Photo Lesson #2 - Soft Light

How can light be hard or soft? Would hard light hurt? Would soft light feel good. Well hard light won't make you bladk and blue, but it could sure bruise your ego after you see those ugly shadows and every skin imperfection. On the other hand, soft light will be like a nice warm Epsom salts bath to your ego, as it can make you, or your subject, look years younger.

Direct light from the sun is the best example of hard light. The light from a flash is hard light too. Of course, a flash can fill in shadows and make the hard light from the sun a little softer. But that isn't what I mean by soft light.

Soft light is diffuse. It could be directional. But it is more like a wall of light than a beam of light. That is why photographers put soft boxes over their lights in the studio. It turns a "point source" like the bulb into a "broad" source, which is more like an overcast sky.

Overcast skies are wonderful for photography, particularly people photography. (Now you too can laugh to yourself when you overhear a photographer talk about what a beautiful, sunny day it is fpr photography.) But sunny days can provide soft light too.

The sun bouncing off a building provides beautiful soft light. There is always shade to be found, too. And the best natural light can be found just after the sun has gone down as it has done on this golf course allowing me to make a beautiful natural light portrait of this bride and groom.

I placed them so their faces were bathed in the warm, sweet light and gave some simple directions and allowed them to do the rest.

 

Tech Details:

Equipment: Canon 5D, 70-20mm f2.8 IS USM lens

Exposure: ISO 800, f2.8, 1/125th of a second