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- Newsgroups: rec.photo
- Subject: Re: Query: Books on Photo composition
- Message-ID: <92365.205316LENBC@CUNYVM.BITNET>
- From: Spartacus/CUNY LC NY <LENBC@CUNYVM.BITNET>
- Date: Wednesday, 30 Dec 1992 20:53:16 EST
- References: <1992Dec18.190948.28674@research.nj.nec.com><1h7nf1INNhh1@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu> <1992Dec24.015454.6263@bony1.bony.com>
- Organization: City University of New York/ University Computer Center
- Lines: 99
-
- In article <1992Dec24.015454.6263@bony1.bony.com>, jake@bony1.bony.com (Jake
- Livni) says:
- >
- >In article <1h7nf1INNhh1@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu> ai918@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Jeff
- >Shafer) writes:
- >>
- >>In a previous article, arif@ccrl.nj.nec.com (Arif Merchant) says:
- >>
- >>>I would appreciate suggestions for *basic* books on photographic composition.
- >>>More advanced books are also of interest, but I'm just starting out.
- >
- >>I am interested in the same subject. I found _Image_ by Michael Freeman
- >>at the library.
- >
- >Highly recommended, though it's not quite a "beginners" book. On the
- >other hand, beginners books are so often silly that _Image_ might be a
- >good start, after all.
- >
- >Also see, _Light_ by the same author. Very instructive.
- >
- >--
- >Jake Livni jake@bony1.bony.com 10 years from now, George Bush
- Arif,
- Yup, Michael Freemen books are pretty good. I would also make
- another recommendation. If you need a book on lighting, checkout
- "Light Science & Magic - An Introduction to Photographic Lighting"
- by Fil Hunter & Paul Fuqua. ISBN 0-240-51796-2.
- TR590.H84 1990. Its an excellent book, probably one of the
- best I seen on lighting. It covers the principles of lighting from
- easy subjects to transparent glass and metal subjects. How to
- control reflection and glare using "the family of angles."
- Below I've included the preface of the book. According to the
- author, even professional photographers could benefit from
- this book as well as students of photography. With Freeman's
- "Image" and this book you will have a powerful combination. Hope
- this helps.
- -==--==--==--==--==--==--<*>--==--==--==--==--==--==--
-
- Photographers use an established set of logical methods to decide how
- to focus, expose, and develop a picture. We learn these methods early
- in our careers and use them from that time on. They never wear out.
-
- One of the reasons these methods need no replacement and little
- repair during a lifetime of use is their flexibility. One photographer may
- decide to use a small aperture and a low shutter speed, while another
- will treat the same scene in exactly the opposite manner. Neither is likely
- to have trouble understanding the reason for the other's decision. The
- same technical foundation supports both.
-
- Lighting enjoys no such commonly accepted method. It is perhaps
- the only technical area of photography in which the principles are not
- universally shared and understood by all photographers. For too many
- of us, lighting is more like concocting a witches' brew than like baking a
- cake. The result may be excellent--just as willow bark, combined with
- the right incantations and the proper phase of the moon, makes a
- wonderful headache remedy. But inadequate understanding of why the
- formula works can lead to a rigid unwillingness to experiment (for fear
- that next time the formula will not work) or to the accidental omission of
- an important ingredient (keeping the moon and the chant but leaving
- out the willow bark).
-
- The purpose of this book is to introduce a logical theory of photo-
- graphic lighting as fundamental as those we use for the other aspects
- of photography--theory that enables beginning photographers to pre-
- dict results *before* setting up lights; allows a professional photographer
- of one specialty to easily see how a photographer with a different type
- of expertise might have produced a given picture; and makes lighting
- more like baking a cake.
-
- Contrary to the impression you may get from briefly thumbing through
- this book, it is not about lighting a selection of classic subjects. It is
- simply about lighting.
-
- We hope this is not primarily a "how-to" book. For example, we show
- three basic ways of lighting a flat piece of metal. Only one of these
- three makes a good picture and that one by itself would be good enough for
- a "how-to." However, all three show *principles*, and those principles
- are likely to be useful even if you never light a piece of metal.
-
- We have also tried to keep this from being a book about any particular
- *style* of lighting. There was no way to avoid showing our own professional
- preferences by the selection of example images and by the emphases
- in the text. But the specific photographs, like the specific subjects, are
- only vehicles.
-
- Consider this a recipe book with an explanation of how each ingredient
- works. Alter the proportions, adjust the time, and add or delete elements
- to suit your own taste
-
- -==--==--==--==--==--==--<*>--==--==--==--==--==--==--
- -------
- . . . . . . . .
- ------------------------------+ All The Best in '93,. . . . . * . . . .
- Reply To: | . . . . /oπ . . . . .
- I18BC@CunyVM.Cuny.Edu | Edward Galarza, . . / o π . .
- I18BC@CunyVM.BitNet | Brooklyn College Of The . /o o π . .
- IRC: Spartacus | City University Of New York /o o o π . .
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