2020 Photo Challenge #18

May’s theme / technique: It’s all about the Light

If you want to see what this month’s assignments are in advance then please click here. All the assignments are available from the menu on the left under the 2020 Photo Challenge / Assignments.

The six visual keys to a great photograph are:

    • Patterns
    • Texture
    • Lines
    • Light
    • Depth of field
    • Space

Being Creative with light. Photography literally means writing with light which immediately tells you how important lighting is. And with light comes shadows. Another important feature. An appreciation of light is crucial to making great photographs.

The qualities of light that affect a photograph are:

    1. brightness of light
      this is fairly easy to understand; it is the intensity of light.
    2. lighting contrasts
      is the difference between highlights and shadows in a scene
    3. specular light
      or hard light can be explained by thinking how sunlight strikes an object on a bright and clear day. One side will be lit up, the other in dark shadow.
    4. diffused light
      on the other hand when it is an overcast day the sun lights the clouds and they become the source of light. Light wraps itself around the subject and reflects light into the shadows. The light is soft or diffused.
    5. direction of light
      creating depth in photographs relies on knowing the source of the light. Front light comes from behind the camera and strikes the front of the scene, usually producing a 2-dimensional image. Use bold colours or a strong colour contrast to replace the lack of shadows. Sidelight is most apparent when the sun is low and shadows are long separating foreground from the background and giving a 3-dimensional look. Backlight comes from behind the subject and can create depth and shape. If a subject is transparent then backlighting is a way to make them glow.
    6. colour of light
      Sometimes you can actually see the colour of light. The so-called ‘magic hours‘ before sunrise or after sunset can produce coloured air which can be pink or orange or golden. Everything seems to change colour. There is also the question of white balance (WB). A setting on your camera that makes things that are supposed to be white really look white. This setting can be changed either in the camera, or if you shoot in RAW, in processing.

As I have previously said, I am not an expert in the technicalities of photography. I tend to use auto settings most of the time. I have altered the white balance occasionally when it has been cloudy or when photographing snow, to prevent that blueness you often get. But by all means experiment to see what difference the presets in your camera make.

This week's assignment - Look for shadows. Strong light, casting well-defined shadows, can create interesting abstract images. Layering light and shadows brings a sense of depth to an image and can convey mystery.

Tip: Shadows are more dramatic when the sun is lower to the horizon

(Please click on an image to enlarge)

(1) Evening shadows on a row of terraced houses in Bridport, Dorset. I particularly like the elderly gentleman emerging from his house at that moment, into the shadows.

(2) I love looking for patterns created by shadows in strong sunlight.

(3) Occasionally it is not a plant itself that catches my eye, but the way the light falls on it casting shadows and patterns as in this delicate bamboo print.

(4) Or this shadow pattern in the Japanese Garden.

(5) And the shadow patterns of these common polypodium ferns growing on the limb of an ancient Magnolia tree appear to be growing from the base.

(6) The fingers of long shadows on the harbour beach in St Ives on a summer’s evening reach out for this tiny figure watching the tide come in.

(7) And finally old worn headstones in a churchyard among dappled sunlight and deep shadows. Again captured as the sun begins to set.

If you would like to join in with the 2020 photo challenge then please take a look at my 2020 Photo Challenge page. No complicated rules, just a camera required 🙂

    • Create your own post with some information about how you composed the shot.
    • Include a link to this page in your post so others can find it too
    • Add the tag #2020PhotoChallenge so everyone can find your entry easily in the WP Reader
    • Get your post(s) in by the end of the month, as the new theme comes out on the first Sunday in June.

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Heyjude

I have lived in the UK for most of my life, but when young I definitely had wanderlust and even ended up living in South Africa for several years which was a wonderful experience. I now look forward to a long and leisurely retirement doing what I like most - gardening, photography, walking and travelling.

76 thoughts on “2020 Photo Challenge #18”

  1. Beautiful light and shadows Jude, I really like 1 and 3, but oh so wish I lived at no 6 right now!!

      1. It is going to be a shock to residents when it returns to normality I suspect . . .in a year or two I wonder if we will look back and remember how lovely the quietness has been

        1. There aren’t that many residents, especially in the town itself, nearly all holiday lets. But folk living on the outskirts must be enjoying the quiet, although many shops will be suffering from the lack of tourists.

          In a year or two we might still be feeling the effects of the virus. It seems that once restrictions are reduced people are just going back to the same old lifestyle. You would hope that some changes will be made.

        2. oh hand’t realised nearly all holiday lets 😦 really not good for the local businesses

          I am so hoping things will change but like you not confident they will.

  2. Shadows! A favourite subject, Jude 🙂 🙂 Lord knows when I’ll join in. Bamboo print is my favourite. Not unlike the pattern on the white wall from my yesterday’s post, but bolder 🙂

      1. What makes you think I have any energy left by then? 🤣 Have spent the afternoon in the shade with bundles of postcards and I’ve hardly scraped the surface. This was meant to be a winter job 😎💕

      1. Have you got spot-metering on your camera? That always worked well for me on film, but I haven’t used it since going digital.

  3. Ah, marvellous…I do bang on about “it’s all about the light”, so I have no excuse for not finding an image or three…later

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