Title: Focus%20On
1Note to all HPS members viewing this
presentation This material was prepared as
visual aids to a lecture-type of program, and
may not always be very meaningful without the
accompanying narration. Questions may be
addressed to the author at stan_at_sprevost.net
. The color filters for flashes mentioned in
some slides were Rosco filters (or Roscolux) .
A sample swatchbook may be obtained through BH
Photo for one cent plus shipping. I have heard
that they will sell you up to five of the
swatchbooks. The samples are perfect for many
flash units, like the Canon 430EX or 550EX.
Just use a bit of tape to hold the filter over
the flash aperture.
2Focus On Exposure
- Stan PrevostHuntsville Photographic Society
3Image Quality
- The technical aspects of image quality include
- Exposure (including white balance)
- Sharpness (including focus, depth of field,
camera and subject motion, diffraction, and lens
quality) - Noise
- Dust
- Lens/camera Flare, Color fringing
- This presentation Focuses on. Exposure.
4Other Planned Programs in the Focus On Series
- Focus On.
- Sharpness
- Shutters
- Flash
- Perspective
- The Inner and Outer Workings of Digital
Photography
5What Is Exposure?
- We talk a lot about it, so we ought to be able
to rather precisely define it. - Generally speaking, it is a measure of the total
amount of light the film or digital imaging
sensor is exposed to. - More precisely, it is the product of the
intensity, or brightness, of the light that
reaches the film or sensor and the amount of time
the sensor is exposed to that light. - Relative to a given intensity/time combination,
if we double the intensity of the light reaching
the sensor, then we can half the amount of time,
and have the same effect on the sensor. Or, vice
versa, we can half the intensity, and double the
time. - In general, if we change the intensity by some
factor, then we should change the time by the
reciprocal of that factor to maintain the same
exposure.
6What Is Exposure? (contd)
- One may consider the Exposure Index, or ISO,
setting to be included in exposure, but that is
actually a film characteristic or signal
processing issue rather than how much light the
film or sensor is exposed to. - Nevertheless, the ISO setting provides a context
for the exposure, and affects the exposure
setting. In this presentation, we will
interleave discussions of ISO with strict
exposure issues, hopefully without confusion. - Likewise, we will include white balance in this
presentation, since it involves the relative
exposures of the primary colors.
7Examples of Exposure
f/8
f/5.6
f/4
1/125
1/60
1/30
8Overexposure Example Loss of Highlight Detail
JPEG As Shot
JPEG, Attempted Tonal Adjustment and White Balance
Raw, Tonal Adjustment and White Balance
2 Stops
707
703
9How Do We Control Exposure?
- Camera Controls
- Lens aperture (partially block the light path)
- Shutter speed (control the time that light is
allowed to reach the film or sensor) - External Lens Attachments
- Neutral Density Filters
- Special Effects Filters (graded filters,
polarizers)
10How Do We Determine What Exposure To Set?
- We have to measure the light
- Sometimes, light measurement can be bypassed by
application of a rule of thumb, such as Sunny
16, at the expense of accuracy. - We have to know the film ISO rating, or decide
what ISO to set on the digital camera. - We have to evaluate the scene to determine which
scene brightness values should be placed at which
image brightness values. - Or, just set the camera on full Automatic and
shoot away! - How do we measure the light?
- Light metering system built into the camera
- External hand-held light meter
- Reflected
- Spot
- Averaging
- Incident
- Take an exposure, chimp the shot, evaluate the
histogram, adjust the exposure, expose again.
11Light Meter Characteristics
- All photographic exposure meters are calibrated
to a middle gray, approx. 18 reflectance. - Consider metering an 18 gray card
- Reflected light meters, pointed directly at the
card, measure the light reflected from the card
and determine the exposure required to render the
card as a middle gray in the image. - Incident light meters, usually placed at the card
and pointed at the camera, measure the light
falling on the card and determine the exposure
required to render the card as a middle gray in
the image. - Note that in either case, changing the intensity
of the light source illuminating the card will
still result in a middle gray image of the card. - Note that substituting a 90 white card for the
gray card will still result in a middle gray
image when using a reflected light meter, but
using an incident light meter will result in a
white card in the image.
12Reflected Light Meters Want To Make Everything
Mid-Gray
White Card Gray Card
Gray Card White Card
f/5.6 1/50
f/5.6 1/250
Metered Spot
Reflectance ratio is 90/18 5. Exposure ratio
5.
