Photographic Lighting Simplified
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About this ebook
Susan Mccartney
Susan McCartney was born in Orlando, Florida, and raised in the small town of Mims, Florida, near the Kennedy Space Center. She is a proud graduate of Astronaut High School, Brevard Community College, University of Central Florida, and Argosy University. She has a bachelor’s degree in elementary education from the University of Central Florida and a master’s degree in instructional leadership from Argosy University. Her husband, Stephen McCartney, and her have been married for thirty-one years, and they have a twenty-five-year-old daughter named Tara, who is a chef. They have five great cats, each unusual in their own way. She is a high school teacher at a small, special-needs school in Fort Worth, Texas, called Wedgwood Academy. They work with students who have unique and varied learning styles. She has been blessed to have great and supportive family members on both sides.
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Reviews for Photographic Lighting Simplified
3 ratings1 review
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5This book explains advanced use of studio flashes in an easy understandable way. The illustrations are unfortunately in black and white but they work.
Book preview
Photographic Lighting Simplified - Susan Mccartney
Lighting Overviews
A First Photo Setup
Lighting photographs is fun and will expand your photo opportunities to an enormous degree. To be able to use photo lighting is virtually a necessity for professional or would-be professional photographers (except, perhaps, for nature specialists).
To use lights in a controlled way, you need to have basic photographic skills: First, you must use a meter to read exposures (the amount of light present) and then be able to select and set appropriate shutter speeds on cameras and f-stops (apertures) on lenses.
Ideally, you should own a camera with fully user-adjustable controls—an all-manual camera is fine. A program-only
film or digital camera is all right to begin lighting, as either can be used with some (not all) photo lights. Eventually, however, a program-only camera may limit your creativity. (Should you need a quick refresher on camera-handling skills, I suggest you read my book, Mastering the Basics of Photography, along with this one!)
In this book, you will learn to light popular subjects—people, objects, interiors, and more—from scratch, and learn to add light to scenes with some existing light already present. You will use studio lighting, of course, and also add lights when you want to create effects that daylight or available (existing) lights cannot.
Any uncluttered space about ten feet square, which can be darkened, is adequate as a first studio.
The ideal studio space should have an eight-foot or higher ceiling, so that you can raise lights up high. It should be painted white or gray; bright-colored walls, ceiling, or even floor can reflect unwanted color onto your subjects. The ideal studio should have two or more 110 volt electric power outlets, preferably on two different circuits.
Start lighting with any lights you presently own. If you are starting lighting from scratch, see my starters’ equipment suggestions on page 11.
Keeping Track of First Lighting Setups
Before you begin to explore the infinite possibilities of photographic lighting, take a moment to sketch the floor space of your studio. I’m not a person who writes everything down, but I do find it helpful to keep notes when learning something new. The grid shown on page 4 represents a hundred-foot-square studio. You may duplicate it, or make a diagram of your own space.
Whenever you create studio lighting setups, note the film speed being used or the digital camera media speed set. Then, on your diagram, note subject and light placements and distance from subject, height of lights, where you put any reflectors, and anything else you want to remember. The diagrams do not have to be elaborate. Also note shutter speeds, lens apertures, and any exposure variants used—these specifics apply to both film and digital cameras. If you note what you do conscientiously, you should soon learn average light placements, shutter speeds, and lens settings needed for good lighting and exposures with your equipment.
Lighting Diagram and Notes
One square = 1 ft. = 0.3048 m.
EXPOSURE BY FRAME
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A sample lighting diagram.
Basic Lighting Tools
At minimum, you will need one photo light fixture and a couple of adjustable light stands. If using a photoflood or quartz hotlight, keep a spare lamp,
or bulb, on hand.
If your camera does not have a built-in meter, a handheld light meter is essential. Also essential are a sturdy tripod that extends to your eye level and a portable reflector
of some sort (it can be purpose made, or a 20 × 30 inch sheet of white and silver artists’ illustration board).
Also get extension cords, a ceramic insert to place between the photoflood fixture and lamp, and a couple of A
clamps from a hardware store. A roll of gaffer
tape (film electricians’ strong, easily removable fabric tape) has many uses in a studio; buy it at a photo dealer, and you’ll have a complete first lighting kit. This information is repeated in greater detail later in the section.
My Other Relevant Books
My book Mastering the Basics of Photography, also published by Allworth Press, can be used as a prequel
to this one if, to date, you have worked only with point and shoot
film or digital cameras, or if your photo skills in general need a brush-up.
If you are interested in achieving studio-type lighting with small, battery-powered flashes, I do touch on that in this book, but you might also do well to read my Mastering Flash Photography. This is extremely thorough and illustrated in color. Amphoto/Watson-Guptill is the publisher.
My book Travel Photography covers lighting for overseas travelers.
If You Are Beginning Lighting with a Digital Camera
A high percentage of the images in this book were made on my Fuji S-1, a camera based on a Nikon N-60 body. I have just recently bought a Fuji S-2; it’s shown on page 54.
