By Amy Renfrey


Light tells us a lot of special things. It tells us whether the environment is safe or not. It tells us whether or not we can trust our environment.There is a good reason kids are fearful of the dark, and this exercise shows that we have never truly moved out of that. But, not all photos with intense shadow capture this feeling of alarm. In actual fact depending on the way we create the image, and photograph it, we can really capture something quite interesting.

Light also has an effect on tone, texture, vibrancy and our background environment. We can be in charge of our lighting in lots of ways; f-stop, shutter speed, using the flash, fine tuning the brightness of the light from the flash, using other lighting sources, using a single lighting source, making use of filters, altering our photos in Photoshop, moving a person from a shady space to a window and many more things. It's crucial to work with light because it helps you reveal your story. And story telling is what taking photos is all about.

When you want a well lit picture but can't produce it, it can be tremendously hard. This can include situations like shooting speedy motion indoors, without the subject being too blurred. This is nearly unworkable so we then use additional lighting sources to help us get more light so we can speed up the shutter. We speed up the shutter so we don't photograph any blur. In a case like this we might use the light from the flash, utilise a higher ISO to make the camera more sensitive to light or employ other light sources.

On saying that though, now and then you will not need a well lit picture. At times you might want to create something really moody and intense, or on the other hand, gentle and romantic. This may demand dim or little or a very small amount of lighting. You can still get excellent images with a small amount of light.

Many wedding and portrait photos are used with quite soft light. It makes the story and overall image look gentle. Window light is an illustration of how light that can do this. There are other ways to capture lovely photos using a small amount of light. I've done it lots of times. It takes time but before long you will appreciate lighting and be able to create the mood and feeling you wish for.

You don't always have to photograph people when shooting with diffused light. You can place an emphasis on the outline of an object. You might only want to highlight certain things and not others. Let's take a look at an example of a photo I took with this exact theme in mind.

Canon 5D, F5.6, 1/250th of a second, ISO 4000, 105mm.

In this photo here I captured my husband's fingers. He was in his studio drawing up measurements for his next painting. As I watched his hands move smoothly over the canvas I couldn't help thinking how beautiful the lighting was. It cast a diffused and a yellowy orange light over the whole space. I sought to capture the softness of the movement, by preserving the lighting on particular components of the image and not others.




About the Author:



0 comments

Web site development, PHP programming's Fan Box