13Built-In Metering Systems
- All built-in metering systems are reflected-light
meters. - Built-in light meters usually allow a selection
of uniform full-frame averaging, center-weighted
full-frame averaging, spot metering, or
evaluative metering. - We all know that focus and exposure are separate
issues, but the camera manufacturers have decided
to help us out by linking the two systems. They
provide multiple focus points across the frame,
and link the exposure determination to the focus
point in use. This can be disabled so that only
the center point is used for exposure. - Perform experiments to learn how your camera
metering system works. - HOMEWORK Cut out a paper white circle, paste it
onto a black paper background. Or use a small
flashlight against a dark backgroud. Manually
focus your camera on the white circle or
flashlight, move the camera around to move the
white circle around in the viewfinder. See how
the exposure indicator responds, using each
metering mode.
14Hand-Held Meters
- Can be incident or reflected, or both.
- Can be continuous light or flash, or both.
- Very useful when incident light readings are
desired, or when the camera is fixed on a tripod
and you need to get up close to the subject and
meter different portions of it.
15General Background
- In photography, we often speak of light intensity
using the EV system, which is referenced so that
EV0 corresponds to f/1 at 1 sec at ISO 100. Each
unit of EV is a doubling or halving of light.
(Also see the APEX system) - We also use the term stop or f-stop to refer
to a factor of two change in light. Even though
the term stop originally applied only to
lenses, we now use it as applying to anything
that changes the light by a factor of two. A
change of one EV is a change of one stop. - This use of factors of two is based on tradition
only there is nothing absolute about it. The
system could just as well have based on factors
of three, or ten, or whatever. But two it is. - A full stop is a factor of two increase or
decrease in light. A half stop is a 41 change.
A third stop is a 26 change. - The high and low limits of exposure for a given
ISO are usually based on the ability to discern
detail in the highlights and shadows. Detail is
represented by small fluctuations in light value.
For purposes of this presentation, I have chosen
1/3 stop as the threshold of perception. To keep
it simple, color changes were not used. Color
variations can aid in perception of detail.
16Digital Camera Architecture Refresher
17Photosensor Saturates Before ADC
Voltage Output
Light Input
Photosensor
A/D Converter
18Other Color Schemes
- The previous illustration showed a Bayer sensor.
- There are a couple more color sensing schemes
- Sigma uses the Foveon sensor, which uses
vertically layered color filters, somewhat
analogous to film, and which makes each photosite
a full pixel. - Sony has introduced a slightly different color
filter array, which instead of RGB (more
accurately, RGGB), uses Red/Green/Blue/Emerald
(RGBE). Supposedly this is for more accurate
color rendition.
19The General Problem of Exposure
- The scene to be photographed may have a
brightness range of any value. It may be two
stops, for a dreamy, misty scene, or 10 or more
stops for a sunlit waterfall in front of a dark
rock overhang. - The final viewing media, whether it be a
photographic print, a press-printed image, a
computer screen or a projected image, will have a
limited capability of representing brightness
range, maybe more, maybe less than the original
scene. - The exposure problem is twofold
- To capture the full range, or the desired range,
of scene details on the film or digital media so
that they can be manipulated for the desired
presentation, and - To fit the scene brightness range onto the
viewing media in a visually pleasing manner. - Between the scene and the viewing media is the
camera, the film, or the digital equipment and
software.
20Media Capability
This image was created in Photoshop, half max
white and half max black.
A glossy print was made at Costco. Using the
built-in exposure meter in my camera, I measure a
reflectance range of 4.6 stops. On the projection
screen used here, I measure a range of ???.
21Sensor Characteristics
- Now that we have examined the usable brightness
range of our output media, we ought to look at
how our camera sensor can handle the scene
brightness range. This will be restricted to
digital sensors. - The next issue will be how to fit the scene
brightness range onto the output media range,
which is a central issue in exposure. - Experiment Use a gray card and a white card in
the same photos. Use a wide range of exposures.
In Adobe Camera Raw, measure the values of the
gray and white cards. Determine the sensor
range.
22Sensor (?) Experiment Results
Top Left Curve ACR Defaults
Bottom Left ACR Sliders To Zero
Bottom Right Same as Bottom Left, Log-Log
23Sensor Experiment Results What Did I Learn?
- Mainly that I have a lot more to learn!
- I naively expected the values measured in ACR to
be linear with the relative exposure. Instead, I
learned that the values are determined by the
settings of the ACR or Photoshop sliders. - Setting the ACR sliders to zero gets rid of any
tone curve, other than a gamma curve applied by
ACR that cannot be eliminated that I know of. - The bottom curves on the previous slide are close
to a square root function. Somewhat less
naively, I would expect a gamma of 2.2, rather
than 2. - Cannot explain two stops rather than 2.32 stops
between gray and white cards. - The large lesson is that you cannot expect to
know anything about light ratios by looking at
tone values in Photoshop. If you change a tone
value by a factor of two, that will not
correspond to a stop change in light.
