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Archive 2009 · What control what?

  
 
Michael White
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p.1 #1 · What control what?


I have been studying on this lighting thing for some time and and I think I have if figured out Please tell me if I am wrong or forgot something, Chuck I expect you to chime in here and help me out.

Shutter-speed control the ambient light
Aperture controls the depth of field
ISO controls the noise in a digital camera or grain in a film camera
Key light controls the highlight spectrality
Fill light controls the contrast between the light and dark
Background light controls how light the background is over Ambient
Separation light separates the subject from the background. and it includes the hair and rim lights.

How is this for a basic understanding of how each control effect and image? Did I forget anything?



Nov 18, 2009 at 12:32 PM
cgardner
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p.1 #2 · What control what?


Shutter, aperture and ISO are the three variables which control exposure.

Typically you set ISO as low as possible to reduce noise, aperture for the desired DOF, then select the shutter speed which produces the correct ambient light exposure. ISO and aperture affect flash exposure but not conventional flash because the shutter has two curtains. The first opens completely (which takes about 1/300th sec.), the flash goes off, then the second curtain closes ending the exposure.

Correct exposure in the technical sense is when there is detail record in the shadows and highlights at the same time. That is a function of the sensor design. Overlapping a key light over even "neutral" fill allows the scene to be fit to the sensor indoors. If we start in a dark room we'd want to first lay down a foundation of fill, just enough to record detail in the darkest areas...

http://super.nova.org/TP/LE01.jpg
Then all the other lights can be added....
Background light for separation....
http://super.nova.org/TP/LE02.jpg
Key light to create highlights and with it an illusion of 3D shape...
http://super.nova.org/TP/LE03.jpg
Accent lights from behind to outline and enhance the illusion of 3D shape.
http://super.nova.org/TP/LE04.jpg

When we light for detail on both ends of the tonal scale everything in the middle falls into place automatically because that's how the photographic process is engineered to work.

The dilemma outdoors is that most scenes exceed the range of the sensor with just the ambient light. The only way to match the scene to sensor is to:

1) Shoot into the shadows of the ambient. Shooting into the shadow side allows flash to lift it INDEPENDENTLY from the ambient. Flash can't overlap the sunny highlights and lift shadows at the same time; both will get brighter and the highlights will be blown before the shadows are filled. You can't fix dark eye sockets with flash; the problem isn't lack of fill, but shaded key light. The solution for dark eyes is raise them into the light. That's not practical facing the sun so we turn the back to the sun and keep the front side ENTIRELY IN THE SHADE.

2) Expose the ambient highlights (which will wind up being brightest) below clipping,
http://super.nova.org/TP/DR_Backlight.jpg

3) Add flash to the shadow side without it overlapping significantly and blowing the ambient highlights.
http://super.nova.org/TP/DR_FlashFill.jpg

In a portrait lighting situation what the flash does if raised overhead is to create a highlight pattern over the fill light from the sky the person is facing when their back is to the sun..

http://super.nova.org/TP/BelenBacklitEyes.jpg

In that situation the flash is actually a KEY light not fill. The shadows not hit by the flash will still be illuminated by the sky. Blurring the photo makes it easier to visualize the "mask" pattern of highlights the flash creates and how the contrast of the shadows filled by the skylight creates the illusion of 3D.
http://super.nova.org/TP/BelenBacklitBlur.jpg

When lighter shadows are desired use two lights in a key and fill configuration as explained above. The only difference conceptually outdoors is that the soft indirect light from the sky helps lift both key and fill and lights the background , while the direct rays of the sun act as accent light. The net result is the same as the four-light indoor example, but doable with only two lights

Those are the basics. For more detail read my tutorials which you can find by clicking the WWW button below.

Chuck




Nov 18, 2009 at 01:01 PM
E-Vener
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p.1 #3 · What control what?


Michael White wrote:
I have been studying on this lighting thing for some time and and I think I have if figured out Please tell me if I am wrong or forgot something, Chuck I expect you to chime in here and help me out.

Shutter-speed control the ambient light
Aperture controls the depth of field
ISO controls the noise in a digital camera or grain in a film camera
Key light controls the highlight spectrality
Fill light controls the contrast between the light and dark
Background light controls how light the background is over Ambient
Separation light separates the subject from the background. and it includes the hair
...Show more

Shutter-speed, aperture and media sensitivity (ISO) all work together to control exposure.

The "key light" mostly does two jobs shapes the general visual feel of a photograph and the modeling ( simulation of three dimensional space in a two dimensional media). Highlight specularity is dependent on the reflective qualities of the subject and the angle ofthe light(s) to the subject relative to the angle of the camera to the subject ( following a basic law of physics: angle of reflection = angle of incidence).

The ratio of "background light to the light on the subject determines how much the subject separates from the background. Of course color is a factor in this as well, as is depth of field.

"Separation light separates the subject from the background. and it includes the hair and rim lights."

Not entirely but close enough. What you are calling "separation light" I'd define as accent lighting




Nov 18, 2009 at 01:19 PM
Carmen Miranda
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p.1 #4 · What control what?


Michael White wrote:
I have been studying on this lighting thing for some time and and I think I have if figured out


"It's what you learn after you know it all that counts."
John Wooden





Nov 18, 2009 at 02:17 PM





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