After reading Barthes Rhetoric of image I had a couple of goes at using his method to look at photographs. I looked at a bill board advert and then just chose a photograph from my own collection. Doing this was enlightening. I look at pictures differently after doing so.
He likes structure so puts what he sees into boxes in a table. It makes looking at images and or text easier to break down. Doing this helped focus my mind on even the initially simple image as shown below.
For this exercise I have chose an image that doesn’t have a photograph at all. I did this as I was interested if the technique would work for a simple piece of typology. I think it does. I chose Coca Cola`s advert “You don’t have to stay between the lines”.
It is a bold image that leaps out of the page and appears very simple at first glance. However when you look it is a sophisticated image with a number of signs and signifiers. The table below shows the ones I saw. Maybe you may see more.

| Sign | Signifier |
| Red and White | Company colours recognised the world over. |
| Bottle Shape | Instantly recognised even though most product delivered in cans. |
| Usual Simple lines broken. | Implies you can break the rules. Hint at other products available. |
| Bottle shape made of dashed lines. | Subtle hint at lines crossed rules broken edgy and maybe risky. |
| Hint at choice | Made me think of other options or alternative products in the range. |
| Vignetting | Focussed the eye on the product in the center of the image. |