24White Balance
Sunlight Daylight WB
Open Shade Daylight WB
- As these two photos illustrate, the color of
light varies with the light source. - Highly-adaptable human vision doesnt notice any
difference, but the camera faithfully records the
difference.
NOTE Histograms were obtained from a selection
on the card to eliminate the grass.
25White Balance (contd)
- In my experience, electronic flash is close
enough in color to bright sunlight or open shade
so as to not cause an objectionable mixed light
situation. More critical viewers or applications
may require filtration of the flash for a better
match. - How can you color match the flash and ambient
without a color temperature meter, especially one
that works with flash? - First, using a gray card or other reference, set
an accurate white balance camera setting for the
ambient light (using presets or custom WB). - Next, apply filtration to the flash and make test
exposures using the gray card using different
filters until the color histogram shows alignment
of the colors. Try to shade the gray card from
the ambient light so that the flash dominates.
26White Balance (contd)
- Automatic White Balance acts in a manner
determined by the various camera manufacturers,
and they do not tell us the details. All we know
is that the camera adapts its color balance
setting in response to the scene. - It is often said that AWB works in an analogous
fashion to full-frame averaging for exposure,
which would mean that it averages the entire
scene and applies color correction to make it
come out neutral gray. To test that hypothesis,
I performed the following experiment
Daylight WB
Auto WB
27White Balance (contd)
- My camera manual says that the camera makes an
adjustment in software to make white areas look
white. So my suspicion is that it doesnt
respond to large areas of strong color, but
searches for bright areas that it thinks should
be white and then adjusts that area for
neutrality. Tests are inconclusive. - The following photos were taken using
center-weighted exposure averaging, and both
Daylight WB and Automatic WB settings.
28White Balance (contd)
Sunlight Gray Card Daylight WB
Sunlight White Card Daylight WB
29White Balance (contd)
- For general snapshots, AWB wont hurt much but
probably wont help much. Using the camera
presets for sunlight, open shade, cloudy,
tungsten, fluorescent, etc., is not much more
trouble and can give more consistent results
without being influenced by the scene coloration.
- In some situations, such as photographing
wildflowers under a forest canopy using ambient
lighting, using custom white balance, either in
camera or in post processing, can give superior
results. Either method requires photographing a
gray or white reference. - Using batch WB correction of photos taken in the
same lighting condition is useful and efficient.
But.. only if a fixed manual WB setting is used
for all the photos. This will not work with
AWB. - Camera settings for white balance affect JPEGs
only, they do not change the raw data. - My conclusion is that AWB is a mystery and
doesnt seem to do anything useful.
30Mixed Lighting
Histograms derived from gray card only.
31Mixed Lighting (contd)
828
Daylight WB
Histograms derived from gray card only.
32Mixed Lighting (contd)
For reference, the last image is repeated.
Background tungsten, foreground flash. Tungsten
WB.
Now in an attempt to correct the mixed lighting
situation, we introduce a filter over the flash
to warm its color
NOTE Histograms from gray card only
33Mixed Lighting Homework
- Test your flash against your camera white balance
settings. See if it better matches flash or
daylight setting. - Consider getting filters for your flash to match
tungsten and fluorescent lighting. - If you decide to try using filters to match your
flash to the ambient light, consider the
following cases - Tungsten
- Fluorescent (unfortunately, there are many
colors) - Open Shade
- Direct Sunlight
- Late afternoon (Golden Hour) lighting
34Histogram
- Perhaps the most important exposure tool we have
today, in digital photography, is the histogram.
The histogram is a plot showing how the
brightness values are distributed in the data
captured by the sensor. - The horizontal axis represents light value, with
black on the left and white on the right. Each
point on the horizontal axis represents a value
of light, described by a number from zero (black)
to 255 (white). At each of those points, a
vertical line is drawn, having a height
proportional to the number of pixels having that
light value. - Some examples
35Histogram (contd)
- Question What Should The Histogram Look Like
For Proper Exposure? - (a) Most tones concentrated toward the left
- (b) Most tones concentrated around the center
- (c) Most tones concentrated toward the right
- (d) None of the above
- Answer (d) ! It depends entirely on the scene
and how it is visualized to be rendered, and on
the workflow of the photographer. - There are two fundamental schools of exposure in
digital photography - Get it Right In The Camera
- Expose To The Right (ETTR)
36Expose To The Right (ETTR)
- This technique advocates using as much exposure
as possible without blocking up the highlights
(clipping, saturation). - It assumes postprocessing.
- ETTR was popularized by an article on the
Luminous Landscape website. The article says
that ETTR brings two benefits improved
signal-to-noise ratio, and reduced posterization.
