Assignment, Week 7: Lighting

In general, we usually regard flash as a bad thing when used in low-light situations - it causes pictures to be one-dimensional and flat (your light is coming from a single direction, and reflecting straight back to the camera); it causes things in the foreground to be really bright, and blacks out the background; it reflects off of shiny things, etc. This is the primary reason we've avoided flash in our discussion about low-light photography: oftentimes using natural lighting, even if it means dealing with camera shake or noise, will produce much better results.

Flash, however, does have one very useful application, and that is to control the light. Even if you have plenty of light from room lights or indoors, light that you can control and direct yourself can be made to look even better than the natural light avaiable to you.

This week's assignment is to take a subject (preferably a person to do portraits, but if not, some random object will do), and experiment with the lighting. First take a "regular" shot using just the natural lighting, and then if you want, a shot using the direct flash. After this, start getting creative. If you have an external flash, use it! If not, see if you can use a desk lamp or floor lamp for lighting, or barring that, play around with the orientation of your subject with respect to a light source (window?).

Assignment Summary: