Squares vs. Rectangles in Photography

By David Pauley

My photographic archive, viewed from a certain altitude, resembles nothing more than a collection of rectangles and squares. The rectangles come from my 35mm cameras, while the squares owe their existence to my twin lens reflexes, arguably my most often-used bit of kit. Many readers of this blog may recall that I made a New Year’s resolution to use only the Rolleiflex 2.8F for 2025; I stuck with my pledge for about three months, but as the seasons changed I once again added my 35mm cameras back to the rotation.

My one-camera pledge was probably doomed from the start, yet this thought experiment led to some interesting questions which continue to percolate. One such question involves the shape of the photos I make, and how the dimensions of the negatives of a particular camera influence my workflow and the success or failure of the photos that result from them. It might be a stretch to say that I broke my 2025 New Years Resolution solely because I grew tired of making square photos, yet this variable—which I’d not given much thought to previously—was, I would wager, probably at the very least a contributing factor in that choice.

The photo that brought all of this to mind for me recently is one of the “outtakes” from my visit with Scott Ferguson to Coney Island on New Year’s Day, 2026.

Polar Bear Plunge, 2026. Rolleiflex 2.8F,  Kodak Tri-X 400.

Though properly exposed, this backlit, monochrome image has little to recommend it. Not only does it say next to nothing about the distant figures in the water—we could be anywhere, in any season, with any random group of people—its composition is generic and, dare I say it, rather boring. A photo editor would be more than justified in cropping out the acres of sky, as they add nothing to the image, and in fact probably subtract from it by forcing a symmetry that deprives the photo of dynamism.

The frame from the same roll I included in my post, in contrast, while perhaps a bit less pleasing to the eye, makes better use of the Rolleiflex’s square format and is also more successful in telling a story about that day.

Hurrying Out of the Waves, 2026. Rolleiflex 28F, Kodak Tri-X 400.

While the Rolleiflex, a storied portrait camera, draws the photographer almost involuntarily toward tight framing of subjects in the viewfinder’s bullseye (a formula many of my photos from the Plunge followed), this photo succeeds by playing against that expectation. The center of the frame here is almost entirely vacant. The photo’s chief human subject, the runner, is kinetic; he splashes down and to the right of the frame, partially escaping from view before the shutter catches him. His diagonal movement away from waves and seagull and people and camera not only enlivens the photo and earns its square format, but for me makes it a bit more effective in documenting the day’s events: this Polar Bear is eager, as we might also be, to get the hell out of the freezing water on a frigid New Year’s Day.

Even within the realm of portraiture for which it is often used, the square-format Rolleiflex in my mind rewards compositions that resist its pull toward tight central grouping. (Though as Richard Avedon demonstrated, with the right subject a balanced negative can turn out just fine). Unlike a standard 35mm photo, whose orientation—portrait or landscape—supplies viewers with a visual floor upon which to anchor their perceptions, the 6×6 square frame is mum on such questions. Received wisdom among photographers states that rectangular photos align with the natural way that humans perceive the world, while square images, in their failure to pick a dominant side, feel a bit alien to our perceptual apparatus, and can read as alternatively formal, distant or cerebral.  

The following Rolleiflex photos, each fairly formal in composition, nonetheless contain elements that depart from the central axis, adding a bit of tension and (one hopes) engaging the viewer’s attention.

Two Weeks Old, 2021. Rolleiflex 3.5F with Rolleinar I Close-Up Adapter, Kodak Portra 400.
Street Portrait (Hat and Hands), 2026. Rolleiflex 2.8F with eye-level finder, Ilford HP5+.
Sonia in her Divali Lehenga, 2024. Rolleiflex 2.8F, Kodak Portra 400.
Ollie Posing like One of Peter Hujar’s Dogs, 2026. Rolleiflex 2.8F, Rolleinar 1,Tri-X 400.
Dusk, Naxos, 2025. Rolleiflex 2.8F, Kodak Portra 400.
Scooter Dude, Smith Street, 2025. Rolleiflex 2.8F, Kodak Tri-X 400.
Festooning the Groom with Marigold Blossoms (Haldi Ceremony), Pune, 2023. Rolleiflex 3.5F, Kodak Portra 160.


