Photography Lesson 11 : Colour Temperature ( Kelvin )

Light is not always what it seems. Our eyes are very forgiving, so when we move from place to place everything seems normal in terms of colour. So, for example, when moving from a bright daylight environment to a room lit by a candle all that will appear to change, to the naked eye, is the light level. Yet record these two situations using colour film and the first will have a blue hue and the latter will come out with a heavy orange cast. This is because our brain can quickly adjust to the changes, making white appear white, whereas film is balanced for one particular colour and anything that deviates from this will produce a colour cast.

Photograph lighting technique

The colour variation is referred to as the colour temperature and is measured in degrees Kelvin. The scale ranges from the flame of a candle at around 1900K to deep blue sky at around 10,000k as illustrated by this diagram.

The light source is listed next to the degrees in Kelvin, both set against the colour of the light at each level.

You will notice that the colour next to the Average noon daylight (5500K) is white. This is the colour temperature that colour film is balanced to which means that when shooting using daylight film the photograph will record white objects as white and all the colours in an image will appear natural on the film. If you shoot in conditions that measure a higher temperature the photo will start to become bluer and shoot in conditions below the 5500 temperature and they will increase in orange.
The colours here don't just relate to daylight conditions artificial light also introduces a colour cast. With fluorescent lights this is often green and with tungsten lighting it will be yellow, while flash can be slightly blue.

If you own a camcorder or digital camera you may have read about the white balance control. Most digital cameras have an automatic colour balance. This will look at a scene and if it thinks the colour is too blue it compensates to make it natural by adding a red shift to the colours recorded. Likewise if it sees an orange scene it will increase the blue content. This

With film cameras you would have to use colour correction filters to compensate.


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Colour control filters are broadly split up into two categories: colour conversion and light balancing filters. The strong colour conversion filters are in the 80 and 85 series and are used for large colour changes while weaker lighting balance filters fit in the 81 and 82 series and are used for making small colour adjustments.

Film Kelvin Illumination Kelvin Filter Colour Exposure
Daylight 5500K Tungsten House lights 3200K 80A Dark Blue 1 1/3
Daylight 5500K

Tungsten Photofloods

3400K 80B Dark Blue 1
Daylight 5500K Tungsten Clear flash bulbs 3800K 80C Dark Blue 1
Daylight 5500K Daylight Shade under blue sky 7500K 81EF Straw 2/3
Daylight 5500K Daylight Shade partly cloudy sky 7000K 81D Straw 1/3
Daylight 5500K Daylight Shade under daylight 6500K 81C Straw 1/3
Daylight 5500K Daylight overcast 6000K 81A Straw 1/3
Tungsten A 3400K Daylight 5500K 85 Orange 1
Tungsten B 3200K Daylight 5500K 85B Orange 1
Tungsten 3800K Daylight 5500K 85C Orange 1
Tungsten B 3200K Tungsten lights 100W 2900K 82B Pale blue 1/2
Tungsten B 3200K Tungsten Photofloods 3400K 81A Straw 1/2
Tungsten A 3400K Tungsten lights 100W 2900K 82C Pale Blue 2/3
Tungsten A 3400K Tungsten Clear flash bulbs 3800K 81C Straw 2/3

The table above shows the film you are using in column 1 and the colour it's balanced to is in column 2. Column 3 is the light conditions you are shooting in and column 4 is the colour temperature of the light. Column 5 is the filter necessary to make the photo look natural and column 6 is its colour. The final exposure column shows the exposure increase that's necessary to adjust for the strength of the filter. This is automatically adjusted by the camera's through-the-lens metering.

Some typical color temperatures are:

1500 K Candlelight
2680 K 40 W incandescent lamp
3000 K 200 W incandescent lamp
3200 K Sunrise/sunset
3400 K Tungsten lamp
3400 K 1 hour from dusk/dawn
5000-4500 K Xenon lamp/light arc
5500 K Sunny daylight around noon
5500-5600 K Electronic photo flash
6500-7500 K Overcast sky
9000-12000 K Blue sky


The other type of light you will come across, usually in offices, factories and kitchens, is the fluorescent tube which gives off a green colour when daylight film is used. To correct this you need to use a magenta filter, known as an FL-D (Fluorescent daylight) or FL-W (Fluorescent white) depending on the tubes used. This photograph shows the typical characteristics. Photograph lighting technique

With a digital camera things are far less complicated. Just point and shoot with the camera set to auto. If there's a colour cast when you preview the photograph delete and reshoot using the relevant manual white balance settings. Some cameras also have a fully manual setting where you point the camera at something that should be white. The camera measures the colour reflected from this and adjusts to make the subject white which corrects the colour.

