Common terms in Photography
- Photography – the word photography comes from two old Greek
words “phos” meaning light and “graph” meaning to draw. So
photograph literally means to draw with light, or a drawing made with
light. So photography is the art of drawing with light.
- Aperture – the opening in the lens through which light
passes to the film or digital sensor. Measured in f-stops.
- Bracketing – taking a series of images at different
exposures or EV.
- Bulb – the “B” setting on your camera where the shutter
remains opened as long as the button is pressed.
- DSLR – digital single lens reflex camera. Any digital
camera with interchangeable lenses where the image is viewed using a
mirror and prism, and the image is taken directly through that lens. What
you see in your viewfinder is what the lens sees.
- EV – Exposure Value is a number that represents the
various different combinations of aperture and shutter speed that can
create the same exposure effect.
- Exposure compensation – modifying the shutter speed or aperture from
the camera’s recommended exposure to create a certain effect (over or
under exposing) – usually used in the Shutter Priority or Aperture
Priority modes. Represented by a little +/- button on your camera. Your
camera reads light bouncing off your subject and is designed to expose for
medium grey. So when photographing a subject that is lighter or darker
than 18% grey, you can use this setting to tell the camera the proper
exposure (- or + respectfully)
- Exposure – the total amount of light reaching the digital
sensor. It is controlled by setting the aperture, shutter speed and ISO.
- F-stop – is a measure of the aperture opening in the
lens defined by dividing the focal length of the lens by the aperture
diameter. Sequence of f-stops are multiples of the square root of 2
(1.414…): 1, 1.4, 2, 2.8, 4, 5.6, 8, 11, 16, 22, etc. Even though these
numbers are rather cryptic, just remember that each step is double the
amount of light. Know that and it’s half the battle.
- ISO – stands for International Standards Organization
and represents the sensitivity of your camera’s digital sensor to light.
The lower the number (ISO 100), the less sensitive, the higher the number
(ISO 3200) the more sensitive. A higher ISO allows you to shoot in low
light conditions.
- Shutter speed – the amount of time the shutter is opened during
an exposure. The shutter speed controls motion. Use a fast speed (like
1/2000th of a second) to freeze motion, or a slow one (1/4 of a second or
longer) to blur moving objects. Learn more about shutter speed and how to control it in this article.
- Zoom lens – any lens that has variable focal lengths such
as a 24-70mm or 18-55mm. You zoom in or out by rotating the barrel of the
lens.
- Prime or fixed lens – any lens that does not zoom and is a set focal
length such as
a nifty 50mm lens.
- Remote trigger or digital cable
release – a device that allows
the camera to be fired without pressing the button or touching the camera.
Helps eliminate movement of the camera during long exposures.
- Macro lens – one that focuses very close to the subject
allowing for 1:1 reproduction size of the object or larger.
- “Normal” lens – generally a 50mm lens (on a full frame sensor
camera) is considered to be a “normal” lens because it is closest to what
the human eye sees. If you have a cropped sensor that will be closer
to 35mm.
- Telephoto lens – simply stated a telephoto lens is one that is
longer than a normal lens, eg., 70-300mm. The dictionary says: a lens
with a longer focal length than standard, giving a narrow field of view
and a magnified image. Super telephoto is usually 300mm and longer
lenses.
- Wide angle lens – again simple answer is a lens that shows a
wider field of view than a normal lens, which allows more to be fit into
the frame. Depending on the degree of wide angle there may also be edge
distortion (super wide angle), and if you get wide enough the image will
become a circle (fish-eye).
- Tilt shift lens – a lens that attempts to recreate the movements
available when using a view camera. Being able to tilt the front lens
element allows for realignment of the plane of focus. Shift allows
adjusting the placement of the subject within the frame without angling
the camera, thus keep parallel lines from converging. This is a popular
lens for architectural and landscape photographers, and is becoming more
widely used by portrait photographers for creating a unique stylized look.
- Camera resolution – expressed in megapixels is the dimensions your
camera’s sensor is capable of capturing. For example Canon’s new 6D has a
resolution of 5472 x 3648 which equals 19,961,856, which they’ve rounded
off to 20 megapixels. This is not the only factor in image quality,
but generally the large the number, the larger prints you can produce from
it without loss of quality.
- File format jpg versus
RAW – most DSLR’s have the ability
to shoot both formats. If you choose JPG, the camera will shoot a RAW
file, process it using the picture style you’ve selected in your menu,
save it as a JPG and discard the RAW version. If shot in RAW the resulting
file will be larger, carry more information (but the same pixel
resolution, see above) and require software to process. It gives you the
photographer more control over the final look of your image.
- Full frame vs cropped sensor – I get asked about this in my classes all the
time. A full frame sensor is roughly the size as the “old” 35mm frame of
film. Lenses are made to create a circle of light just large enough to
cover that area (covering power). In a cropped sensor camera the physical
size of the sensor is smaller so it only captures a portion of the entire
image the lens is projecting, effectively cropping part of the image out.