For all of the merits of the Rolleiflex and of 6×6 negatives in general, there are moments when I tire of the strictures of square photographs, when in fact I yearn for the immediacy and perhaps messiness that in my mind can only come from a rectangular setup. In choosing to orient my 35mm camera horizontally or vertically in the heat of the moment, I am in fact already interpreting the scene before me, in the process moving a step closer to the action in a way that the Rolleiflex, with its square frame’s formality and stillness, does not, in my hands at least, so easily permit.

71st & Amsterdam, 2026. Leica III, Summarit 50mm f1.5, Ilford HP 5. The Leica’s vertical framing here brings us more fully into the scene and to the surging traffic.

I’ll conclude this post by referring to a famous image from the history of photography, Alfred Eisenstadt’s 1945  “VJ Day in Times Square.”

Eisenstadt, A. 1945, “VJ Day in Times Square.” Image courtesy of Wikimedia.

As many readers may know, Eisenstadt was not the only photojournalist on hand in Times Square on August 14, 1945, the day of the Allied victory over Japan in World War II. A U.S. Navy photographer, Victor Jorgensen, caught the same scene from the waist level (very likely using a Rolleiflex) at almost the exact instant that Eisenstadt clicked his shutter.

Jorgenson, V. 1945. “Kissing the War Goodbye,” Public Domain.

Looking at the two images side by side, one can readily see the advantages of each different camera orientation. With his square-format camera, Jorgensen, closer to his subjects, fastens his gaze on the pair in the center of his frame. While his photo also makes room for the reactions of a number of pedestrians in the background, his frame, like a similar but far better known Rolleiflex photograph from Robert Doisneau from five years later, could clearly be read as a private romantic moment, devoid of larger context. Notwithstanding this slight limitation, the New York Times used Jorgenson’s excellent photo in its coverage. 

In choosing a vertical orientation to capture the couple’s full bodies and faces while aligning them with the crowded vista of Times Square just behind, in contrast, Eisenstadt uses his Leica to place that swooning kiss at the center of a public event at the core of a metropolis that had until then long been at a state of war—its rectangular frame and slightly wider perspective better matching the enormity of the occasion. From that recognizable urban intersection, his iconic photo made it into Life magazine, and from there into history.

Postscript: On Digital Squares and Rectangles

As I was writing this piece, I found myself wondering how and indeed if it applies to digital photography. While digital photographers can, like us “filmies,” crop any image into whatever shape pleases them in post, as far as I know there has never been a camera with a dedicated square-format sensor on the digital market. When one uses a vintage film camera such as a Rolleiflex, Hasselblad or any of the high-quality Japanese equivalents, in contrast, one apprehends the world through a square window. This not only cuts against normative expectations—the natural human bias toward rectangles that I have alluded to earlier—but has practical implications for the images as they move downstream toward eventual printing. While I have heard from my husband’s family in India that square photographs were the norm in analog weddding photography there up until the late 1970s, no darkroom I have ever seen gives that shape such preferential treatment. Darkroom easels, developing trays and—most consequentially—photographic paper come in a variety of sizes, but always in rectangular shapes. Though my enlarger is equipped with negative carriers that make it easy to print square images (like Diane Arbus, I have filed down the edges of one set of carriers to artfully expose the black border of the frame), the rectangular bias in the rest of the darkroom persists, and has real-world implications. If I want to make a full-sized enlargement of a square image, say 18×18 inches, for example (a size I almost never attempt), I must use a very large 20×24 sheet of photographic paper, single examples of which can cost up to $20, and waste a good portion of it in the bargain. And as anyone who has spent time in a darkroom can attest, one sheet, even for a straightforward negative in the hands of an experienced printer, is seldom adequate to get the job done.

Thanks for reading.

FEATURED IMAGE: Alwyn Court Cornice, NYC, 2025. Rolleiflex 2.8F, Kodak Portra 400

You can see more of my photos at www.leica1933.com.

