A detailed close-up view of hands using a ruler and pen to draw precise lines on a spiral notebook. The image captures the focus of learning, design, or engineering work on a wooden desk.
PHOTO INFO
- Image Size
- 5760x3840px
- File Size
- 2.04MB
- resolution
- 5K
- License
- Commercial use free
- Aesthetic Score
- 82/100
VISUAL ATTRIBUTES
- Color temperature
- warm
- Brightness
- mid_tone
- Saturation
- moderate
- Lighting Source
- natural
- Lighting Condition
- indoor
- Negative Space
- moderate
- Negative Space Location
- top
- Depth Of Field
- shallow
- Has People
- 1-person
- Season
- unknown
- Time Of Day
- unknown
- Shot Scale
- close_up
- Background Type
- textured
- Orientation
- horizontal
- Composition Style
- diagonalclose_up
- Dominant colors
- brownwhiteblack
- Palette Style
- naturalearthy
- Mood
- professionalcalmfocused
- Style
- lifestyledocumentary
- Subject type
- educationworkspace
AI aesthetic analysis
This image stands out due to its excellent technical execution and strong narrative focus on precision and creativity. The shallow depth of field and warm color palette create a professional and inviting atmosphere that is highly desirable for educational and design-related stock imagery.
Composition & Framing
85The diagonal placement of the notebook and the leading lines of the spiral binding create a dynamic and engaging composition.
Lighting & exposure
80Soft, natural lighting illuminates the hands and paper evenly without harsh shadows, highlighting the texture of the skin and wood.
Color harmony & palette
82The warm tones of the wooden desk and skin contrast beautifully with the crisp white paper and black spiral binding.
Visual impact & mood
78The image conveys a strong sense of concentration, creativity, and precision, making it visually compelling for educational or design contexts.
Technical Quality & Clarity
88The shallow depth of field keeps the hands and ruler in sharp focus while smoothly blurring the background, emphasizing the action.
Subject clarity & focal hierarchy
90The viewer's eye is immediately drawn to the hands and the ruler, clearly establishing the primary action of drawing or measuring.