Before starting this
exercise I felt I had a good grasp of what a histogram is - a graph which
represents the tonal information in an image in levels of 0-255. A 'well
exposed' image has a full range of tones (no gaps either side of the histogram)
with the majority being in the middle. A histogram bunched to the left suggests
under exposure, and to the right over exposure. This however relies on the idea
that there is such a thing as 'correct exposure.' In 'Perfect Exposure', Michael Freeman observes "the best we
can say about correctness in exposure is that there are norms that are accepted
and expected by most people."1
In 'Photographers Eye' however he points
out that "shadows and highlights can contribute strongly to the mood and
atmosphere of a photograph."2 He gives examples of low and high key
images that seemingly break the rules of 'correct' exposure and yet are
powerful and atmospheric.
For the exercise I
had to take images of a low, average and high tonal contrast subject. My first
consideration was how I can do this to produce comparable results - I would
need to produce a set up that I could manipulate to demonstrate the different
conditions required. The exercise also calls for exposures to be taken at +/- 1
EV to compare.
As I was daydreaming
one day staring into the distance in my living room I was struck by the way the
daylight dropped off against the corner of my window. I was struck with the
idea that this could be the subject I was looking for - the corner under daylight
conditions I imagined would approximate average contrast and I could introduce
artificial light to create both higher and lower contrast.
1: Average contrast
Window
light and shadow
0
EV
+1
EV
-1
EV
2: Low Contrast
Light
shone on dark side of wall to balance tones
0
EV
+1 EV
-1 EV
3: High Contrast
Strong
light shone on dark side
0EV
+1EV
-1 EV
Observations:
The histograms in
each sequence behave in the way I expected with the high contrast set showing
peaks at either end of the histogram, the average contrast being closer
together and the low contrast being bunched in the centre. The low contrast
image shows little difference in either the + or - EV shots while the average
and high contrast pictures behave in a similar way with the +1 EV shot having
less contrast and the -1 EV sot showing more contrast.
The difference
between the high and average histograms is less than I expected and when I
compare the images the high contrast shots seem much more evidently so than is
suggested by the histogram. This is perhaps due to the intensity of the light
source used and also the fact that I relied on the camera's matrix metering
mode - perhaps I should have metered for the average shot and then set the
exposure manually after that. I also had the camera set to automatic white
balance and maybe should have also set this to a standard setting. The average
contrast appears much warmer than the high contrast image which could partly
account for how they are perceived differently.
Another explanation
perhaps is that my perception of how much contrast there was in each set up was
not accurate, that is my eyes and brain have compensated for reality and made
me believe I have created the conditions necessary for this exercise but the
reality was quite different. This indicates to me that the knowledge I think I
possess is flawed - if I had looked at the histogram on the preview screen of
my camera as I took these images I would have realised that I was not creating
the correct conditions for the exercise. My belief that I was producing the
correct conditions and my willingness to push ahead with the exercise have led
to the mistake - the main learning I will take from this project is to consider
more fully what is being asked in the brief and be less overly confident about
where my level of knowledge sits. I also now realise I have much more to learn
about the way my camera sees and records the world.
1 Perfect Exposure p.50, Michael Freeman
2 Photographers Eye p.110, Michael Freeman
No comments:
Post a Comment