to show the process of making the rope swing and then using it. I emphasized the photo at far right by:”
- reducing the saturation on the left two photos and increasing the saturation on the focal point photo (and adding a filter from Picasa called focal zoom)
- reversing the photos on the left, so that my son is facing toward the focal point photo
- aligning journaling, title, and embellishing paper strips in above and below the focal photo to create a column with added visual weight
emphasize with contrast
Chris Asbury says, “I set the blending mode of the two outside photos to ‘luminosity blend,’ and the center photo became the focal. I also added a photo glow (in overlay mode) over the focal point photo to enhance the color even further.”
emphasize with appeal and added weight
Meghann Andrew says, “On this layout, the middle photo is the focus. The subject is looking into the camera and this photo is double matted with yellow and blue cardstock.”
emphasize with appeal, contrast, and added weight
Tara McKernin says, “The center photo on this page is the focal point, made so by its central placement and its appeal–his cute expression over the Christmas wrap he was playing with. I added wordart to the image, highlighted it with the colored versus grey cardstock. The images on each side are of smaller details.”
emphasize with appeal and added weight
Doris Sander says, “I easily arranged three photos on the page by using a simple 2×3 grid. The photos take up 3 sections of the grid. While the photos are all the same size and orientation, the top right one is clearly the focal point as the little girl is making direct eye contact with the viewer in that one and the title has been placed directly under it.”
emphasize with contrast and added weight
Stefanie Semple says, “The photo on the left side of this two-pager is the focal point. I made it the focal point in several ways:”
- it’s on its own page,
- it’s embellised with a big colorful flower to draw the eye
- the title overlaps it
- it has a mat of a thin white border which makes it pop
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