You also don't have to correct colour at all. Rules can be broken. Adding a blue filter when using daylight film can produce landscapes with added mood, especially when shot at dawn or dusk. While the 81 series are often used to warm up skin tones in many situations.

Some situations can be extremely tricky to correct. Take this interior. The window light is stronger than the interior tungsten light. So you get a mixture of colours to worry about. If a blue filter had been added to correct the yellow the stairs and floor would have gone blue. Professionals get round many shots like this by placing huge sheets of lighting gel over windows (yellow in this case) to balance the daylight with the interior light. They then use camera filters to correct the colour cast. I feel in this example leaving the natural colours to affect the film in their own way has worked and I wouldn't want it any other way.

Professionals also use colour meters to measure the light acurately. We have a guide to these here.

You can often correct a colour cast using your image editing program's channels or colour balance control, but that's another article!

Tip
The filters can even be used to unusual effect with flash by placing one colour over the lens and a correcting colour over a flash. Then when a photo is taken the flash illuminated subject will look natural while the background will take on a colour cast.

Photograph lighting technique


Photography Lesson 10 : Rear Sync Flash


SLOW SYNC FLASH / REAR SYNC FLASH

Slow-Sync-Flash-3-1

One camera function that can be a lot of fun to play with (and that can get you some interesting results) is slow sync flash.

Low Light Photography Options

When shooting with a subject in low light situations you generally have two options; either to shoot with a flash or to shoot with a slow shutter speed.

1. Flash - When shooting in low light with a flash in auto mode your camera will choose a relatively fast shutter speed. This means that your subject will be well lit and that if it is moving it will be frozen and as a result will be sharp. The problem with this is that it can also leave your subject lit up too brightly and can leave it’s background looking very dark as there is not enough time for the camera to collect any ambient light.

2. Slow Shutter Speed - The other option is to turn your flash off and shoot with a longer shutter speed in order to collect enough available light from the image to get a well exposed shot. This can be an effective technique if you’re shooting landscape or environmental shots where everything is nice and still - however if you’re shooting a moving subject it means you’ll get motion blur which could ruin your shot.

Both of the above options are legitimate technique but both have their weaknesses. Another options to consider is slow sync flash.


What is Slow Sync Flash?

Slow-Sync-Flash

Slow Sync Flash is a function found on many cameras that tells your camera to shoot with both a longer shutter speed as well as firing the flash. This means you get the best of both worlds above and can both get a relatively sharp shot of your main subject as well as get some ambient light from the background and foreground.

Some cameras allow you to access slow sync flash manually and set exposure length and flash strength but on many compact cameras there is a little less control given and it’s presented as an automatic shooting mode, often called ‘night mode’ or even ‘party mode’ where the camera selects the slower shutter speed and flash strength for you.

Rear and Front Curtain Sync

If your camera gives you some manual control when it comes to slow sync flash you might find yourself presented with two options called ‘rear curtain sync’ and ‘front curtain sync’.

These two modes sound a little technical but to put it most simply they are the way in which you choose when to fire your flash during the longer exposure.

Slow-Sync-Flash-2

Rear Curtain Sync - this tells your camera to fire the flash at the end of the exposure. ie when you press the shutter your lens opens up and starts collecting light and just before it closes the flash will fire to light up and freeze your main subject (see the card shot to the left for an example where you’ll see the card trail ending in a nice crisp shot of the card).

Front Curtain Sync - this tells your camera to fire the flash at the start of the exposure. ie when you press the shutter, the flash will fire immediately and the shutter will remain open afterwards capturing ambient light.

You might not think there’s much difference between these modes but when you’re photographing a moving subject it can have a real impact. You’ll find many action/sports photographers will use Rear Curtain Sync when shooting with a panning technique.

Tripod or Handheld?

Slow-Sync-Flash-1

When using either slow synch in either mode (or in the automatic ‘night mode’ you will want to consider whether or not to use a tripod. Traditionally when shooting with longer shutter speeds it is accepted that a tripod is essential in order to stop any camera movement. Even the steadiest of hands will not be able to stop a camera moving over even a 1 or 2 second exposure. So if you want to eliminate blur from your cameras movement definitely use a tripod (and consider a shutter release cable).

However in some circumstances hand holding your camera while using slow sync flash can lead to some wonderful effects. For example if you’re at a wedding or party and are out on the dance floor the results can be great at capturing the mood of a night with those you’re photographing largely frozen by the flash but the lights on the dance floor blurred from you moving your camera during the shot.

