As I've mentioned, eHarmony photos shouldn't be taken only with you and a blank background.
But that doesn't mean that the focus of the picture should be the background. It shouldn't.
The picture still needs to show you.
So... here are a few composition tricks.
Perspective matters
It's fun to take pictures on your vacation.
And, often, the sites we see on our vacations are grand... and big.
They can consist of vast scenes - like the Grand Canyon, large gardens, or expansive deserts.
Or they can include things that are really big. Things like amusement park rides. Or dinosaurs.
The trouble is... when you've got a big or expansive background, you usually look pretty small in comparison.
And eHarmony pictures, by their nature, are small. So, if you're cramming that full-scale model of the space shuttle into your picture - your matches may see the rocket - but they can't see you!
A rule of thumb? See if you can get photos where the color of your eyes are visible. In the thumbnails, for close-up shots. On the "My photos" page for full body shots.
This can be tricky for full-body shots, but not impossible.
But remember... just because you're cropping a monument out, it doesn't mean the picture is going to be worse.
You may look good in the picture. And your matches might be curious to know why there's a crowd around you.
...But, as I've said, that's not a question you want to answer in a caption. Let 'em wonder.
The Rule of Thirds
In "classical" photo composition, people are taught that the focus of the photo should be in the center of the picture. And, sometimes, a picture does look better if it's cropped that way.
But, most of the time, I've found that the "Rule of Thirds" works better.
Essentially, imagine drawing a large tic-tac-toe board across the frame of your picture. You should imagine that there are 9 equal squares.
If you decide to use the "rule of thirds", you should try to make sure that you are in a place where the lines of the tic-tac-toe board cross.
In a full-body shot, your head should lie as close to one of the crossings as possible. And in close-ups, I'd see if you could put one of your eyes at one of the crossing points.
Oh, and if you've got some body flaws? You don't want them at the crossing points.
Cut out the clutter!
Finally, if something doesn't seem to add to the picture - cut it out.
If you're at a restaurant - feel free to photoshop out the clutter that's on the table. Things like crumpled-up napkins just distract from the picture. Take 'em out.
Feel free to do the same with other distracting elements. If it's irrelevant - experiment. See if the picture is stronger without that item in the frame.
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