Friday, September 9, 2011

The Basic Qualities of Light

Without light no photograph would be possible. It is the core component of photography. Understanding light in whatever form you may find it is critical to your growth and success as a photographer. There are many references to light and its qualities available online. I've taken a few of these and compliled them into a basic primer for light in photography.


The way light acts upon a subject will depend on the physical properties each light source presents. Before taking on the challenge of creative photographic lighting it will be worth your while to understand some of these properties.
Light Characteristics
Defined by the way surfaces are affected by specific light sources.
Hard
  • Creates harsh shadows and high contrast
  • Accentuates textures and can vary depending on the angle
  • Easy to control and shape
Soft
  • Creates soft shadows and lower contrast
  • Difficult to control
  • Presents form through an extended range of tones.
Color Quality
Defines the color cast from a particular light source
  • Known as color temperature
  • Derived from the colors emitted when heating a black object through a range of temperatures. These colors are matched to light sources we use in photography.
  • Measured in ºK (Degrees Kelvin, just referred to as Kelvin or K)
Sources and approximate color temperatures
  • Candle light 1200K
  • Incandescent light bulb 2700K
  • Red Head (quartz halogen bulb) 3200K
  • Sunrise and sunset 3200K
  • Flash light 5600K
  • Sunlight at midday 5000K
  • Outdoors shade 6000K
  • Skylight reaching 10000K
The temperatures listed will change depending on the age or wattage of the source light.
The color cast is referred to warm at the lower color temperatures and cool at the higher temperatures, changing from orange-yellow at the bottom to blue-white at the top. This is why the camera has comprehensive white balance, or color balance control functions that remove the color casts from the different sources and render white as white.
Natural Light
  • Natural light is from the sun, which can still present indoors by shining through windows, doors and skylights. These illuminations are a source which can be used to creatively light a subject. At certain times of the day the light is very even and is often diffused through a sun filter in a window. Natural light is sometimes referred to as Ambient light. This is light that exists at a location, or "found" light.
  • Other sources of natural light are fire, candle light, campfire, stars, and the moon.
Artificial
  • Light powered by electricity is artificial light.
  • The most common are listed under Light Sources above.
  • A flash light closely matches the light quality from the sun, but is still artificially generated.
Continuous
Continuous light is defined by a light source that is always there when switched on (light bulb or fluorescent) or a source such as sunlight.
  • The effect of a continuous light on a subject is always there to see (intensity and shadow positions) making adjustments real time and therefore easier.
  • Using a continuous light source also affects the way exposure is controlled regarding shutter speed in relation to aperture diameter.
  • The exposure is affected by a fast or a slow shutter speed using a continuous light source.
Flash
The flash offers a burst of instantaneous light and requires different lighting techniques to that of continuous lighting.
  • The shutter is synchronized to the flash
  • At certain shutter speeds the flash light will not register on the film or imaging device.
  • A model light or continuous light is often used to judge shadows on the subject before the flash is fired.
  • Blurring is less of a problem because the flash freezes a moment in time.
  • There are in effect two exposures when firing a flash. The camera exposes the ambient light while the shutter is released for a short time to allow the burst of flash into the camera. This duration that the shutter is open is often not enough time for the ambient light to make any difference to the exposure.
Application
Understanding light characteristics, natural or artificial, will help elevate you to the next level of photography. There is a plethora of lighting equipment on the market that you can acquire once you have found your preferred genre or niche in photography (Weddings, Portraiture, landscape, Glamour). Photo lights have been designed based on the above properties and come in many shapes and sizes to meet specific photographic lighting applications.
Knowing these basics can assist you in making decisions regarding exposure, composition, and even choice of ISO. I reccommend keeping a small notebook of unique lighting situations you encounter and how you dealt with them. Just another resource in your photographers toolbox. Keep shooting!

"Do it Tomorrow" from Seth Godin

Every now and then I find a little tidbit of information that just needs to be shared. One such item crossed my path this morning.  I follow several blogs that I find interesting and informative. A post from one of these blogs caught my attention and I want to share it with you. The author, Seth Godin, is a unique individual that thinks a LOT! I enjoy his posts and have included the link to his site for those of you that might wish to check it out. I'm posting this on my blog with full credit attributed to Seth. Enjoy!!

"Do it tomorrow"

Stupid advice, certainly. But free. I didn't charge you anything for it.
There are very few categories where there is less correlation between price and quality than advice. You can buy a million dollars worth of consulting, a thousand dollars worth of coaching or read a few tweets for free--your choice.
This widespread variety of pricing leads to two interesting questions:
Are you confusing what you pay with what you get? (Does expensive advice feel more valuable than the free stuff?)
and
Are you more likely to take action because you've paid a lot?
One of the most effective ways to get your ideas implemented is to charge a lot for them. It increases the perception of value and creates an impulse to execute so that the investment won't be wasted.
Of course, I said that for free...

 One of the things I enjoy is browsing the news about photography and how it is changing...literally daily! One of the sites I use frequentl...