I've never heard it described that way. Video is obviously different than still photography but I would use this describtion as a guide: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_thirds
Following that guide, the skater (the subject) should stay in one of the intersections and not move around.
from the wikipedia webpage: "This article is about the rule of thirds in photography"
in most cases you probably would not be after having the object pinned down to one spot on the screen, but then again it depends what you are after (like for example a cartoon effect of having an object in the foreground with the background whizzing past behind it)
thx for this awesome video popwar skater! interesting to see how the rule of thirds applies to depicting motion
and thx to mr videopia for posting the link to it :)
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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_thirds
Following that guide, the skater (the subject) should stay in one of the intersections and not move around.
in most cases you probably would not be after having the object pinned down to one spot on the screen, but then again it depends what you are after (like for example a cartoon effect of having an object in the foreground with the background whizzing past behind it)
thx for this awesome video popwar skater! interesting to see how the rule of thirds applies to depicting motion
and thx to mr videopia for posting the link to it :)