AndyLim Creative is a photography studio and design consultancy.
Andy Lim is a wedding & portrait photographer who also builds websites running on content management systems and creates corporate identity systems, drawing from 20 years of professional experience in the art of visual communications (William Harald-Wong & Associates, Ken Ray Communications, Netcard and Embedded Wireless/Designtree).
Andy got started in photography after leaving design college in 1992, at first with travel and landscapes and later weddings & portraits and commercial assignments. Andy conducts photography classes for beginners to advanced, writes useful and practical digital photography tips, has given several public talks on the subject of photography and is the author of the best-selling e-book titled SimpleSLR Hands-On Photography Guide.
Follow Andy Lim on Facebook and Twitter!


Light Ratios for Landscapes

6th February

Landscape photography relies a lot on good lighting. Let me rephrase that… it relies on great lighting. Great lighting can be found if you know where to look, and when.

Understanding the balance of light, or light ratio, between foreground and background areas will put you on the road to better landscape photography.

Image A (taken from my Central Bali gallery)



The background usually means the sky, and the foreground is usually the subject of the photograph, eg. a hill, building or lake. For the sake of simplicity, let’s assume the subject is a hill. Pay attention to the bar graphs on the right side of the diagram below. They show the balance of light (or lighting ratio) between the foreground (hill) and background (sky) within a scene.

light-ratio-for-landscapes.jpg

It’s 6am, and you’ve chosen a nice spot where the sun will rise behind you and your camera. You set up your sturdy tripod, engage the mirror lock-up, and wait. The first rays of the sun slowly breaks out above the horizon and illuminates the peak first (or clouds, as seen in Image A), because that’s the highest point. The sunlight gradually illuminates the whole hill as the sun rises higher above the horizon.

By 8am the sun would have risen high enough to illuminate the hill quite completely, thereby giving you a 50:50 ratio of light between the hill and sky.

Imagine for a moment that you are shooting from the opposite direction, with the sun facing you, shining at you from behind the hill. The lighting ratio would drastically change to about 5:95 (hill:sky) because there would be very little light illuminating the hill, but a lot of light in the sky because the sun would be shining directly into your lens. This is evident in photographs of scenery with a white sky and a dark landscape. Or silhouette photos (Image B).

Now that we know which direction NOT to shoot from, we will try shooting with the sun to our left. This will create cross lighting which can be very attractive. Cross lighting is used in people photography in the form of off-camera flash. Now you know why your built-in flash rarely gives flattering portraits!

At 12 noon the sun will be directly above almost everything in your scene, giving it a 20:80 ratio. This is because the sky will almost always be brighter than your hill at this hour, especially in humid tropical climates like Malaysia. In dry climates you may still get a 50:50 ratio at this hour.

If storm clouds start gathering behind the hill, the dark clouds will create a 60:40 (hill:sky) ratio if there are openings in the cloud cover that allow the sun to illuminate the hill. This can yield beautiful landscape photography because the sunlit foreground can really stand out from the background of dark clouds.

Shooting at the right time and direction will make a dramatic difference to your landscape photography. Understanding the balance of light and what affects this balance will bring your photography to the next level.

Image B (taken from my Bangkok gallery)



see more




Learn to light portraits at the speed of light!

SimpleSLR Portrait Lighting + Portrait Recipes

The starter Portrait Lighting Guide covers foundation skills and technical details of portrait lighting. Portrait Recipes VOLUMES 1 and 2 are detailed lighting recipes for indoor portraits, complete with diagrams of lighting setups. Portrait Recipe VOLUME 3 are detailed lighting recipes for outdoor portraits, complete with diagrams of lighting setups. Combined, they will guide you from zero lighting knowledge all the way to experimenting with 24 different portrait lighting scenarios.

GET THEM NOW!



Comments are closed.

Comments are currently closed.

(none so far)
Share this on Twitter

Share this on Facebook

Follow Andy Lim on
Facebook and Twitter!