3. Basic principles of photography author David capel

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Basic principles of photography

David Capel
346B IST
Latin “Camera Obscura” = “Dark Room”

Light passing through a small hole produces an


inverted image on the opposite wall
Safely observing the solar eclipse
Alhazen (10th c.), Roger Bacon (13th c.)
Early use by artists for true-life sketching
Leonardo DaVinci, 15th c.
The portable “tent” camera obscura
Johannes Kepler (1604)
Further refinements, use by 18th century artists
Canaletto (18th c.)
First photo : Joseph Niépce (1825)
Light sensitive silver chloride plates
First production camera: Daguerreotype
Louis Daguerre (1840s)
Fast-forward 150 years:
the digital single lens reflex camera (DSLR)
Modern film technology
A substrate coated with light-sensitive
chemicals
Early photographers used silver halides
on a mirror-polished hard surface
Modern color film attaches dye
molecules to achieve sensitivity to
different wavelengths of light
May employ over 200 chemicals and 12
different wavelength bands!
CCD or CMOS sensor Color Filter Array

Digital cameras employ an electronic sensor consisting


of a large number of square cells or “pixels”
Photons hitting a cell create an electrical charge
Accumulated charge is proportional to amount of light
Color sensors employ a mosaic of Red,Green,Blue
dyed cells (Color Filter Array). Requires interpolation to
recover the color image.
Color Filter Demosaicking

interpolate combine
between color
samples channels
Pinhole cameras

focal length f

ys
light ra
sensor size s

pinhole (aperture)
film/sensor
image scene

The camera obscura is an example of a “pinhole camera”


Each point on the film is illuminated from a single direction
Simplest and earliest practical camera
A working pinhole camera!
Problem: Tiny aperture means little light hits film
Problem: Tiny aperture means little light hits film
So use a bigger pinhole?
Problem: Tiny aperture means little light hits film
So use a bigger pinhole?

Each point on film sees rays from multiple directions


Result: a blurry image!
Answer: add a lens!

Rays from a single point are focussed at a point


Result: a sharper image
Thin lens optics

focal length f

Parallel rays converge on a plane at focal length f


To focus on objects at “infinity”, place film at
distance f behind lens
f

Thin lens optics


D’ D

1 +1 =1
f
D’ D f

Points at distance D are focussed on a plane at D’


To focus on objects at distance D, place film
at distance D’ behind lens
When you turn the focus ring ...

... you move the focal plane

out of focus in focus


Field of view
For a given film or sensor size, the field of view
depends on the focal length f

image film scene


Field of view
If we double focal length, we halve the field of view

2f

image film
scene

Short focal length = wide field of view


Long focal length = narrow field of view
Field of view
For known film size s and focal length f ...

s a

Angular field of view


s
a = 2 arctan
2f
35 mm film (aka 135)
35mm is by far the most common film format
36 mm

24 mm
35 mm

Each recorded image is actually 36 x 24 mm


Examples: 35mm film, various focal lengths ...

28 mm focal length, 65.5° × 46.4° 50 mm focal length, 39.6° × 27.0°

70 mm focal length, 28.9° × 19.5° 210 mm focal length, 9.8° × 6.5°


Perspective convergence
Short focal length (wide FoV) images tend to
exhibit pronounced perspective effects

Wide FoV, near to subject: Narrow FoV, far from subject:


parallel lines converge parallel lines remain parallel
By increasing focal length and moving further from
subject, we can drastically change the composition

f = 24 mm

f = 50 mm

f = 135 mm
Move-in, zoom-out
Move-in, zoom-out
In practice, different lenses are required in order
to allow focussing at different focal lengths ...

Short focal lens Long focal lens Zoom lens


(wide FoV) (narrow FoV) (variable FoV)

These are complex, compound optical devices, but


the previous principles still apply most of the time
Exposure
Taking a good photo requires getting the right
amount of light to the sensor or film

Under-exposed Correct exposure Over-exposed

There are two main parameters we can control:


• Shutter speed
• Aperture area
Shutter speed
Controls how long film is exposed for
Measured in fractions of a second
e.g. 1/30, 1/60, 1/125, 1/250, 1/500
Fast shutter reduces motion blur BUT
admits less light
Slow shutter speed Fast shutter speed
(long exposure time) (short exposure time)
Aperture
Diameter of lens opening
Expressed as fraction of focal length
(called f-number)
e.g. f/2 on 50mm lens = 25 mm aperture
Big f-number means small aperture
Large aperture = more light, but shallow
“depth of field”
Depth of field
Range of distance that is acceptably “in focus”

Small aperture Large aperture


= large depth of field = shallow depth of field
Recall: lens can precisely focus points at only one
distance (the focal plane)

Sharpness decreases away from the focal plane


depth of field

focal plane

Points within the depth of field produce an


acceptably sharp image
Recall: lens can precisely focus points at only one
distance (the focal plane)

Sharpness decreases away from the focal plane


depth of field

focal plane

The rate of decrease depends on the aperture


Smaller aperture = larger depth of field
Pinhole camera = infinite depth of field!
Exposure: Reciprocity
Same exposure is obtained with shutter interval
twice as long and aperture area half as big

exposure = shutter speed


f-number 2

For a given exposure, we have a number of


possible choices of shutter and aperture:

Note the convenient step sizes!


Sensitivity (ISO scale)
Additional variable affecting exposure
ISO scale indicates chemical film sensitivity to light:
ISO 100 - low sensitivity, good for bright conditions,
static scenes, wide aperture, slow shutter
ISO 1600 - high sensitivity, good for low light,
dynamic scenes, small aperture, fast shutter
Digital camera equivalent is electronic gain level
Penalty for high sensitivity is noise or “graininess”
Example of film grain at high ISO numbers
Digital cameras exhibit similar noise at high gain levels
Camera modes

Modern DSLR cameras typically have several shooting modes:


Program mode (P) - Camera intelligently chooses shutter
speed and aperture to achieve correct exposure
Shutter priority (S) - User sets shutter speed, camera
chooses appropriate aperture
Aperture priority (A) - User sets aperture, camera chooses
appropriate shutter speed
Manual mode (M) - User sets both aperture and shutter
speed
Depth of field preview
When using “aperture priority” mode, the camera still
uses the widest aperture for the view-finder

Ensures a bright image


Shallow depth of field helps with
manual focussing
BUT - use the “aperture preview”
button to temporarily stop-down the
aperture and see the true effect

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