Common crop factors are 1.5 or 1.6x so if you put on a 50mm lens it is
more like a 75mm with a 1.5x crop factor.
- Camera modes – manual: full manual the user is setting the
ISO, shutter speed and aperture. Shutter priority (Tv on a Canon or S on a
Nikon) the user is selecting ISO and shutter speed, the camera is then
choosing the aperture to make a correct exposure. Aperture priority (Av for Canon users, A for Nikon) the
photographer selects the ISO and aperture and the camera picks the shutter
speed.
Lighting and Portrait Photography Terms
- Ambient light – also referred to as available light, is the
light that is occurring in the scene without adding any flash or light
modifiers. This could be daylight, or man made light such as tungsten or
fluorescent bulbs.
- Main light or key light: is the main light source for a photograph. It could
be the sun, a studio strobe, a flash, a reflector or something else. But
it is the source of light that is producing the pattern of light on the
subject with the most intensity.
- Fill light: is the light source that is secondary to the mail
light. It is used to “fill” in the shadows to a desired degree. It can be
produced by using a flash, a reflector, or a studio strobe.
- Lighting pattern: this is the way the light falls on the subjects face.
A particular pattern of light and shadow that is created.
- Lighting ratio: is a comparison between the intensity
(brightness) of the main light and the fill light and thus the difference
of the lit and shadow sides of the subject’s face.
- Incident light
meter: is a handheld device separate
from your camera that measures the amount of light falling on a subject
(as opposed to the reflective reading your camera takes which is light
bouncing off the subject back to the camera). The incident meter is not
fooled by the brightness range of the subject, where as in camera
reflective meters can be fooled.
- Speedlight (speedlite for Canon
users): small portable flash which
can attach to your camera’s hot shoe, or stand alone if activated
remotely.
- Reflector – a device that is used to reflect light,
generally back towards the subject. It can be a specialized factory made
reflector (I recommend getting a 5-in-1 if you get one) or as simple as a
piece of white cardboard.
- Light meter – a device that measures the amount of light in a
scene. Your DSLR has one built in, it uses reflective readings (light
bouncing off the subject coming back through the lens [TTL])
- Remote flash trigger – a device used to fire speedlights off camera. Pocket
Wizard is a popular brand.
- Subtractive lighting – as the name implies it is the taking away of
light to create a desired affect. Commonly it involves holding a reflector
or opaque panel over the subject’s head to block light from above and open
up deep eye shadows cause by overhead lighting. It can also mean holding a
black reflector opposite your main light to create a deeper shadow, in essence
reflecting black onto the subject instead of light.
- Hard light – harsh or undiffused light such as produced by bright
sunlight, a small speedlight, or an on-camera flash. It produces harsh
shadows with well defined edges (edge transfer), contrast, and texture (if
used at an angle to the subject). Emphasizes texture, lines and wrinkles,
and used to create a more dramatic type of portrait (character study).
- Soft light – diffused light such as from an overcast sky,
north facing window with no direct light, or a large studio softbox. This
type of light produces soft shadows with soft edges, lower contrast, and
less texture. Generally preferred by most wedding and portrait
photographers as it flatter the subject more.
- Edge transfer – where the light turns into the shadow, the edge
transfer is how quickly it goes from dark to light. If using harsh light
the edge transfer is very defined and sudden, almost a clear line. When
using soft lighting the edge transfer will be much more subtle, almost
imperceptible as it gradually changes from light to dark.
- Flash sync – simply put is the synchronization of the firing of an
electronic flash and the shutter speed. You need to know what shutter
speed your camera syncs at, otherwise if you shoot too fast a shutter
speed you may get a partially illuminated image. For most cameras that is
around 1/200th of a second, but it can be adjusted if you have a flash
that can be set for fast speeds.
Slang and Photography Jargon
Here’s a few other
terms that are a bit more advanced, and even completely made up jargon. Become
familiar with them so you can walk among the pros with confidence!
- Fast glass – refers to a lens with a very large maximum
aperture such as f1.8 or f1.2. “Fast” as in, it allows you to shoot at a
fast shutter speed due to the large aperture.
- Chimping – slang term meaning looking at the back of the
camera after every image. Spending too much time reviewing images on
camera, not enough time shooting.
- Bokeh – often mispronounced “bow-kay” or “bow-kuh” it
is correctly pronounced as “bo-ke” like the ke in kettle. It is used to
described the out of focus blurred bits in the background when “fast
glass” is used. Most often bokeh occurs where small light sources are in
the background, far in the distance.
- Depth of Field (DOF or DoF)- the distance between the nearest
and farthest objects in your scene that appear in focus. It is
controlled by many factors including the aperture, lens focal length,
distance to subject, film or digital sensor size, and camera format.
