Review Natural Light
Assess natural light conditions — direction, quality, and color — and determine whether to use, modify, or wait for better light.
Why This Is Best Practice
Adopted by: National Geographic photographers, Bryan Peterson's photography education programs reaching 500,000+ students
Impact: Peterson's exposure research documents that photographers who shoot at golden hour consistently rate their images 40% higher for emotional impact compared to images shot at midday under identical technical conditions
Why best: Natural light is free, directional, and varies with time and weather in predictable ways. Photographers who understand the light cycle can predict ideal shooting windows, position subjects advantageously, and choose modification tools (reflector, diffuser, fill flash) appropriate to the conditions. Those who don't spend hours in post chasing tonality that should have been captured in camera.
Steps
- Check sun position for the shoot time — Use The Photographer's Ephemeris, PhotoPills, or SunCalc to determine sun angle, azimuth, and golden hour times for the exact location and date. Know before you arrive.
- Evaluate current light quality — Hard/direct sun: creates dramatic shadows and high-contrast scenes. Overcast: diffused, even, soft — excellent for portraits and macro. Partly cloudy: inconsistent, variable — challenging for consistent exposure.
- Assess light direction relative to the subject — Front light: even illumination, low texture, low depth. Side light: reveals texture, creates depth, dramatic shadows. Back light: rim separation, silhouette potential, requires fill. Overhead light: unflattering for portraits, creates raccoon-eye shadows.
- Determine color temperature — Golden hour (1 hour post-sunrise, 1 hour pre-sunset): 2,000-3,500K warm. Blue hour (20-30 min after sunset): 5,000-7,500K cool, saturated blues. Open shade: 7,000-9,000K (requires warming correction). Midday overcast: 6,000-6,500K (near-neutral).
- Identify modification opportunities — Available reflectors: white walls, sand, water, light-colored pavement. Available diffusers: translucent curtains, tree canopy. Determine if a 5-in-1 collapsible reflector is needed.
- Evaluate dynamic range challenge — Assess the luminance difference between highlights and shadows. If beyond the camera's dynamic range, decide: bracket for HDR, expose for shadows and recover highlights, or use fill flash to compress the ratio.
- Decide: shoot now, wait, or modify — If current light is ideal, shoot immediately. If it will improve (approaching golden hour), wait and plan. If conditions won't improve, modify with available tools.
- Set exposure and white balance — Dial in WB to the current color temperature. Set exposure using the ambient as the base; adjust for any modification (reflector adds ~1 stop of fill).
Rules
- Never dismiss overcast light as "bad" — flat, diffused overcast is the ideal condition for portraits, still life, and macro; learn to work it.
- Golden hour is 30-40 minutes on clear days; be positioned and ready before it begins.
- Backlit subjects require fill (reflector or fill flash) to prevent silhouettes — unless silhouette is the intent, which requires intentional underexposure.
- Open shade is always cooler (bluer) than it appears to the eye; set WB manually or shoot RAW for correction flexibility.
Examples
Outdoor portrait at 3pm (harsh midday sun): Subject moved to open shade on north side of building. Light quality: soft, diffused, even. Direction: slightly front-left (ambient sky). Color temperature: 7,500K — set WB to "Shade" preset. Used gold reflector at camera-right to add warm fill (+1 stop exposure to shadow side of face). Result: flattering soft light with warm dimension, achievable at any midday location.
Common Mistakes
- Arriving at golden hour without pre-scouting — the light is perfect for 30 minutes; wasting it on setup is the most common golden-hour failure.
- Placing subjects in direct sunlight for "even" illumination — direct sun creates harsh shadows and causes subjects to squint; open shade is always preferable.
- Ignoring the color temperature of shade — blue shade casts are unflattering on skin tones and must be corrected in WB settings, not just accepted.
- Using a silver reflector in already-harsh conditions — silver reflectors amplify hard light; use white for soft fill or gold for warm fill in direct sun conditions.
When NOT to Use
- When shooting in a windowless interior or fully light-controlled studio where there is no natural light to assess and all sources are artificial.
- When the creative intent is to use only artificial strobe or continuous lighting and natural light is being actively blocked or controlled out of the scene.
- When the shoot is taking place at night or under conditions where natural light is negligible and ambient artificial sources (streetlights, neon signs) are the relevant lighting to evaluate instead.