Chapter 4 Storytelling with Light 123
The Essence of a Medium
Look around you right now. What is the source of the light
that allows you to read the words on this page? Are you
indoors? Outdoors or near an exterior light source? What
kinds of light are illuminating what you can see right now?
Can you see shadows?
Th e human eye is a very eff ective receptor and interpreter
of light. Th e eyes and brain adjust instinctively to make
what we see more palatable to our senses and more pleasant
to watch. People tend to take this for granted. However,
photographers must train themselves to be able to understand
what the camera, fi lm, or other preserving materials are
able to capture and reproduce.
As you have learned, photography was invented as a result
of experiments involving chemical reactions and the eff ects
of light on diff erent surfaces. A key issue to consider is the
component of traditional photography known as grain. Th e
surface impression of traditionally photographed pictures,
whether for still or moving images, includes particles that
register as tiny grains as they are exposed and developed.
As the silver-halide crystal particles react to light and
emerge they help to give a photograph or motion picture
a particular texture, quality, and luminescence. Th e grains
diff er in distribution, size, and density according to fi lm
type, the light that hits the fi lm, and how it is processed.
Typically, the grains are well distributed when there is
proper exposure to a particular type of fi lm. On the other
hand, the grains generally cluster together when there is too
little or too much light or when fi lms are reprinted through
many generations.
Digital Capture of Light
With digital cinematography, the recording medium does not involve chemical
particles embedded in a surface, so there are no physical grains reacting to
the light. Instead, the light is electronically converted into the binary code
known as bits. Computers function using strings of 0s and 1s , and digital
photography works in the same way.
As light passes through the lens and into the body of the camera, it strikes
a photographic sensor that contains a light-sensitive grid that registers light
in pixels. Each pixel contains a single measurement of the light’s brightness
and color at that exact spot, with the number of bits per pixel determining
the detail of that information. As a result, the quality of a digital image
depends on the number of pixels making up the frame and the number of
bits per pixel. Th e quantity of pixels is measured in width by height (such as
Figure 4-2 Charles and Ray Eames, who
headed one of the most creative and
infl uential design and arts studios of the
twentieth century, shooting one of their
playful and enlightening short fi lms, Toccata
for Toy Trains. (Courtesy Time & Life Pictures/
Getty Images)
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