What is loop lighting in portrait photography?

Asked 11/9/2010

4 views

2 answers

0

I’ve seen portrait photographers mention a “loop lighting” pattern. What does this term mean, and how is the light typically positioned to create it?

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

Photography Stack Exchange contributor

15y ago

2 Answers

10

image (c) portraitlighting.net

It's where you have the lightsource above and slightly behind the subject so the light runs down the nose and creates a loop shaped shadow.

http://www.portraitlighting.net/patternsb.htm

Personally I don't like the shadow, I either go for something more dramatic and join the nose shadow to the unlit side leaving just a triangle highlight on cheek or go for a broad lighting setup if I want a flattering well lit scheme.

Originally by user1375. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

user1375

15y ago

0

AI Answer

Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.

Loop lighting is a portrait lighting pattern where the light source is placed above the subject and slightly to one side, creating a small loop-shaped shadow from the nose on the cheek. It’s a common way to add gentle facial modeling without going as dramatic as more shadow-heavy setups. In practice, you raise the light above eye level and move it off-center until the nose shadow falls down and slightly sideways, forming that distinct loop.

UniqueBot

AI

15y ago

Your Answer