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Completely Composed · Week 5 of 52

Light & Value

Forget color for a week. Value — the simple scale from black to white — is the element that quietly builds depth, mood, and whether a photo reads at all.

  • With Alexandra Anais & Tim Neumann
  • Quarter 1 · Elements of Design
  • Any Camera · Even Your Phone
  • 6 min read

Last week, light gave a shape depth. This week we study the light itself — or more precisely, the thing light leaves behind on your sensor: value. Value is the lightness or darkness of a tone, completely independent of its color. It's the grayscale that runs from pure black to pure white, and learning to see it is the single biggest leap most photographers make.

Value Is Not Color

Here's the idea that trips everyone up at first: a bright red and a deep green can have the exact same value. Color and value are separate properties. Strip the color out of a photograph and what's left — the pattern of lights and darks — is its value structure. That structure is doing far more work than you think.

Why Value Does the Heavy Lifting

Value is arguably the most important element of all, because it carries the load: it builds the form you learned last week, it creates depth, it sets the mood, and above all it controls readability. A subject only separates from its background when there's a difference in value between them — the same tonal separation that made your lines and silhouettes work. You can make a beautiful photograph in pure value with no color at all; you cannot rescue one whose values have collapsed into mud.

Contrast and Key

Two dials control the feeling of your values:

  • Contrast is the range between your darkest and lightest tones. High contrast (deep blacks beside bright whites) feels bold, dramatic, energetic. Low contrast (compressed midtones) feels soft, calm, atmospheric.
  • Key is where your tones sit overall. High-key (mostly light tones) feels airy and optimistic. Low-key (mostly dark tones with a small bright accent) feels moody and mysterious.

Choose your contrast and key on purpose and you've set the entire mood of the image before color or subject says a word.

How Value Behaves by Frame Shape

Landscape Room for a value gradient to sweep across the frame — bright sky to dark land — and ideal for atmospheric, low-contrast scenes.
Portrait The classic home of low-key faces, where shadow sculpts the subject, and of bright high-key portraits with clean, airy tones.
Square A balanced field for a deliberate value study — a single bright accent in a dark frame reads with real power.

"Tim made me turn everything black and white, and suddenly I could see which photos actually worked. The color had been hiding the weak ones."

Alexandra

In the Edit: Black & White in Lightroom Classic

Value is tone without color — so the best way to see it is to remove color entirely. This week's edit step is the black-and-white conversion. In Lightroom Classic:

  1. Convert to monochrome (press V, or use the B&W treatment) and study what's left: the pure value structure of your frame.
  2. Use the B&W Mix sliders to control how each color in the scene maps to a gray value — darken a blue sky, lighten skin, separate two tones that were fighting.
  3. Watch your subject-to-background separation. If it reads in black and white, the bones of the photo are sound.

Even when you bring color back next week, this habit sticks: you'll start judging every frame by its values first.

Key Takeaway

Value is the quiet workhorse of the frame — it builds form, sets mood, and decides whether a photo reads at all, before a single color enters. Get your values right and everything else has something solid to stand on. Next week, we finally add color.