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Light and illumination form the foundation to photography. In fact, the
word photography comes from two Greek words, phos meaning light, and
graphis meaning drawing. Hence, photography can be described as
"drawing with light". As we start the lesson, I want to wish you a
pleasant and illuminating session!
If you ask me to name the most important thing in photography, I would
say light. Without light, there is no illumination. In a room without
illumination, everything is pitch black. You can't see a thing. Taking
a shot - assuming your camera allows you to - produces a solid black
photograph. You switch on a lamp, and you send light across the room,
and everything is illuminated. Now you can take a photograph and show
something in the picture. You realize that your eye and the camera both
need light and illumination to work.
Photography is about
capturing light and recording it, whether on paper, or more frequently
now, in a digital format. As a photographer, you control the amount,
intensity and duration of light required to create the picture. The
apparatus used to draw with light is called the camera, which comes
from camera obscura, a box with a hole for light to pass through and
strike the backwall of it. The name "camera obscura" actually means
dark chamber, and indeed, the word "camera" is still used in some
languages such as Italian to mean "room" or "chamber".
There is
a saying that the camera never lies. Actually, the camera is rarely
capable of telling the whole truth. Without even going to what the
camera shows, it often cannot even get the brightness right. Have you
ever taken a photograph, and the shot seems brighter or darker than
what you remember the scene to be? With a digital camera, you can even
see then and there how distant the difference between what you see in
front of you and what the camera recorded. Why is that so?
The
camera and our eyes work in pretty much the same way. The difference
between the two is that our eyes are better able to handle wide
differences in light intensity. For example, if you take a photograph
from inside a room with an open window, you may get the room properly
exposed but the window is too bright, or the window looks right but the
room too dark. Yet our eyes don't have such a problem: they can see
everything inside the room and outside the window properly exposed. The
reason is, our eyes can compensate for the wide difference in light
whereas the camera cannot.
Secondly, our eye is more sensitive
to light than most of the amateur/prosumer cameras. In a dark
environment, such as inside a movie theater, our eyes can still adjust
to the lack of light and allow us to see the rows of chairs and people.
Most cameras would have difficulty focusing under such a demanding
condition.
So are we saying that the eye shows reality but the
camera doesn't? Neither is capable of showing us reality all the time.
What our eye and the camera do is that they provide their
interpretation of reality. What we see with our eye and what we see
with the camera are what they are capable of showing us. As an example:
Switch
on a fan. You see the blades start to turn. Soon the blades become a
blur. Now aim a camera at the fan, set the camera to the highest
shutter speed and take a shot of the fan. The picture comes out showing
the blades seemingly motionless. Why is it that our eyes show the
blades blur while the camera shows them still?
On the other
hand, have you seen photographs taken in crowded public places such as
railway stations or airports, where the people seem to be blur? Your
eyes never show you people as a motion blur, and yet that's how they
look like in the photo. How is that possible?
Our eyes are
capable of showing a moving object as sharp, up to a certain speed.
Beyond that, it becomes a blur. The camera, on the other hand, will
record the object as sharp or blur, depending on the shutter speed that
we set. Our eyes and the camera both provide an interpretation of
reality, but they interpret reality in their own way. Moreover, our
eyes see things in continuous motion while the camera captures a moment.
Have
you seen a photo where people appear as motion blur? Have you seen a
photo where the subject is sharp but the background of off-focus? Or a
photo of a stream where the water become a milky blur? Or an ocean
where the rolling waves are frozen? These are all possible with a
camera, even though reality doesn't look like that at all. And yet,
often such pictures are regarding as being very well taken.
That
takes us back to the art of photography. It is after all, an art form.
Art doesn't have to look like reality. Art can be very unreal as still
look pleasing. As a photographer, your goal is to create photographs
that are pleasing to the eye. The next time someone tells you, "Oh,
your photo looks so real!" thank them, but be mindful that none of your
photograph - not a single one - is 100% the real thing, but only an
interpretation on it.
What we've learned in this article:
- Our eye and the camera need light and illumination to work.
- Our eye and the camera do not record reality, but provide an interpretation of reality.
- Our eye and the camera interpret reality differently.
- Our goal as photographer is to create images that are pleasing to the eye.
About the Author:
Timothy Tye is a travel writer and
photographer with many websites on travel and photography. He provides
tips to take better travel photographs at
http://www.travelphotographyworkshop.com. To read the latest on light
and illumination in photography, go to:
http://www.travelphotographyworkshop.com/light-and-illumination-in-photography.htm
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