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About The Author

By David Pauley
I'm a Brooklyn-based photographer and psychoanalyst. My journey with photography began in middle school in the late 1970s and revived in 2019 when I bought a used film camera and installed a darkroom in my basement. I'm committed to analog photography and am enthusiastic about the expressive power of old cameras, traditional processes and methods. You can see more of my work at www.leica1933.com.
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Comments

Andrew Moore on Squares vs. Rectangles in Photography

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

Hello David,

Many years ago I had the use of a Minoltaflex 120 TLR, and still love square images. Whilst I haven't looked for a digital camera to capture square in camera, I set the aspect ratio in the iPhone camera app to 1:1, and am always happy with the results. I enjoyed your pictures and writing, thanks.
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

Hi Andrew, Thanks so much for your kind words. I didn't realize that the iPhone aspect ratio was something one could change (silly me, of course it is), but I'd love to give it a try, and appreciate your sharing that. I really do think that the shape of the frame I'm using influences the kinds of photos I make. Like you I often prefer squares ... but not always. Happy shooting. - David

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Bill Brown on Squares vs. Rectangles in Photography

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

I worked as a second shooter for a wedding photographer in the 1980's and we used Hasselblad cameras. This gave the option for a horizontal or vertical crop if desired. I was tasked with ceremony shots from the aisle and balcony and the square format showed off the location and attendees. The 8x8 & 8x10 size was the goal to sell for an album and therein lies the issue with 35mm format. 35mm certainly doesn't work if you shoot for crop. The edges will be cut off to get the 4x5 ratio and a square is almost impossible. Having a wedding album with square prints immediately told everyone you had paid for a higher end photographer. End of story.
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

Hi Bill, thanks for reading and responding. It sounds like the wedding photographer you were working with was a pretty high-end outfit; even the old 50s-70s Hasselblads aren't cheap today on the used market;I shudder to think of what they must've cost new. That said I'll bet the photos you took were outstanding, and interesting that the square format was the preferred way to go.

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Peter Schu on Squares vs. Rectangles in Photography

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

Dear David,
I guess the square format requires more careful composing the image, because it draws the eye to the center and what's not in the center has to support the center. That*s not an easy task, at least not for me. So, some scenes can just not be recorded in square format. I use a Bronica SQ and so I can switch to 6x4.5. I am starting to use that format much more often than the square format, but I am happy to have the option to use the square as well. I always have both film backs with me. The 6x4.5 is close to the 36x24 rectangle, but the difference matters and I find 6x4.5 much more pleasing most of the time. If I crop my 36x24 images, it is either into a panorama format or a format closer to the 6x4.5 ratio. I always thought about getting a smaller MF camera, but in the end the option to use different formats is more imortant.
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

Hi Peter, thanks for your comment. Bronicas are wonderful cameras and very adaptable as system cameras with (as you point out) the option to change aspect ratios, a feature that in the Rolleiflex lineup is only possible with their Sl66 SLR, a totally different beast from the TLRs. I'm partial to the Rolleis because of their relative compactness and the simplicity of having only one built-in lens, but the trade-off is flexibility. For that I have to reach for my Leica M3 or one of the smaller Barnack cameras. Thanks again.

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Wendell Cheek on Squares vs. Rectangles in Photography

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

David, I was very interested to discover your thoughts about squares and rectangles..... I have shot both 35mm and 2 1/4 square since the early 70's. I have found myself shooting 35mm more than 2 1/4, but mostly because of the versatility of the interchangeable lens SLR and DSLR. By the way, my Nikon D850 allows selection of a square format, and though not often used, I'm glad to have it. I've also been known to crop square negs to rectangular prints, upon occasion. Other considerations aside, I find myself seeking to find compositions that fit the format I'm shooting with, and am discovering that having the luxury of interchangeable leses, and prism finder on a newly acquired Rollei 6008 is inspiring a new interest in square compositions.
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

Congratulations on your new Rollei 6008 Wendell! I've read about but never used that camera and would love to hear about your experience once you've put some rolls through it. Having the option of interchangeable lenses is obviously a huge advantage of most 35mm cameras and of SLRs such as the Hasselblads, Bronicas, Mamiyas etc. Some days the option of shooting different focal lengths is the deciding factor in which camera I pick up, but for whatever reason over the last seven years I probably opt for a fixed-lens TLR at least 60% of the time. Shooting from the waist level position (which some folks hate) for me is also often a plus. Good luck with the new camera and thanks again.

