Principles of Light
Principles of Light
Principles of Light
Principles
of
Light
by Darina Kopcok
principles of light
The following is a summary of the lighting principles in
LightShaping: Getting Started with Artificial Light for Food
Photography. Refer to these pages when crafting your light, or you
don’t understand why your light is behaving the way that it does.
Keeping these principles in mind while you shoot will allow you to
predict what your light will do and work with it accordingly.
Principles of Light 2
Copyright© 2020 by Darina Kopcok
• The effective size of the light source is the most important
factor in lighting because it determines what types of shadows
are produced.
• The bigger the light source, the broader and softer your light.
• The closer your light is to the subject, the softer the shadows,
while the further it is from the subject, the harder the shadows.
• The closer your subject is to the light source, the bigger the
shadows will be because your subject is blocking more of the
light. The opposite is true. The further away your light source,
the smaller the shadows will be because the subject is blocking
less of the light source.
• What determines how hard your light will be is the size of the
light source. The larger the light source, the softer the shadow
transitions will be. The smaller the light source, the more
abrupt the shadow transitions will be.
Principles of Light 3
Copyright© 2020 by Darina Kopcok
• If you move your light source away, it becomes smaller relative
to the subject. Bring it closer, it becomes bigger relative to the
subject.
Principles of Light 4
Copyright© 2020 by Darina Kopcok
• The shadows will always face in the opposite direction to your
light source. As you move your light source backwards and
forward, or from left to right, the shadows will move in the
opposite direction.
• High contrast occurs when light rays strike the subject from
nearly the same angle. Light striking the subject from many
different angles results in low contrast.
• The further a gobo is from your subject, the softer the shadows
will be. The closer it is to the subject, the more defined the
shadows will be.
Principles of Light 5
Copyright© 2020 by Darina Kopcok