Set the Scene with a Three-Picture Story

I upload sets of photos to my photoblog and use images to liven up posts here all the time, but until this year I never thought much about the overarching stories my choices of images tell. I used images as decoration and illustration, not as real elements of my content.

That is, until I spent a morning last fall exploring a sunrise market in Hanoi with photographer Colm Pierce, learning to improve my photography and how I present it. Introducing: the three-picture story.

Can’t I just take pictures of pretty things?

I often wander around with camera (or smartphone) in hand. Here’s what I normally do: take pictures of things I think look interesting, or picturesque scenes I think I’ll want to remember.

Here’s what I don’t normally do: think about the totality of the pictures I’m taking and what they’ll communicate, or how they’ll actually help me remember the experience of the places/things/people I’m shooting.

Thinking in terms of a three-picture story helps fix that. It encourages you to think about the connection between your photos and subjects in a different way, and helps you create context that allows your photos to create a complete scene. Some of you probably do this instinctively already — I didn’t, and keeping the three-picture framework in mind has markedly improved my still-nascent ability to tell a story photographically.

What is a Three-Picture Story?

In simple and completely unhelpful terms, it’s a story told through three related images. (You’re welcome.)

Not just any three images, though — three related images designed to create a more complete sense of your subject than a single picture. Together, they capture both visuals and feel:

Picture One: The Establishing Shot

This is the big picture — where are we? For this shot, step back from the subject and put it in context. Think wide-angle.

Picture Two: The Relationship

This shot starts to get at what it’s like to be in the place you’re shooting by showing subjects interacting. Often, this means people connecting with one another — talking, involved in an activity together, or just looking at the same thing — but it doesn’t need to be. Inanimate items and scenery elements can interact, too (as we’ll see below).

Picture Three: The Details

The third image completes the scene by zeroing in on a detail, something you might not notice (or even be able to see) in the broader photos.

As we wandered through the market, I created this story (click any image to see it full-size):

I wanted to capture the experience of the marketplace — the mix of frenetic movement, one-on-one chatter, and quiet moments that create the overall atmosphere. I took a photo of the main thoroughfare from a bridge overlooking the market, found a vendor and shopper haggling over some meat, and was transfixed by an older woman sitting quietly in a side-stall, meditatively cutting corn off the cob.

Walking through the alleys around the market, I noticed the shops and breakfast stands beginning to hum and found another story:

First, I took a picture of the street waking up. For photo two, I snapped a photo of a woman sitting down at a noodle stall for breakfast — here, you only see the person preparing the bowl of soup, and the recipient isn’t actually in the frame. Finally, I peered over the shoulder of a vendor countering her earnings and grabbed a quick shot of the notes.

Adapting it

It’s easy to see how the three-picture story is great for street photography. What if you’re in a different situation, or street photography isn’t your thing? You can use this structure and idea — broad strokes, a relationship, details — and adapt it for your subject:

Here, I’ve grouped three shots from Angkor Wat that interpret the three-picture story in a slightly different way: first the panorama. Second, a person who has a relationship with the place. Third, a detail of the structure you wouldn’t see otherwise. (They’re small stupas, rock formations made by visitors to honor a lost loved one, found in one of the courtyards of Angkor Wat.)

And here’s my nephew graduating from college last spring (hi, James!):

We’ve got an establishing shot of the ceremony, a photo of him in relation to his classmates, and a detailed shot focused on his mortarboard.

Really, though, you don’t need people at all. Here’s a dinner I made last summer:

I used the three-picture ideas, but adapted them for my lack of people and the story I wanted to tell.  I flipped the order, to take you from inside of a melon (the detail), to the melon with other items in a blender (the relationship), to a finished dish (the establishing shot).

This framework can be re-imagined for all kinds of photography. Think of a three-picture nature story (a forest panorama, a few entangled trees, a close-up of some lichen on bark), or  a building (a shot of the whole structure, a few perfectly-spaced windows, a detail of some floor tile). Show off your images side-by-side, as I have here, by displaying them as a tiled gallery — use the “square tiles” setting for this look.

It might seem like more than you want to think about while you’re snapping images. That’s fine, too! Even if you don’t have the three-picture story in mind while shooting — I didn’t, while photographing the graduation or dinner — you can use it to decide what images you want to share on your blog, and the order in which you want to present them.

If you want to give the three-picture story a try, wait for this Friday’s photo challenge (hint, hint). In the meantime, we’d love to hear any other guidelines you use for taking and curating photos. What do you think about when telling a story with photos, or adding them to your posts?

————-

All photos by Michelle Weber, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

Show Comments

64 Comments

Comments are closed.

Close Comments

Comments

  1. I’ve gone to a couple of workshops to learn photography and the professionals there always tried to get us to do exactly what you said. Tell a story with your pictures. Use the large, medium, small pictures.
    Thanks for the reminder. 😉

    Like

  2. Three-picture-story? That is a challenge. Nearly all the posts of my photoblog consist of larger series of images, sometimes from varying occasions, linked by colour or mood to express something particular. I spend so much time with the gallery function, as the size of the images vary from time to time. I would really love a gallery that was easier to handle and predict. Perhaps it would be better to use another theme, instead of On Demand?

    Like

  3. I love this idea. I’ve been trying to do something similar in 12 pictures, but I’m beginning to think that 12 is too many. 3 may not be enough for me, but it certainly has caused me to think. Thanks!

    Like

  4. Thanks for this. I am looking forward to using this on my blog and beyond. I often think and communicate in pictures – literal photographic pictures as well as word pictures. This idea of the Three-Picture Story has great implications for the teaching and preaching that I do. I’ll be working with this and implementing it into what I do as I lead a congregation, facilitate workshops, and do my work as a Life Coach. Thanks for the inspiration!

    Like

  5. Such a simple idea yet it is one I never thought of! I will try applying this to my posts & when taking pictures next time. I use to carry my camera around and take a lot of pictures of pretty things, interesting things, random things; but when I looked back at them any months or years later, they didn’t have much meaning. It was the silly, sometimes random moments with people in them that being back memories, laughter & smiles.

    Thanks!

    Like

  6. I really enjoyed this! I do a reasonable amount of amateur photography, mainly to capture expression in so many ways and I feel I could use this method to help me paint a picture as such. Thank you 🙂

    Like