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Tony Warren on Squares vs. Rectangles in Photography

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

A very thought provoking piece David. The two shots from Times Square really show the difference between eye-level 35mm and waist level TLR. The 35mm probably matches what we actually see whilst the TLR gives "real" perspective. I like the square format and larger negative which allows cropping if felt necessary but in itself is a very complete frame to enclose the image. The closest to what I actually see though is my 6x12 which seems to take in my peripheral vision to capture what I saw best. And again the Times Square shots show how important off subject detail can be with the reactions of people around.
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

Thank you Tony for the kind words and response. I've never used a 6x12 setup, but intuitively it makes sense that it might align well with the way I actually see (sweeping the horizon from side to side). May I ask what camera you use to make 6x12 panoramas? I'm assuming a 4x5 with a roll-film back, but am always eager to learn more.

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Tony Warren replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

My 6x12 is a home made item that I wrote about here some time back now. I had some help from a cabinet maker for the blanks and then cut and fitted it together. You might find it from my profile entry. I know I scan side to side as a matter of course so I think you are correct there.

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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

Thanks Tony. I must've missed your piece when it appeared but will look forward to reading it now.

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Walter Reumkens on Squares vs. Rectangles in Photography

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

I have my own thoughts on the matter. The square format allows you to leave plenty of options open when taking the shot – so the decision between portrait and landscape orientation can be made later in the darkroom or on the computer. Of course, this means sacrificing part of the frame, but the quality makes up for it. I find it pleasing that a square image format makes optimal use of the lens’s circular image circle. Many photographers also refer to 6x6 as 4.5x6 with ‘built-in shift’. What this means is that, when using a wide-angle lens – for instance when photographing tall buildings – the camera is held horizontally, and the dull foreground is simply cropped out later without any significant loss of quality.

I use 6 x 6, 4.5 x 6, 24 x 36 and 24 x 24 formats on the Zeiss Ikon Taxona, and 18 x 24 on the PEN-FV, alongside the variety of formats available on DSLRs and DSLMs, which also support the square 1:1 format as a screen grid. It’s not easy to keep switching formats, because the composition of the image is completely different. You really need to be skilled at it, have experience and also have the right subjects. Fewer snapshots, more landscapes, still lifes, nature and architectural shots. And that’s where the problems start for some snapshot and street photographers.

I only started shooting 120 roll film again a few months ago; the light-well viewfinder is a real pleasure compared to a rangefinder – the whole experience, the time involved, the mindful way of taking photos with just 12 or 15 shots rather than 36, which are often simply too many. And I won’t even get started on the negative size and the quality reserves.
I also find it very difficult to commit to a single format for a long period of time, and therefore don’t think it makes much sense. There are so many subjects worth photographing that you need to be flexible and take the most suitable equipment with you. Camera, format, focal length, film – everything should be just right. I usually take just one camera with a single lens. I think about what to expect beforehand. If it doesn’t work out, then you’re just out of luck. Which has rarely been the case for me so far – after all, you’ve still got legs to move around on.
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

Thanks for this thoughtful response, Walter. I agree with you about there being something special about shooting medium format with a waist level finder -- when I'm at my best there's nothing that can beat it. But on other days I do pine for the rough and ready and in my case a bit more indiscriminate kind of snapping that comes with having 36 exposures on 35mm film. I also was pleased to learn about 6x6 being thought of as 6x4.5 with a bit of extra margin. I need to remind myself that cropping, even to a different aspect ratio, isn't a sin, though Cartier-Bresson wouldn't agree with me! Cheers.

