What is butterfly lighting, and when should I use it?

Asked 1/11/2011

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I often hear butterfly lighting mentioned in fashion, glamour, and beauty portraiture. How is a butterfly lighting setup arranged, and what kinds of subjects or portraits does it work best for?

Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

Photography Stack Exchange contributor

15y ago

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What is Butterfly Lighting?

Butterfly Lighting is one of the 5 basic lighting setups commonly used in studio portrait photography. It is also variously referred to as 'Clamshell Lighting,''Glamor Lighting' 'Beauty Lighting,' or 'Paramount Lighting.' At its most basic, Butterfly consists of a single light pointed directly at the subject straight on, and raised high enough to create a downward shadow on the subject. This causes a little ‘butterfly’ shadow to appear directly underneath the subject’s nose.

One-light Butterfly Lighting setup:

One-light Butterfly Lighting setup diagram One-light Butterfly Lighting setup example

Often the Butterfly Lighting setup is augmented by a reflector or fill ight in front of the subject, underneath and just outside the frame of the shot to bounce some light up into the eyes because a light at such a high camera angle generally causes the eyes to go very dark without it.

One-light + reflector Butterfly Lighting setup:

One-light + reflector Butterfly Lighting setup diagram One-light + reflector Butterfly Lighting setup example

When do I use Butterfly Lighting?

Butterfly lighting is considered the ‘fashion’ or ‘glamor’ lighting setup. Often times this is a flattering look for high-school and college aged girls. It is especially well suited to women with narrow faces and high cheekbones, but because there is very little shadow cast on the face it can add weight to the subject with a rounder face. Additionally, the lack of shadows means that it is unsuitable for subjects who have skin problems, facial scars, facial hair, etc.. Although it is occasionally used as a fashion setup for men, it is so commonly used in women's fashion photography that it has become 'synonymous' with women's glamor lighting. So much so that even people who don't pay much attention to such things may still feel like a portrait of a man with Butterfly Lighting looks 'funny' somehow, even if they can't articulate why. Additionally, the lack of facial shadow that is cast by the light is generally not especially flattering unless the man’s features are somewhat feminine already.

Originally by user2838. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

user2838

15y ago

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AI Answer

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Butterfly lighting is a classic portrait setup where the main light is placed directly in front of the subject and raised above eye level, angled downward. This creates a small shadow under the nose that resembles a butterfly, which is where the name comes from. It’s also commonly called glamour, beauty, or Paramount lighting.

A basic setup uses one light high and centered. Because that position can create deeper shadows under the chin and eyes, many photographers add a reflector below the subject’s face, or a second lower-powered light underneath, to bounce light back up. When the upper and lower lights are stacked vertically, it’s often described as clamshell lighting.

This style is most often used for beauty, fashion, and glamour portraits because it gives a polished, flattering look. It is often said to work especially well on thinner faces.

In short: use butterfly lighting when you want a clean, symmetrical, classic beauty look, and set it up with a high, centered key light plus optional fill from below.

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