Photographic Lighting Concepts'True' fill light in photographyOk, this is more of a technical subject, but I think that it’s worth the electrons as a topic of photography discussion. Pretty much every photographer understands lighting enough to know the concepts of photographic main light and fill light.
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Photographic Main LightThe Photographic main light gives the subject, whether it food or people, shape and form. Probably the biggest decision is lighting a subject is deciding where to optimally place the main light. On some subjects, an inch left or right, or up and down, can make or break the shot. Don’t get me wrong, on many shots, and inch or two in the light’s position, does not make much of a difference, but in some shots, especially food photography, an inch can make a huge difference in the quality of the photograph. We’ll talk more about that at another time. |
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The other, lesser thought of light source, is the fill light. When most photographers set up their lights, they will place the main light to one or another side of the subject and the fill light will usually be placed very near the camera, most likely on the opposite side of the camera as the main light. The idea being that the fill light is meant to "fill" in the shadow of the main light. The intensity of the fill light is increased or decreased to give the subject matter the desired "light ratio". Right? That’s right. The problem is that the fill light that is meant to ONLY fill the shadows, but in reality, it ends up casting it’s own shadow and there are usually large areas of the image that the fill light never reaches. Don’t believe me? Try shutting off you main light and take a picture using just your fill light. You will notice that the fill light doesn’t really fill, especially areas "under" the subject. If the subject has any type of overhang, like a plate lip, for example, that shadow area ends up being in shadow from both the main light and the fill light, making it totally "un lit". | ||||
Ideally, the fill light should surround the camera, theoretically, casting light from below, above, and from both sides of the camera "filling" in everything and not casting any shadows of its own. The ideal light would probably be a really big "ring light", but in reality, most ring lights are too small and end up casting their own shadows. In food photography, you can see the lack of fill light in a very textured subjects like a salad, for example. Each leaf of the salad acts as a little awning, preventing the main light and the fill light (any light from above the camera axis) from actually getting to the shadow areas. The result is very very dark shadows. What’s the solution? Glad you asked? | ||||
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© Michael Ray 2008 |
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