Of course hand held techniques won’t work with every situation so experiment with both methods at different shutter speeds and by using both rear and front curtain sync and find the best methods for your particular situation.

Tips 1 : How to check Shutter Count?

What is shutter count? Shutter Count is the quantities of shutter we've been pressing and it shows us how many shots we've taken with the camera.

How to check the shutter Count?

Here's some link for you to check :-


( FOR NIKON USER )


http://scent.org/cgi-bin/exif.cgi

http://regex.info/exif.cgi/


( FOR OLYMPUS E-500 USER )

  • Turn camera on
    Open card door.
    Press Play(green arrow on e1) and ok together

    Press up down left and right
    Press shutter button
    Press up
    press right.


    R = shutter releases (it shows the number of shutter releases the camera had so far)

( FOR CANON USER )

the shutter actuation count for the Canon EOS series is not included in any output file.

It can presumably be read from the camera somehow by a facility only had by authorized Canon service centers.


If you need any assistance , please feel free to drop some comment!

Photography Lesson 9 : Metering Control

Spot metering

With spot metering, the camera will only measure a very small area of the scene (between 1-5% of the viewfinder area). This will typically be the very centre of the scene, but some cameras allow the user to select a different off-center spot, or to recompose by moving the camera after metering. A few models (including the Olympus OM-4 and Canon T90) support a Multi-Spot mode which allows multiple spot meter readings to be taken of a scene that are averaged. Both of those cameras and others also support metering of highlight and shadow areas.

Spot metering is very accurate and is not influenced by other areas in the frame. It is commonly used to shoot very high contrast scenes. For example, if the subject's back is being hit by the rising sun and the face is a lot darker than the bright halo around the subject's back and hairline (the subject is "backlit"), spot metering allows the photographer to measure the light bouncing off the subject's face and expose properly for that, instead of the much brighter light around the hairline. The area around the back and hairline will then become over-exposed. Spot metering is a method upon which the zone system depends.


Center-weighted average metering

In this system, the meter concentrates between 60 to 80 percent of the sensitivity towards the central part of the viewfinder. The balance is then "feathered" out towards the edges. Some cameras will allow the user to adjust the weight/balance of the central portion to the peripheral one. One advantage of this method is that it is less influenced by small areas that vary greatly in brightness at the edges of the viewfinder; as many subjects are in the central part of the frame, consistent results can be obtained.


Average metering

In this metering mode the camera will use the light information coming from the entire scene and averages for the final exposure setting, giving no weighting to any particular portion of the metered area.


Partial metering

This mode meters a larger area than spot metering (around 10-15% of the entire frame), and is generally used when very bright or very dark areas on the edges of the frame would otherwise influence the metering unduly. Like spot metering, some cameras can use variable points to take readings from, (in general autofocus points), or have a fixed point in the centre of the viewfinder. Partial metering is found mostly on Canon cameras.


Multi-zone metering

Honeycomb Metering on a Dynax 5D. The AF point was set to the eye of the toy; the camera has been able to produce a good exposure, by not being fooled by the strong back lighting of the out of focus areas.



Honeycomb Metering ona Dynax 5D. The AF point was set to the eye of the toy; the camera has been able to produce a good exposure, by not being fooled by the strong back lighting of the out of focus areas.

This mode is also called matrix, evaluative, honeycomb, segment metering, or esp — (electro selective pattern) metering on some cameras. This metering mode was first introduced by the Nikon FA, where it was called Automatic Multi-Pattern metering. On a number of cameras this is the default/standard metering setting. Here the camera measures the light intensity in several points in the scene, and then combines the results to find the settings for the best exposure. How they are combined/calculated deviates from camera to camera. The actual number of zones used varies wildly, from several to over a thousand. However performance should not be concluded on the number of zones alone, or the layout. In general, the most advanced metering is found on single-lens reflex cameras.

Many manufacturers are less than open about the exact calculations used to determine the exposure. A number of factors are taken into consideration, including the following: Autofocus (AF) point, distance to subject, areas in focus or out of focus, colours/hues of the scene, and backlighting. Multi-zone tends to bias its exposure towards the autofocus point being used (whilst taking into account other areas of the frame too), thus ensuring that the point of interest has been exposed for properly. A database of many thousands of exposures is pre-stored in the camera, and the processor can use a selective pattern to determine what is being photographed.

