Showing posts with label color. Show all posts
Showing posts with label color. Show all posts

Monday, October 30, 2017

Backlight: Exposure, Options and Techniques


The sun was striking these still-green leaves on a bough backed by brilliant color and stark trunks. The difference between the bough and background was about 1.5EV, but reading right off the bough made the colors in the background to go darker, which created a strong play of brightness and color.


As the term implies, backlight is a strong light behind your subject as it faces the camera. In some cases it can cause exposure problems, but it is also one of the most beautiful light sources for translucent subjects. Think of stained glass windows in a church. They are rather dark and dull when the sky is overcast, but when the light comes through them they are the most glorious window treatments of all.

Backlight is inherently contrasty, meaning that there will be a considerable difference in exposure between parts of the subject and the light behind it. In some instances this means that parts of your subject will either sit in silhouette (having form but no detail within the form) or be considerably underexposed. The key to backlighting is to exploit this contrast, to use the shadows it “throws” toward the camera as part of the composition. You do this by biasing exposure toward the brighter light. The usual solution to getting detail in a subject that is backlit is to use flash to “fill” the foreground subject with light, but that defeats the purpose and dramatic potential of this kind of lighting.

Tools and techniques: spot metering mode, exposure compensation, autoexposure lock.


The bright light here is supplemented by reflections off the pond, which provides a natural fill light for the darker parts of the scene. Nonetheless a spot meter reading of f/16 at 1/250 second at ISO 200 was made directly off the bright yellow leaves on the left side of the frame.


Perhaps the most colorful season in which to exploit backlighting is fall, when brilliant color displays combine with low angle light. The key to exposing this type of lighting is to avoid bringing shadow areas into consideration and read from the backlit leaves themselves. This is easily done by using spot metering mode and locking exposure on the brilliant light of the leaves. In most cases this will be the proper exposure, but in some instances you might want to use a + exposure compensation to add some brightness to other parts of the scene. This rarely goes above +0.5EV. Once you attain the exposure and review it to make sure it does the job, lock it, or switch to manual mode to maintain the exposure as you work in the area.




If you are shooting in the shade with a bright sky behind the main subject you can either crop out the sky and not worry about contrast, or expose for the main subject and deal with the bright backlight later in processing. These formations sat in deep shade but I wanted the sky for relief of the forms at the top of the frame. I used CWA to make the exposure, locking it on the formation itself, then recomposed. Later in post I selected the sky, which was blank in the recording, and added a very light blue color wash.


There may be times when working with backlight that the sun is higher in the sky and/or cannot be absorbed by a dense background.  It is essential to then make sure you block the sun from both the image and from exposure consideration. I often do this by finding a shadow area cast by the foreground subject and stand within it to make the picture, or at least position myself so that I block the sun with a branch, rock or other obstruction. Failure to do this will result in flare and an exposure that is thrown off by the strong presence of a direct light source. In addition, it is never a good idea to look through the finder directly at the sun. In this shots I used a branch to black the sun and took my spot reading from the leaves of the center tree.






Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Color and Light


The overall quality of the light source can have a profound effect on color perception. Light and dark tints of color that in flat light would show as one hue become more differentiated in bright light--the effect of color contrast. Yet, if that light is too bright and the surface is glossy we will get greater interference, thus some of the color that we might see in flat light becomes "washed out" or replaced by white. If the surface is matte the reflection becomes more diffuse we see more color. Thus, the greater the surface reflection the less the color richness or saturation we perceive. Rough surfaces throw off all sorts of reflections that can vary the color in many ways.

Atmospheric effects also alter color. If you look at a range of mountains from a distance, for example, you see them as blue. When you walk or drive closer to them, however, you see them as green, or red or whatever color they might be.

The same goes for the color changes subjects seem to undergo throughout the day. The inherent color, if you will, of sandstone formations do not change but we all know that photographing those formations late in the day, on a clear day, will yield the most spectacular results. Those afternoon colors are influenced by the prevailing light. Their amber tint results from the color bias of the light as it travels longer distances later in the day.

The color of any one thing does not exist in a vacuum. It is influenced by the color of subjects around it and how those subjects absorb and reflect light. It's as if we exist in a world of color mirrors and reflectors that bounce light from one subject to another. This sets up the world of color relationships and creates many of the color enhancing vibrations and associations we see around us.

In short, the way we see color is almost subjective--it is certainly conditional. Just as brightness is influenced by a host of factors, color itself is always changing and being affected by the energy around it.

The color mood of this image is affected greatly by atmospheric conditions. Photo and text copyright George Schaub 2010