But it doesnt say how the SNR improvement
occurs, and implies that it is due to the
increase in encoding levels available for
stronger light signals. - The truth of the matter lies more in two things
one is the discrete nature of light, and the
other is the electronic circuit noise that
competes with low-level signals. - The number of photons arriving at the photodiode
per unit time is random and is described
statistically by a Poisson Distribution. The
number of photons collected can be described by
the average number and by how much that number
varies, called the standard deviation. - In a Poisson process, the standard deviation is
equal to the square root of the mean. - The end result is that the signal to noise ratio
improves as the light intensity increases due
simply to the properties of light itself. The
more light, the less the relative influence of
the random component of the light.
37ETTR (contd)
- Always try to get as much light as you can into
the sensor without overfilling it. Use the
lowest ISO setting you can. - You may have constraints in how large an aperture
you can use or how slow a shutter speed you can
use. After reaching those limits, crank up the
ISO to reduce noise in the darker areas (due to
some subtle technical factors).
38More Light Less Noise, So ETTR
Canon A650 IS, f/3.5, ISO 800, Daylight WB Both
images normalized in postprocessing for same gray
card value.
0.4 sec
39Types of Histograms
- Different cameras and different software packages
will display different kinds of histograms. - Brightness
- Luminance L .59G .30R .11B
- RGB
- Separate R, G, and B
- Single-channel clipping cannot necessarily be
detected in luminance histograms. - The Highlight Alert or Flasher or Blinker may
operate on single-channel clipping. - ETTR requires an understanding of the histogram
and clipping alerts in the camera to be used - HOMEWORK Experiment to learn how much to adjust
the exposure compensation by, based on the
vertical grid lines on the camera histogram.
40Raw vs JPEG
- Most digicams will only output JPEG files
- Some higher-end PS will output raw and maybe
TIFF - Probably all DSLRs of all brands will output raw
files - Usually you can select to get JPEG only, Raw
only, or Raw JPEG - The question is, if raw is available from your
camera, should you use it? - But even before that question, a more fundamental
question is, What is Raw? For that matter,
What is JPEG?
41What is Raw?
- The Raw data format contains unprocessed image
sensor data, the A/D converter outputs for each
of the R, G, and B sensels. It has not been
demosoaiced, gamma corrected, or had any other
processing. - The raw data file also contains metadata that
records all the camera settings used in creating
the file, including date and time, as well as
other sensor data such as black reference, maybe
a blackframe, and a small JPEG image for viewing. - All image processing is performed in external
software. - Lossless compression algorithms are used to
reduce file size. Nikon employs a compression
technique that is theoretically lossy but is
practically transparent.
42What is JPEG?
- JPEG (or .jpg) is the most commonly used image
file format. - It uses a lossy compression algorithm with
variable parameters to achieve a much smaller
file size than the uncompressed original, or even
relative to the same image compressed with
lossless techniques. - Lossy vs lossless data compression
- The lossy part of JPEG encoding is based on 8X8
pixel blocks (nonoverlapping). - JPEG uses 24-bit color, or 8 bits per color.
- Recommendation If you save your original image
files as .jpg, it is usually a good practice to
save any processed derivative files with a
different file name, so that the original file
remains unchanged. Lost information cannot be
recovered.
43JPEG Qualities
- Advantages of JPEG
- Instantly available, can even be printed directly
from the camera or shown on a TV - Does not require postprocessing
- Universally accepted
- Smaller file size
- Flexible as to quality and file size
- Disadvantages of JPEG
- Repetitive opening and saving of the file can
result in artifacts - Editing options somewhat limited
- 8-bit color word size limits editing
- Headroom for highlight recovery lost
- Camera-produced JPEGs use in-camera algorithms
optimized for speed. JPEG production using
PC-based development of raw data can use more
sophisticated and flexible software. - NOTE If you dont want to use raw and dont
mind some postprocessing, you might can reduce
the contrast and color saturation settings in
your camera to allow more scene brightness range
to be packed into the JPEG 8-bit range, then you
will have a little more flexibility in your
postprocessing.
44ISO
- High-end Canon DSLRs (5D, 1D) use hardware ISO
gains at all settings except 50 and 3200. - Lower models use hardware gains at 100, 200, 400,
800, 1600, but software multiplication or
division at all in-between settings. - Recommendation For all but the high-end DSLRs,
use only the primary ISO settings. Use the
lowest ISO setting consistent with usable shutter
speed and f-number settings. Use exposure
compensation (change the light) when necessary. - Note Use of the Auto exposure setting will
allow the camera to - automatically choose any ISO setting it
wishes. Avoid this when - possible.
45Thats All, Folks!
Discussion Welcome stan_at_sprevost.net