Some cameras allow the user to link or unlink the autofocus and metering, and allow the option of locking exposure once AF confirmation is achieved, AEL, (auto-exposure lock). Using manual focus, and on many compacts/bridge cameras, the AF point is not used as part of the exposure calculation, in such instances it is common for the metering to default to a central point in the viewfinder, using a pattern based off of that area. There is considerable variation from different manufacturers as to how multi-zone metering is implemented, and even from the same maker in their model range, and how much "priority" is given to the AF point itself. Some "Scene" modes, such as sunset, sports, night exposures etc, also often affect the calculations of this metering pattern.

However, some photographers may be uncomfortable with multi-zone metering. This tends to stem from a lack of clarity about "how" the camera reacts in certain situations. The design concept behind multi-zone is to reduce the need to use exposure compensation.

Some users have problems in wide-angle shots with high contrast, due to the large area which can vary greatly in brightness. It is important to understand that even in this situation, the focus point can be critical to the overall exposure.





Photography Lesson 8 : How to compose your Photo?

Composing Your Picture


We all, at times, fall victim to selective seeing. We look at a scene and we pay close attention to the main subject, failing to really see what is behind or in front of it. If there are elements within the frame that do not add to the picture, the chances are great that they are detracting from it by diverting the viewers attention away from the main subject.



After few years in photography, when I see a subject that I think has possibilities, I automatically look at the background and the foreground. If they are not to my liking I will go out of my way to change my shooting position, either getting down lower, up higher, or to the side.

By getting the camera low and using the sky as a background the composition was kept simple and the picture has much more impact because there are no distractions.

For the picture of the street clown I politely asked him to move to a spot a few feet away that had a dark background and I used tight framing to further increase impact. Doing these simple things will improve your photographs immensely. I realize the photographer cannot always do these things but should try to do them whenever possible.




Reducing unused space in the photograph is another way to improve it. In the picture of the old saw and barn almost every pixel is taken up with the subject with very little to divert the viewers gaze away from what I intended them to see.

There are times though, that having space around your subject suits the picture very well, as in this photograph of a glass of tea and its shadow taken on my front porch. But the composition was kept very simple and balanced and no distractions were allowed.



Keeping your picture uncluttered and simple in its message is just one way, along with accurate focus, the rule of thirds, and correct exposure...of getting that extra WOW! in your shots.

Give "keep it simple" a try and I think you'll be amazed at how much improvement you'll see. More improvement than buying the latest camera or a new lens, more than just about any one thing you can do.

It really is very simple!

Photography Lesson 7 : Choose your own Focal Length

Creative use of focal length

Focal length indicates whether a lens is wide angle, telephoto or anywhere in between.

Generally speaking, using wide angle is ideal for shooting scenes such as land and city landscapes, group photos and room interiors. For portraits, a mid-range focal length is a good choice. Long telephoto lengths are ideal for photographing wildlife and distant subjects.

Focal length as a creative tool

Focal length selection can be used creatively when composing a shot, beyond simply getting more or less of a scene into the frame. The focal length you choose plays an important role in composition and the "feel" of an image.

Wide angle effectively exaggerates distance and shrinks distant subjects. Telephoto compresses distance without shrinking distant subjects.

For example, if you were to take two shots of a landscape with an object in the foreground such as tree, rock or flower, etc. and an object such as a mountain in the background using a wide angle and then a telephoto, they would look very different though framed in the LCD (or viewfinder) in a similar way.

Selecting a focal length to achieve the effect you want can be just as important as selecting the right aperture and shutter speed. Focal length can also be used to vary the emphasis on an object/subject.

Photography Lesson 6 : What is EV?

Exposure Value (EV)

A cameras metering system can be fooled when taking pictures where large areas of a scene are very bright, very dark or contain strong contrast. To help prevent a photo from under or over exposure, adjust Exposure Values (EV).

Exposure values, represented by numbers with a plus or minus in front of them, override settings automatically selected by a cameras exposure mode. When the main subject is darker than the background, increase exposure value. If the subject is much lighter than the background, decrease exposure value.

For overexposed subjects (too light), decrease EV.

For underexposed subjects (too dark), increase EV.

Suggested Exposure Value settings

  • Bright sunlight coming over the back of you when taking a photo: -0.3 or -0.7 EV compensation
  • For shots with strong light coming behind the subject (back lit): +0.7 or +1.0 EV
  • Scene with bright sun and/or backlighting: 0 to +2 EV
  • Snow, beach or highly reflected water: +2/3 to 2 EV
  • Close-up of white or yellow flower: +1/3 to +1-2/3 EV
  • Dimly lit night sky: 0 to +2 EV
  • Land or seascape taken just prior to dusk: -2/3 to 0 EV
  • Very dark or black objects: -1 1/3 to -2/3 EV

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