Exploring the Principles of Lighting This report describes the basic and secondary principles of lighting, the key, the purpose of filling, the lighting of black and background, and the purpose of high and low trajectories. I will also include a detailed chart of the two scenes in the film I made. The purpose of more modern lighting is that it creates reality.
Let's first look at the light. During the Renaissance it was just a tool that the artist used to define the theme. Although their work certainly explores the contrast of light and dark, those themes clearly define clear boundaries clearly. Light illuminates details and shapes of artistic themes in a controlled way. Clearness is the key. Meanwhile, in the Baroque era, light itself was the theme. Baroque artists use a technique called shading that hides a strong contrast of bright contrast and dark contrast, that is, masks the subject and creates a sense of mystery and drama. In Baroque art, the boundaries are blurred, details and shapes go into the shadow. The images were combined and ambiguous and the viewer felt it necessary to locate where the object left off and where to start the next object. Welcome ambiguity
"What is light?" There is no single answer to this question that satisfies the light experience, can explore and exploit many backgrounds. Physicists are interested in the physical nature of light and the aesthetic appreciation of artists for the visual world. Through sight, light is the main tool to perceive the world and to communicate among them. Light from the sun warms the earth, promotes global weather patterns, and initiates the life support process of photosynthesis. For the most part, the interaction of light and matter helps shape the structure of the universe. In fact, light provides windows of the universe from cosmology to atomic scale. Almost all information about the rest of the universe reaches the earth in the form of electromagnetic radiation. As the invention of the telescope greatly expanded the exploration of the universe, the invention of the microscope opened a complex world of cells.
Light is a complex phenomenon classically interpreted by a simple model based on wavefront and light. The Olympus microscope explores a considerable amount of visible light. First we introduce electromagnetic radiation, then continue to understand color and human vision. The Olympus microscope is an instrument designed to create small objects or to magnify visual images. These microscopes must perform at least three tasks - rendering of human eyes and camera details, separation of detail in images, generation of enlarged images of specimens