guide: use color theory to make your videos look more like movies
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intro to color temperature
Before we get into the practicals of how I mix daylight and tungsten lighting, let’s detour into what color temperature is, and why daylight and tungsten are both called “white points”, when they’re different colors to our eyes.
The color white as we know it isn’t a single point, but exists along a spectrum on a graph known as the Planckian curve. This spectrum is known as color temperature, and we use units of Kelvin to describe where our “white point” exists along it, from warm at the lower end of the spectrum to cool at the higher. The color white we imagine when we think of white is one specific point along this spectrum at 5600 Kelvin. This is also known in film as “daylight” or having “daylight-balanced lights”. Tungsten sits at a lower point along this spectrum, 3200 Kelvin, which is why it appears orange, or warmer than traditional daylight when they’re viewed together.
Our eyes are constantly adjusting for white along this spectrum. Your eyes will recognize the color white whether it’s in the cool shade or being lit by a warm candle. One way to see how our eyes can adjust to different color temperatures is with a fun optical trick. If I light this scene at daylight, and set the color temperature on my camera to 5600k to match, the paper appears white. Then, I’ll switch to the same scene but lit in tungsten, the scene appears very orange. If I hold on this orange scene for a bit, your eyes will gradually normalize the new white point of the scene and the paper won’t look as orange as it did when we first cut. When I switch back to daylight, notice how blue the paper looks despite being the same piece of paper from moments ago? This illusion is also something to look out for when you’re editing and swapping between tungsten and daylight balanced scenes. Take a second and rest your eyes on a neutral gray tone in between to avoid this issue!
Because our cameras don’t adjust naturally like our eyes do, we need to adjust the color temperature ourselves in camera with a setting that’s usually called “white balance”. Most cameras go from at least 2700-7000K, with the “standard” daylight value again being at 5600 Kelvin. Parts of a scene that are lit with lights having a higher color temperature than the white balance in the camera will appear blue, with the blue saturation increasing as temperature increases. Anything in frame below the white balance setting will appear orange.
basics of mixing color temperature
So we know what color temperature is, and why white isn’t just one shade, but why does this matter in film?
Well, mixed color temperatures happen all the time around us, in obvious and not so obvious ways. For example, the winter sky I’m experiencing right now in Colorado measures 5600 Kelvin in the sun, but is actually around 8000 Kelvin in shade. I can use this knowledge practically on a set to increase the realism of a scene. Because mixed color temperatures happen all around us in subtle and not so subtle ways, scenes with multiple color temperatures in them can often appear more natural and pleasing to our eye than scenes lit with a single color temperature in frame.
basics of color theory
One reason mixing color temperatures in frame looks so pleasing to our eye is due to some basic color theory. In case you’ve never seen a color wheel before… this is a color wheel. Colors that are directly across from each other are known as complementary colors, and can be a good starting point for deciding which hues will pair well together. Notice that blue and orange are across from each other on this wheel. It’s this part of color theory that we’re taking advantage of when we combine mixing color temperatures and the white point setting on a camera to achieve the blue and orange look.
gels
intro recap
Let’s rewind a sec and review some of these key points because I know I just threw the whole studio at you. The color white exists along a spectrum, known as color temperature, and is measured in units called Kelvins. Low values appear orange or “warm” and higher values appear blue or “cool”. Daylight comes in at 5600 Kelvin and Tungsten is at 3200 Kelvin. By manipulating the white balance setting on our camera we can make our scene appear more blue or orange in camera. Mixing blue and orange is pleasing to our eye because they are across from each other on the color wheel, what’s known as complementary colors. Without having RGB lighting, the best way we can add blue and orange tones to our lighting is by using color correction gels that can come in varying strengths.
controlling lights
lighting setup #1
lighting setup #2
lighting setup #3
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