Eye of the beholder

Brightness is in the eye of the beholder.

For a creative photographer, it is meaningless to say “the sky is this bright” or “the sky is this dark”. Instead, on a given day with a given sky, you might say: “I’ll make the sky bright”:

Or “I’ll give it some colour”:

Or “I’ll turn it dark so I get dramatic saturation”:

You do this by exposing it more, or less. A blue sky can be anything from white if I overexpose it, to almost dark whrn I underexpose it.

That’s how I get pictures like the desert pictures the other day, or this, of my sister-in-law the other day too, on a bright Arizona afternoon:

Of course when I underexpose like that, she would be dark too, except I am using my flash to fill in the foreground.

0 thoughts on “Eye of the beholder

  1. So, looking at SiL’s nose, there is visible shadow, so there must be a light source off to the left side of the frame. Ground shadows indicate the sun is off to the right side of the frame. Am I right in thinking you used an off camera flash? And great photo btw.

  2. Not a lot of shadow off the nose… look at the glasses- if the flash had been off camera, they shouldn’t look so.. spot-on reflecting back at the camera. All it takes is the camera being slightly to the left.

    Maybe?

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