Image & WireframeSoul
Hey, ever wondered how a building’s skeleton can become the frame of a photo?
It’s like finding a hidden story in steel and glass, right? When you frame those beams and columns, you’re literally framing the building’s heartbeat, turning the raw structure into a living composition. It’s one of my favorite ways to make architecture feel alive.
True, the columns aren’t just support, they’re the bones that hold the story. But the story only matters if every vertex knows why it’s there. If a beam is just a line in the frame, it’s missing its purpose. Keep the topology tight and the narrative thin.
You nailed it—every line and joint needs a reason, or the whole shot feels flat. Tightening that topology makes the story sharper, just like trimming a frame to keep the eye on what matters. That's how you turn a raw structure into a story worth photographing.
Glad you feel that way, but remember—every joint still needs a story before you even pick up the camera.
Absolutely, I always try to see the story behind each joint before I even pick up the camera, so every detail feels intentional and alive.
Nice, keep that instinct sharp—like a clean grid on a sheet, the picture will breathe without extra color noise.
Got it—clean grid, clear focus, let the structure breathe, and the picture will speak for itself.