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Walter Reumkens replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

I’ve read several books about Henri Cartier-Bresson, and some of the information is contradictory. Marketing also plays a part. In his private life, he subsequently took photographs with his Leica and a 50mm lens, but things were quite different when he was working on commissions for Magnum. I haven’t come across any further details on this anywhere, though. He never developed or enlarged his own films, though. He had learnt how to do it, but apparently had neither the inclination nor the time, and instead relied on lab technicians he trusted for years. If a photo didn’t work straight away, the negative was discarded. People often worked with contact prints, after all. I’ve often seen records where negatives were simply crossed out by the photographer and ruled out for further use. Thanks for your reply, David. You’ve identified the problem correctly: if you have several camera formats, you should make use of them. You should decide at home which camera and lens combination is best suited to the upcoming trip. However, I agree with Cartier-Bresson: usually just one body with a single lens, and no others in the bag.

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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2026

Hi Walter, I've also read about HCB's dislike of doing darkroom work, which I guess shouldn't be surprising since he was often on the move and in that era there was no lack of talented printers around who specialized in that end of the business. While I am a competent printer I would love to take a course at some point with a real pro. Particularly when it comes to printing on fiber and doing toning of various sorts (where craft gives way to art), my work falls down. Something to look forward to one of these days!

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Scott Ferguson on Squares vs. Rectangles in Photography

Comment posted: 17/03/2026

Hey David,
Very interesting post, as usual. And it was nice to be reminded of our Coney Island venture. I think your posts first came to my attention in the run up to choosing the Rollei as the camera you would use for all of 2025, and I love the way you think and write, even if I wasn't totally surprised when you started 'straying' into 35mm as the year rolled along. I'm quite interested in your thoughts on the square format vs. rectangular. I like shooting square with the Hasselblad, but also have a 645 back so I can do rectangular frames as well. I tend to frame pretty intuitively and if I have an area that I want to be more conscious of as I shoot, I think framing and composition is the next frontier for me. Too often as a default I tend to center the subject on both 35mm and 120 because the focusing patch is dead center and I'm often so intent on getting focus perfect on close up portraits that I don't think enough about the frame when I snap the shutter. I also find that I'm very loose on leveling the frame -- not sure why -- it might be that I'm 'leveling' some element within the frame like a person's face as opposed to checking the horizon. Some times I like the effect, and it kind of pulls you in to a bit of a visual vortex, but often it's just something to correct in Lightroom.
As I think more about framing and composition going forward, I might have more thoughts on the meaning of the square frame vs. the rectangle, but for now it feels like the experience is defined a little more by the way my mind reacts to a waist level mirror finder which tends to be a little more formal and composed and a rangefinder window, which tends to be a little more immediate and spontaneous. I like both cameras very much for street portraits, my favorite mode of shooting these days, but probably would lean toward the Leica for anything that is more dynamic and documentary, where speed and timing is more important (while still being too slow for my liking.) I also think the rectangular frame does work better for documentary and narrative shooting, whether vertical or horizontal as your brilliant Eisenstadt illustration shows. I loved learning about the nearly identical shot from the Times!
Thanks,
s
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 17/03/2026

Hi Scott, Our Coney Island adventure was definitely the genesis of this post and lots of other thoughts as well. Glad to hear that you're enjoying both formats even though your heart (or so it sounds like) is for the moment more in the Leica system. At the moment I'm on spring vacation in Europe and unlike last fall when my Barnacks came with me this time it's only the Rolleiflex. I'm loving it...but also missing the Leica! I may never be monogamous when it comes to formats or cameras...! I agree also that a tilting horizon can in certain instances create a lot of drama, although many times like you I just end up correcting in post.

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Geoff Chaplin on Squares vs. Rectangles in Photography

Comment posted: 17/03/2026

You touch on a point Ibraar Hussain made recently when you said digital cameras were rectangular format and, of course, you could crop to square or whatever. Unless you're very good at pre-visualisation, or tape a section of the screen to square, you compose in a rectangle and serendipitily crop to square. Is that ever as good, or satisfying, as composiing with a square viewfinder?
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 17/03/2026

Hi Geoff, I'm a simple-minded fellow, and doubt I'd be able to manage visualizing a square image with a rectangular viewfinder or vice versa. Though undoubtedly there are others who can and do! I agree there's a special pleasure in composing on a TLR's waist-level ground glass that is worth the price of admission. Thanks for your response!

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