Y07W21RC Seeing Through the Lens

This week you are exploring how images are constructed to shape the way a viewer thinks and feels — before they have read a single word. The reading ahead will show you how three specific visual choices work together to create meaning and influence an audience. As you read, keep asking yourself: whose perspective am I being given, and why might that be?

Multimodal / media — Website/article

A website article is a piece of writing published in a digital format, designed to be read on a screen rather than in a printed book or newspaper. Its purpose is to inform and explain — to walk the reader through a concept or set of ideas in a way that is accessible and easy to navigate. This kind of text typically combines explanatory paragraphs with structured features like headings, panels, or labelled sections that help readers move through the content at their own pace. The content itself usually mixes factual explanation with illustrative examples, all arranged so that each section builds on the one before it. When you read a text like this, your job is to actively construct meaning — connecting the explanations to the examples provided, and thinking about what each section adds to your overall understanding.

Before You Read

  • Scan the title and the section headings before you begin reading. In a webpage-style article, headings signal distinct concepts — use them to map out what the text will cover and in what order.
  • Think about photographs or images you see regularly — on social media, in school materials, or on advertising around your neighbourhood. Notice that some images make people look impressive or powerful, while others make them seem small or ordinary, even when the subject is the same person.
  • The image description panels in this text are not real photographs — they are written descriptions of fictional scenes. Read each one carefully, as though you are building the image in your mind.

While You Read

  • As you move from one section to the next, pause to check that you can summarise the concept just introduced before reading on. This text builds layer by layer, so losing track of an earlier idea will make later sections harder to follow.
  • Each image description panel follows its explanation with an analysis of effect. Read the description first and form your own impression, then compare it to the analysis the writer offers.
  • Pay close attention to the language used to describe visual effects — words like 'suggest,' 'appear,' and 'create' are doing specific work. Notice how the writer connects a visual choice to an emotional or psychological outcome for the viewer.
  • When the text uses the word 'together' or similar connecting language, it is signalling that the concepts being discussed reinforce each other. Track how the three main ideas interact across the panels.

Read With Purpose

  • Notice how the same subject could look completely different depending on the angle, gaze, and distance choices a creator makes — and consider what that tells you about who holds the power in a visual.
  • Notice the shift in mood between the three described images, and think about what combination of choices produces each distinct feeling in the viewer.
  • Notice where the writer shifts from describing a visual to interpreting its effect on an audience, and consider what that movement between description and interpretation reveals about how images communicate meaning.

Now read

The online article

~4 min read · ~729 words

Visual Lens Lab: Angle, Gaze, Distance

Have you ever looked at a photograph and felt uneasy without knowing why? Or seen an image of someone that made them seem incredibly powerful — even if they were just standing still? Chances are, the person who created that image made very deliberate choices about angle, gaze, and distance. These three tools are the hidden language of visuals, and once you know how to read them, you will never look at an image the same way again.

What Are We Actually Talking About?

When we talk about ‘angle,’ we mean the position from which the viewer appears to see the subject. A ‘low angle’ places the viewer below the subject, looking up. A ‘high angle’ does the opposite — the viewer looks down. A straight-on, eye-level angle suggests equality between viewer and subject.

‘Gaze’ refers to where the subject’s eyes are directed. Is the subject looking directly at the viewer? Looking away? Looking at something outside the frame? Each choice creates a completely different relationship between the image and the person looking at it.

‘Distance’ is about how close or far the subject appears — whether we see a full-body shot from across a room, a mid-shot from the waist up, or a close-up focused on the face and expression.

These choices are never accidental. They are decisions, and every decision has an effect.

Image Description Panel 1: The School Captain Poster

Imagine a poster for a school leadership campaign. The student in the image is photographed from a slight low angle, so the viewer looks up at them. The student faces directly forward, making strong eye contact with the viewer. The shot is framed from the chest up, filling most of the space.

What is the effect? The low angle gives the student a sense of authority — they appear tall and in control. The direct gaze creates a personal connection, almost like the student is speaking to you individually. The close framing removes distractions and focuses all attention on the person. Together, these choices communicate: ‘This person is confident and worth listening to.’

Image Description Panel 2: The News Story Photograph

Now imagine a news photograph showing a group of students working together on a community project. The camera angle is high — the photographer has positioned themselves above the scene, looking down. The students are absorbed in their work and none of them are looking at the camera. The shot is wide enough to show the full group and the space around them.

What changes? The high angle makes the subjects appear smaller and gives the viewer a sense of overview or distance — as though the viewer is observing rather than participating. The lack of eye contact makes the scene feel candid, like a moment captured rather than staged. The wide distance shot emphasises the group rather than any one individual. The mood shifts entirely: this image says ‘look at what is happening here,’ not ‘look at me.’

Image Description Panel 3: The Documentary Portrait

A third image: a close-up portrait of an elderly person, taken at eye level. The subject is gazing slightly off to one side, as though thinking or remembering something. The background is blurred, leaving the subject’s face in sharp focus.

The eye-level angle creates a sense of equality — the viewer is not above or below this person, but face to face with them. The averted gaze — looking away rather than at the viewer — gives the image an introspective quality, as though the subject is lost in thought. The tight framing and blurred background direct every bit of the viewer’s attention to the expression on the subject’s face. This image invites stillness. It asks the viewer to pause and observe.

Putting It Together

Angle, gaze, and distance work together to shape how a viewer feels about a subject — whether that subject seems powerful or vulnerable, approachable or distant, real or staged. Creators of images make these choices based on what they want their audience to think, feel, or believe.

The next time you encounter an image — in a magazine, on a screen, in a textbook — ask yourself three questions: Where am I positioned in relation to the subject? Is the subject looking at me, and what does that do? How close does the image bring me to the subject? The answers will tell you a great deal about what the image is really trying to say.

Check your vocabulary knowledge

deliberate adj.
done on purpose, with clear intention and thought behind it
authority n.
the quality of seeming powerful, confident, and in control
candid adj.
captured naturally, without posing or awareness of the camera
introspective adj.
suggesting deep, quiet thought turned inward on oneself
averted adj.
turned away from something, especially the direct line of sight