| Ambient Light | The light already present in a scene, before any additional lighting is added. | ||||
| Incident Light | Light seen directly from a light source (lamp, sun, etc). | ||||
| Reflected Light | Light seen after having bounced off a surface. | ||||
| Colour Temperature | A standard of measuring the characteristics of light, measured in kelvins. | ||||
| Contrast Ratio | The difference in brightness between the brightest white and the darkest black within an image. | ||||
| Key Light | The main light on the subject, providing most of the illumination and contrast. | ||||
| Fill Light | A light placed to the side of the subject to fill out shadows and balance the key light. | ||||
| Back Light | A light placed at the rear of a subject to light from behind. | ||||
| Hard Light |
Light directly from a source such as the sun, traveling undisturbed onto the subject being lit. | ||||
| Soft Light | Light which appears to "wrap around" the subject to some degree. Produces less shadows or softer shadows. | ||||
| Spot | A controlled, narrowly-focused beam of light. | ||||
| Flood | A broad beam of light, less directional and intense than a spot. | ||||
| Tungsten | Light from an ordinary light bulb containing a thin coiled tungsten wire that becomes incandescent (emits light) when an electric current is passed along it. Tungsten colour temperature is around 2800K to 3400K. Also known as incandescent light. | ||||
| Halogen | Type of lamp in which a tungsten filament is sealed in a clear capsule filled with a halogen gas. | ||||
| Fresnel | A light which has a lens with raised circular ridges on its outer surface. The fresnel lens is used to focus the light beam. | ||||
| Incandescent | Incandescent lamps produce heat by heating a wire filament until it
glows. The glow is caused by the filament's resistance to the current
and is called incandescence. |
Monday, 12 January 2026
Week 9 -Lighting Terminology
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