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David Ward
"Many see the subject as the most important element of a photograph, and the light falling on it as a secondary concern. This couldn’t be further from the truth. Learning how to match subject to lighting, and vice versa, is the most critical part of landscape photography. We all need to learn how to work the light."
Top five tips for working the light
1. Think about the colour of light – is it warm from early or late sun or cold shade light from a blue sky? Do you need to filter it or leave it as it is?
2. Think about the size of the light source – is it a point source (the sun for instance) producing strong directional light? Or is the whole sky the light source (cloudy, or a clear sky when the subject is in shade) giving soft almost directionless light?
3. Think about the height of the light source – how does it affect the shadows on the subject?
4. Think about the direction of the light – is it lighting the best side of your subject?
5. Think about how all these things together will affect the way your subject looks!
Charlie Waite
"Light must be studied though its behaviour can never be predicted with
total precision. For example, the beautiful warm evening light that bathes
the landscape in a mantle of amber is usually thought of as
characteristically Mediterranean; but the same light can be found in
northern Europe. Despite many claims to the contrary, every region in the
world will have its share of ravishing light."
Top five tips for working the light
1. Without a camera, look at the way in which light interacts with different
surfaces. Perhaps set up a simple table-top still life where it is possible
to move the light source from one position to another.
2. Become obsessive about light and take every opportunity to observe its
behaviour in conjunction with every conceivable surface.
3. Set aside a special time for your photography and make images of a
landscape setting in different lighting situations. Study and analyse your
results. Define as best you can why the lighting does not seem to have been
successful.
4. Make repeated visits to a favoured location and work tenaciously to produce
an image that matches your previsualized ideal.
5. Tolerate as few compromises as possible and, when they are unavoidable, be
aware of what they were, why they were allowed and where they have sullied
the image.
Joe Cornish
"While landscape provides the subject matter, it is light we record and
interpret. Light defines space, reveals texture, sculpts form, controls
colour, and above all ignites an emotional response. The sky is our studio,
our theatre, and we must learn to act upon its gifts of light."
Top five tips for working the light
1. Buy a spot meter and learn to use it properly.
2. Realise that the cycle of the seasons has an enormous effect on the
position of sunrise and sunset, and learn to anticipate the effect of the
sun’s path through the course of the seasons.
3. Try and respond emotionally to light. But be scientific enough to do your
response justice by getting the exposure right!
4. Use a tripod. Most light interesting enough for a landscape photo can’t be
hand-held anyway, and most photographers compose their pictures better with
a tripod than without.
5. Get out more. But take fewer pictures.
Extracts from Working the Light - Landscape Masterclass with Charlie
Waite, Joe Cornish, David Ward and Eddie Ephraums (Light and Land, £20) www.workingthelight.com
Click here to enter the Landscape Photographer of the Year competition and to see the full terms, conditions and details of entry fees.
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