One thing to be avoided when lighting for digital images is too much contrast—too-bright highlights tend to burn out, and too-dark shadows don’t reproduce well. I keep the lighting fairly even. (In fact, very-high-contrast lighting is to be avoided when shooting film, too—for much more on this, see the section on Exposure and Metering, starting on page 40.)
I have found that photoflood and quartz hotlights are compatible with all digital cameras, even tiny program point-and-shoot
models without user controls. Consumer digital cameras all have built-in flashes—turn the flash off when shooting under hotlights, if possible (see the camera manual), or put black tape over the flash. When shooting under hotlights with any digital camera, set the White Balance
mode to match indoor or tungsten light.
Canon’s D-60 is the company’s mid-priced 6 megapixel digital camera, a successor to its popular 3 mega-pixel D-30 model.
Nikon’s D-100 is the company’s first mid-priced 6 megapixel digital camera. Both of these models are designed to appeal to advanced amateur or professional photographers and have a street price of about $2,000 at the time of this writing.
To use a detachable flash or strobe, your digital camera must have user-adjustable controls and either a hot-shoe
on top or a synch/pc
outlet on the side. Either can be used to connect a separate flash or strobe to the camera. (But see the caption below!)
Exposing with a Digital Camera
An obvious advantage of all digital cameras is that they are great learning tools. You measure exposure by aiming the built-in TTL (through-the-lens) meter at the most important part of a subject. You can hold focus and exposure by keeping the shutter button depressed halfway down while you recompose or reframe
the scene if needed (see your camera manual). Always remember not to aim the meter at bright lights, or you will get underexposed images. Of course, with digital cameras, you can immediately play back and view images on the LCD screen, and correct exposure or improve light placement if needed.
Be aware that playing back images may degrade them, so don’t overdo this. Playback mode also uses up batteries fast—keep spare batteries on hand.
My friend Jon Naar uses his 3.3 megabyte noninterchangeable-lens digital point-and-shoot
Olympus Camedia for some professional jobs. With hotlights and camera on a tripod he relies on the built-in TTL meter to adjust exposure. (He has even used the built-in flash to fire a slaved Dynalite strobe aimed to light dark ceilings in big buildings, but says that this is not recommended for beginners—it takes a lot of experience and experimentation; then, with camera on tripod, Jon adjusts the strobe power to balance with the existing lighting, using the camera’s playback mode as a guide until he gets it right.)
The Three Basic Types of Photo Lights
Photo lights can be broadly classified.
Tungsten, or hotlights,
burn continuously, so effects are easy to see— photographers have used them for over a hundred years. The big lights used on movie and TV sets are tungsten lights, and so are the lights used in the theater, clubs, and at rock concerts. The tungsten lights used by most still photographers today are called photofloods,
or quartz
lights. They are lightweight and of reasonable price and size. (Today, expensive so-called HMI hotlights are also popular with professional photographers, but those are outside the scope of this book).
Battery-powered portable flash units can be tiny, compact, or moderate-sized, can be used on- or off-camera, are fast-acting, and emit brief bursts of light that can stop
or freeze
much action. They are the mainstays of most wedding, event, and news photographers and photo-journalists.
Strobe
lights (originally called stroboscopic lights) are also known as portable strobes
or studio flashes.
They can consist of a power pack
plus one to four separate light heads
connected to the pack by cords, or they can be monobloc
or one-piece units. Strobes all run off a continuous electricity supply; incorporate a continuously burning tungsten modeling lamp,
so effects are quite easy to see; and when fired emit short, bright bursts of light that can stop much motion, as flashes do. Strobes can fire every few seconds, almost indefinitely, and are the workhorses of many photography studios.
In the hands of the skilled, many effects can be created with all three types of lighting. It is sometimes difficult to know just by looking at a photograph whether the subject was lit by a hotlight, a flash, or a strobe.
As long as a subject is not too big and is not moving fast, the way a light is used has more effect on the lighting look
of a photograph than does the type of light itself. Hotlights cannot stop
or freeze fast motion. And any light bounced
(reflected) out of a white umbrella down onto a portrait subject is quite soft—the bigger and closer the umbrella, the softer the effect.
I discuss what different types of light do best in the sections on hotlights, flashes, and strobes, later in this book.
Lights to Learn With
I highly recommend tungsten lights for learning studio-type lighting. Most are cheap or reasonably priced and are easy to set up. And, as mentioned earlier, they burn continuously, so lighting effects are easy to see.
Photoflood lamps can be used in big, metal reflectors; these can give pleasant effects when used close to a subject. But the lamps are somewhat fragile and the fixtures bulky, so I don’t recommend photofloods for travel.
Quartz-type hotlights are compact and easy to transport; diffuse these lights for soft effects.
Lights from lower left clockwise: A photoflood in a 5-inch reflector, a Smith-Victor quartz light, a monobloc strobe unit, and a battery-powered flash. All are aimed into umbrellas. When so used, the quality of light from each can be similar.
Strobe Units