Emulsion: Why photography is like that woodburning set you used to own
Wednesday, January 18th, 2006What is photography? Well, basically photography is the art of making photographic pictures. (Stupid question means a stupid answer). Let’s rephrase that. How about: “In what paradigm should I think about photography?”
That’s a good question, and–like most of the good questions–it engenders many different answers. Here’s mine:
Photography is a little like those woodburning sets you may have played around with as a child. You know the ones I mean? It came with wood blocks with red patterns printed on it, and a heat stylus with selectable heads with which to burn the patterns onto the wood over top of the red pattern marks? Yeah. Photography’s a lot like that.
However, instead of one electrical heat stylus, you get millions. and they’re made of light, and they’re controlled not by your hand but by the lens on your camera. But otherwise, yeah, exactly like those kits.
The light travels through the camera lens…and the spatial position of the ray origin dictates the shape of the light that strikes the film emulsion at the back of the camera. Essentially you ‘burn’ the light onto the film, etching it permanently.
The emulsion-type of the film is very important, each film strip must have a standard photosensitive reaction that remains consistant, which means that if you take two pictures under the same conditions they will be of an idential look and tone on the finished negative.
In order to have a standard measure of photosensitivity, the ISO number was developed. Let’s look at some common ones:
- ISO 100: A slower film made to shoot in daylight
- ISO 200: A very common ‘catch all’ film for snapshot cameras. Works well with daylight or flash.
- ISO 400: A faster film, often used for outdoor casual sports photography.
- ISO 800: For brighter indoor photography
There are also extremely specialized film like Agfapan 25 which is ISO 25 (makes sense). It’s used for landscapes which aren’t in the habit of moving around a lot and a photographer can afford a slower shutter speed to expose the film properly. On the other end there is ISO 1600 film used in low-light situations, it has a nasty habit of being exposed and ruined still in its canister by something no more powerful than an airport x-ray.
The nice thing about the ISO number is that it’s linear. an ISO 200 film is twice as sensitive as ISO 100 and half as sensitive as ISO 400. Put more simply: the light takes half as long to burn into the film to the same degree on ISO 400 film as it does 200.
You’d think the usefulness of being able to shoot things at high speed would mean that we’d have all just gone to the highest ISO possible. However there’s a trade off for higher speed film: it gets a LOT grainier. Interestingly enough, the higher you set the ISO sensitivity of a digital camera chip, the granier the digital image becomes too.
Thus we have the first manner to control exposure.