Branding_print

Navigation


John Freeman's Guide to Colour

  • Monday, 17 November 2008
  • John Freeman
  • 0 Comments


Colour

Guide to colour

Just because we are surrounded by a world of colour it doesn't mean our photographs are going to express the scene as our eyes first saw it

Saturation
Good colour pictures can be found in situations where the camera is often put away. When we are about to take our shots, we always consider the quantity of light, but many of us never really consider the actual quality of the light available.

The quality of light changes throughout the day. The rising and setting sun on a clear day can have quite a warm red colour. When the sun is at its highest at midday, the light is bluer, or 'cooler’. This variation in the appearance of light is measured on a scale known as degrees Kelvin (°K). In photography it is called colour temperature. An average domestic tungsten bulb is about 3,000°K.

On most digital cameras we can select an icon from the camera’s white balance such as Sunny, Overcast, Tungsten; while on more sophisticated cameras we can choose from K settings. If your camera is continually set to AWB – auto white balance – certain scenes (such as sunsets) can get neutralised and the atmosphere will be lost.

Natural Frame (Right)
Colour can be used to make a natural frame, such as in this portrait of a young girl. The shot is made stronger by the contrast of the red outfit that she is wearing.


Changing The Light with a Polarising Filter

Fitting a polariser to the lens will enhance a blue sky and make the clouds stand out more. Increase your exposure by about one and a half stops, keep the sun at right angles to the camera and choose a time of day – usually mid-morning – when it is at about 45º. If you shoot towards the sun or if the sun is directly behind you, this filter will have no effect. Remember that with extreme wideangle lenses the coverage of the polariser is only partial – one side of the frame has a deep blue sky, while the other is unaffected.

Colour Balance

In most situations, I use an 18% grey card called a Qpcard. This card also has a white and a black area. When I have established my lighting I take a shot of my subject with this card facing the camera and shoot a frame. I then take my shots in the normal way, but without the card present. After I have downloaded the shots into the computer I can look at the one with the card in it in Photoshop. Choosing Image > Adjust > Curves then using the grey pipette I can neutralise the image on the grey area of the card. I can then save this as an ACV profile, to be applied to the other images. Of course, though the profile might be a ‘correct’ assessment, I might prefer it if the shot was warmer or cooler, particularly when it comes to skin tones.

Complementary Colour (Right)
By placing this slice of lemon on a blue plate I have created an interesting picture using two complementary colours. The use of a colour wheel can help you understand the relationship between complementary and contrasting colours.








Isolating Colour
(Left)
The material that these two people are draped in is enhanced by being shot against a neutral background. The spatial element between the two figures adds to the compositional quality of the picture. 

 



This article has more pages:

Share this article

email this to a friend

IPC Media Limited, owner of whatdigitalcamera.co.uk, will collect this information solely to process your request.

  • Bookmark
  • Print
  • Comment

Click on a link below to share this article with your favourite link sharing site


Rate this Article

Rate this content

4 stars

1 Votes

Current Rating


Reader comments

Add your comments

No comments have been added yet. Be the first by adding yours below...

Add your comments

Please note that we review all comments before they will appear on our site.

IPC Media Limited, owner of whatdigitalcamera.co.uk, will collect your personal information solely to process your request.

Back to top

What Digital Camera magazine

What's in this issue?

August Cover

What Digital Camera August 2009 Issue

What's In The August Issue? Lets take a look...

Subscribe

Save up to 30%

Subscribe

/







Latest Competitions

PaintShop Pro X2

WIN! A Corel software bundle

Name the camera to win a Corel software bundle

Enter now...


White Collapsible

WIN! A Lastolite collapsible background worth £165!

Answer these questions correctly from this...

Enter now...



More Competitions


Poll

Take part in our poll

What software do you use for editing?

Poll

  • Adobe Photoshop (31%)
  • Adobe Photoshop Elements (17%)
  • Corel Paint Shop Pro (10%)
  • GIMP (3%)
  • Adobe Lightroom (0%)
  • Apple Aperture (3%)
  • Google Picasa (21%)
  • Other (14%)

It may take 15 minutes for the system to update.

See all polls..