Friday, 19 November 2010

Lighting

Ambient Light
The light already present in a scene, before any additional lighting is added.
More info: Ambient Light
Incident Light
Light seen directly from a light source (lamp, sun, etc).
Reflected Light
Light seen after having bounced off a surface.
Colour Temperature
A standard of measuring the characteristics of light, measured in kelvins.More Info: Colour Temperature Chart
Contrast Ratio
The difference in brightness between the brightest white and the darkest black within an image.
More Info: Contrast Ratio
Key Light
The main light on the subject, providing most of the illumination and contrast. More Info: 3 Point Lighting

The image below shows this:















Below shows Key light with less glare (created when the camera is too close to a light)
Fill Light
A light placed to the side of the subject to fill out shadows and balance the key light.More Info: 3 Point Lighting
Back Light
A light placed at the rear of a subject to light from behind.More Info: 3 Point Lighting
The image below shows both key light and back light used. Notice the 'halo' effect above the sholder:

Hard Light
Light directly from a source such as the sun, traveling undisturbed onto the subject being lit.
Soft Light
Light which appears to "wrap around" the subject to some degree. Produces less shadows or softer shadows.
Spot
 A controlled, narrowly-focused beam of light.
Flood
A broad beam of light, less directional and intense than a spot.
Tungsten
Light from an ordinary light bulb containing a thin coiled tungsten wire that becomes incandescent (emits light) when an electric current is passed along it. Tungsten colour temperature is around 2800K to 3400K. Also known as incandescent light.
Halogen
Type of lamp in which a tungsten filament is sealed in a clear capsule filled with a halogen gas.
Fresnel
A light which has a lens with raised circular ridges on its outer surface. The fresnel lens is used to focus the light beam.
Incandescent
Incandescent lamps produce heat by heating a wire filament until it glows. The glow is caused by the filament's resistance to the current and is called incandescence

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