Understanding Exposure Value in Photography

Before explaining Exposure Value (EV for short), it helps to know what Light Value (LV, for short) means. When you find something (whether it’s a person, a landscape, or even a ninja), there are (generally speaking) two main levels of light you need to deal with. The first is the average amount of light in the area (we call this luminance or brightness), and the second is the amount of light bouncing off of the subject (also known as Light Value, or LV for short).

exposure levels tutorial

Photo by Aikawa Ke.

When you want to take a picture, the different things in your scene will absorb light, reflect light, or even block it and cause shadows. This will cause some things to appear brighter than others. This is what we call contrast. For example, imagine a person standing on a sandy beach. The water will be one level of brightness, the sand will be brighter, and the sky will be even brighter. The shadow from the person will be darker. This represents a higher-than-normal contrast scene.

There is a common standard we use to measure light in a given situation. We use a scale ranging from 0 (a dim interior) to 18 or so (a super bright interior). Many professional photographers will go into a given location and think, “This is a night club, so it’s around LV-5,” or, “It’s sunset outside, so it’s LV-10ish,” or even, “It’s a bright, sunny, cloudless day, so it’s LV-16ish.” Like measuring temperature, LV levels are a standard. Try freaking out a photographer (the guy with the big lens at the wedding) by saying, “Hey, it’s LV-16 outside, but there are clouds coming so it’s going to drop to LV-14 by noon!” For more info, google “Light Value Chart” for a list of examples where you may encounter different LV levels.

Now that we understand LV, let’s focus on the camera (nice pun, right?). When your camera takes a picture (let’s assume you are in automatic mode and shooting at ISO-100), it goes through a series of calculations to determine what the aperture and speed should be in order for the main subject in that picture to be reproduced as a middle tone of gray.

landscape metering

Photo by tamasmatusik; ISO 320, f/22, 1/60-second exposure.

These settings are known as Exposure Value. It uses middle gray because it allows the camera to get as much of the dark and light tones as possible while keeping the subject visible in the picture. It’s like shooting a dart as a bulls-eye and aiming for the center: The camera can only allow so much light and dark in at the same time (in relation, the edges of the dart board), so it aims to make sure the subject is at the center of that light scale.

Another example: If you are at the beach and it’s LV-15 outside and you whip out your camera to take a picture of a absolutely nothing, the camera says to itself, “Oh my gosh, it’s bright out here. I mean, it’s a whopping LV-15! I am going to increase my shutter speed (let less light ina) and shrink my aperture (also letting less light in) to a certain setting to make sure that I capture all the range of light in this picture.” Those settings (aperture, shutter speed, and ISO) combined are called the Exposure Value for the overall picture. It will probably assume the sand is gray, and as such, because the sun is so much brighter than the sand, the sun appears completely white as well as most of the sky (vs. blue). Whereas if you took a picture of the sun, it would appear as gray and the sand would appear as black because it’s no longer in the range allowed by the camera. (P.S. Don’t aim at the sun or you will zap your eye and render it useless).

Now, let’s say you are outside taking a picture at sunset. The camera then says, “Hey, it’s darker out here, so I’m going to reduce my shutter speed and open up the aperture allowing for more light.” It recalculates a new Exposure Value, but it’s doing so with the primary intention of making the subject a middle level of gray.

Finally, let’s say that it is still sunset, but a Ninja (not one ones in black, but the ones in white) comes running at you… Of course you want to document this, so you snap a picture. Here something different happens. The camera says, “Hey, it’s kinda’ dark outside, but that ninja is wearing all white. I am going to adjust my exposure again.” Here is where you have to be sneaky (like the Ninja). The auto-exposure on a camera ALWAYS wants to make sure that your subject is a middle-level of lightness. In this case, because the sneaky Ninja is in all white and you want to see white, not gray, you have to override your camera and say, “Hey, you need to allow for MORE LIGHT because I want that ninja to be reproduced accurately, and in order to do that, he needs to be white and not gray.”

exposure settings tutorial

Photo by liquidcrash; ISO 800, f/16, 1/320-second exposure.

This is where you’d take your camera and use the feature called “Exposure Adjustment” (which can force it to allow more light in). Exposure Adjustment (EA, for short) will be the topic for another article.

About the Author
Shane Messer is a successful entrepreneur and professional photographer based out of Nashville, TN, Louisville, KY and Costa Rica. He has won numerous national and state awards for his business and philanthropic work.

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11 responses to “Understanding Exposure Value in Photography”

  1. Irene says:

    Well written article. Thanks for sharing.

  2. Thank you for the fabulous article. I love it. I am a novice and I am keen to learn photography and video editing further.

  3. Wendy says:

    What I miss most about my FG is the “backlit” button. Hit the button, and you’re saying, “This is darker than you think it is, open up a couple of stops!” Release the button, and you’re back to normal–no having to go into the menu and make any adjustments that you have to undo later. I don’t know why the digital-design idiots never made that an option for the programmable button.

  4. Stan says:

    Back in film days, I owned cameras where the aperture and shutter speed controls could be locked together so that they could be moved together to change settings while keeping the same EV. Very handy when you wanted to attend to bokeh effects or to subject speed. Those film cameras didn’t have auto exposure, so you set the camera with the help of a hand-held meter or (sometimes) an internal meter that wasn’t automatically connected to controls. I miss that feature in cameras today.

  5. Paul Dorrell says:

    This is really helpful to know about this subject. I appreciate your writing skill. Thanks

  6. Diane Bennett says:

    Well written fantastic article

  7. Adam Cunningham says:

    the author taught us something being sneaky like the ninja(in white) !! i really enjoyed this article

  8. An excellent article – well done. Such an important subject and so few people understand it! I used to come across this problem a lot with snow shots. Hopefully this will help many people get their exposures correct, although I have noticed recently a tendency for photographers to rely too heavily on camera raw with the multiple exposures embedded…

  9. I actually enjoyed reading it, very casual way of writing and good examples mentioned, thanks for sharing!

  10. Veronica Beaudry says:

    I really enjoyed reading this. You did a great job writing it. I think I even learned something.

  11. Great article and nice intro to the difficult subject!

    Andrew

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