- Circles of confusion – closely related to the above bokeh, the
textbook definition is: the largest blur spot that is
indistinguishable from the point source that is being rendered. Objects
outside the depth of field of an image that the human eye can determine as
“out of focus”.
- Hyperfocal distance – often used by landscape photographers, it is
the focus distance providing the the maximum amount of depth of field.
Older prime lenses for film cameras usually had hyperfocal distance marks
to aid in finding this magic sweet spot. With today’s lenses it is
possible to calculate, just takes a bit more work and a hyperfocal
distance calculator.
- Gobo – something used to block unwanted or stray light
from falling onto the subject. Often a reflector (using the black side) can
serve a dual purpose and act as a gobo as well.
- Scrim – a translucent device used to diffuse and soften
the light, could be a reflector with a translucent panel or option. Also
used on movie sets scrims can be made extremely large, several feet
across, and clamped in place to create shade where these is direct sun
without it.
- Shutter lag – every camera has a slight delay from the time
you press the shutter button to the time it actually fires and opens. In
DSLR’s it is minimal and almost unnoticeable. In smaller point and shoot
cameras the delay is more pronounced such that it may actually cause a
missed shot of a fast moving subject.
- Chromatic aberration – in terms of lens optics it is the failure of
the lens to focus all colours (RGB) at the same point. It shows up as
colour fringes in areas of the image where dark meet light (think edge of
a building against the sky). It is more common in wide angle lenses, and
those of inferior optics (kit lenses). It is correctable, to some degree,
using Photoshop, Lightroom or software of your choice.
- Rear shutter curtain sync – by default most cameras are set to front curtain sync
which means that if the flash fires, it does so at the beginning of the
exposure time. By setting to rear shutter curtain sync it fires the flash
at the end of the exposure time. The difference in some cases me be
negligible, but in shooting a moving subject front sync will put any
motion blur in front of the subject, where as rear sync will place the
blur behind the subject. Neither is wrong, just preference.
- Camera shake – this is a blurry image which has resulted from
an insufficiently fast enough shutter speed, while hand holding the
camera. So how slow is too slow? Many teachers will say that 1/60th of a
second is the rule of thumb. I tend to recommend 1 over the focal lens of
your lens instead, as the longer the lens the more amplified any shake
will become.
- Lens flare – occurs when the light source hits the lens
directly, it can manifest as a hazy looking image or artifacts such as
circles of light. Some photographers actually desire lens flare and
position their camera to create it and use it as a compositional element.
- Kelvin – is the absolute measurement of colour
temperature. On your camera under the White Balance settings you make see
a “K” setting. This allows you to adjust the colour manually by degrees
kelvin. The lower numbers represent warmer colours like orange (tungsten
light) and the higher numbers are cooler (blues). Play with this scale to
create different affects.
- ND filter – stands for neutral density filter which is a
filter designed to go in front of the lens to block out some of the light
entering the camera. Often used by landscape photographers to be able to
get slow shutter speeds when photographing waterfalls and streams in full
daylight.
- Panning – the act of using a slow shutter speed, and
moving the camera in the same direction as a moving subject, during the
exposure to create a blurred background.
- Stopping down – the act of closing down the aperture to a
smaller opening. EI going from f5.6 to f8.
- TTL and ETTL – stands for Through The Lens, refers to the
metering system in regards to flash exposure. The flash emits light until
it is turned off by the camera sensor. ETTL is evaluative through the lens
metering and fires a “preflash” to evaluate and calculate for lost light
then compensates and fires the main flash. It happens so fast you do not
see two flashes.
- Photog – short for photographers, something pros often
call each other
- Glass – lens, as is “what glass do you own?”
- Golden hour – also called “magic hour” is the hour right
before sunset or right after sunrise. The sun is low on the horizon and it
is an optimal time for photography.
- Spray and pray – shoot as many images as possible and that hope
and pray you got something good. Not a philosophy I personally recommend.
- Blown out – having highlights that are off the chart on the
right side of the histogram, having no detail in the white areas.
Eg: “the bride’s dress is blown out”
- Clipped – similar to blown out being off the histogram,
but it can also apply to shadow or blacks areas of the image.
- Grip and grin – often used to describe a quick photoshoot at an
event or set up with two people shaking hands. Most photographers have had
to shoot these during their career.
- Selfie – a self portrait
- SOOC – straight out of camera, no post
processing or editing done
- Dust bunnies – dark spots that appear on the image, caused by
bits of dust on the digital sensor
- Pixel peeper – someone that spends too much time looking at images
at 100% size in Photoshop
- Nifty 50 – an old school prime 50mm lens, great to have
- ACR – Adobe Camera Raw
- Flash and drag – the method of using a slow shutter speed
combined to flash to capture more of the ambient light in proportion to
the flash
- Wide open – using your lens with the aperture at the widest
setting (f1.8 for example)
Thanks, very clear described..
ReplyDelete