MIKE WILLIAMS on Portraiture Lighting
Part 2 – “The Eyes have it”

Following from my last article on Studio Lighting, I feel I should go
into more detail on the placement of light on the face.
It’s all to do with painting shadows on the face, and then adding
sparkle in the eyes. If you look at great portraits and wonder how they
created that effect, just look at the eyes and as long as no major
retouching is done you will see the set up of the lights reflected
there. The eyes act like mirrors. This is a great way to pick up tips on
lighting.

So after mastering the basic lighting set up, you will need to refine
your light angle and height. As in my last article, choose your lighting
style (e.g. narrow, broad light, etc.) Then move the light up and down
and watch the sitter's eyes closely. You will see the iris go from dull
dark to bright and the colour in their eyes become bright or more fully
saturated. This is the optimum lighting angle in terms of height. In any
photograph your eyes are always drawn to the area of highest contrast,
in a portrait this should be in the eyes, the white of the catch light
and the black of the pupil.

Tradition has it that only one catch light should be visible in the eye
and these traditionalists insist that any other catch light should be
removed. My advice is learn the rules, then, when you know better,
modify them to taste to taste.
Use the sitter's eyes to fine tune your lights and reflectors, but do
not stare at the sitter too hard, you might get strange looks and
reactions.
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Using reflectors to brighten the eyes
Use reflectors (White, Silver, and Gold) to add drama and sparkle into
the portrait. A reflector can be any material that reflects light from
state-of-the-art, purpose-made, framed reflectors, to a simple piece of
card or paper. In this article I used a piece of card with baking foil
crushed up and glued to it. Your should always check the colour of your
reflector to ensure balance with your main light or, as with a gold
reflector, that it has the effect that you desire.

For a general filling of shadows, a starting position for your reflector
should be on the opposite side to your main light and not past the
sitter.

For a more dramatic, glamourising effect, use the reflector from below
and place your light above to give a butterfly light effect. Ladies, in
particular, like this effect, as lines on the face are reduced and
sometimes removed hidden altogether.

Portrait lighting is an ongoing development of your skill as a
photographer, the topics I have covered here are equally relevant in
outdoor portraiture or weddings, it’s all about mastering the skill of
Painting with Light.
I do hope that this short feature has helped you to gain the basics in
studio lighting. For those of you who would like more details of the
Training Days I run, please phone me or email for an update of forth
coming events. A maximum of 10 delegates per session. I also run one-toone
sessions at my studio for you to see how a working studio operates or I
can quote for me to attend your studio.
Mike Williams Portrait Studio
01745 560633
Photo Quote: Many pictures turn out to be limp translations of the known world instead of vital objects which create an intrinsic world of their own. There is a vast difference between taking a picture and making a photograph. -Robert Heinecken