I chose to make this triptych because I decided that the central image, the lightpole, would work well with a horizontally cropped image. There is also an idea of texture contrast here, with the rusty metal in the 'background' and the newer metal in the foreground.
This triptych demonstrates the idea of different "kinds" of trees. In the background, or the images on the side, the tree-branches are showing a lot of contrast, whereas in the middle image, the background behind the tree is simply a grey building. The comparison of these two types of foreground-tree images makes the back image much more vivid.
This is another example of texture contrast, with the diagonal stripes of the wood above and the horizontal stripes of the wood below. The colors remain the same, only the texture changes, both in the wood itself and in its direction.
This diptych represents the idea of how different something can be when seen from two different angles. One of these images, I took while looking upwards into the sky, and the other one I took while looking through buildings straight into the sun. Although the light from the sun creates an uncomfortable vertical line, it does show how much brighter it is compared to the horse statue, and makes the horse statue much darker in comparison.
In this kaleidoscope, the cyclical pattern demonstrates the idea of color contrast. In the foreground, we have the bright golden shapes, and in the background, we have the bleak black glass building.
This kaleidoscope does not demonstrate any kind of contrast, however, the way I edited it by accentuating the color of the berries and blurring out the background gives an impression of depth behind the image/