Window Light Portraits at Home
Reading north-facing daylight, shaping it with a sheer curtain, and bouncing fill from a white wall.
Read guideHome Photography · Lighting · Canada
Field notes on setting up light and backgrounds for home photography in Canadian apartments and houses — how short winter daylight, low ceilings, and rental walls shape the way a small home studio comes together.
Reading order
Start with daylight, add controlled light when the sun drops early, then solve the background. Each guide stays close to the constraints of rented and shared spaces.
Reading north-facing daylight, shaping it with a sheer curtain, and bouncing fill from a white wall.
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Key, fill, and rim light in a living room, with stand placement that survives low ceilings.
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Paper, muslin, and painted boards that store flat against an apartment wall.
Read guideWhy room-first
Most home photography problems are spatial before they are technical. Ceiling height caps how high a light can go. Wall colour tints every bounce. A north window in Toronto behaves differently in January than in July, when daylight runs from roughly mid-morning to late evening.
How these notes come together
01
Walk the room at the hour you plan to shoot and mark where daylight falls. Decide whether daylight alone is enough or whether a continuous light fills the gap.
02
Choose a backdrop that suits the subject and the depth you have. A seamless paper roll needs distance behind the subject; a painted board can sit close.
03
Add a modifier, take a test frame, and read the histogram. Adjust distance rather than power first — moving a light is often cheaper than buying a brighter one.
Contact
Questions about a specific room, window, or backdrop are welcome. Use the form and a reply will be sent by email.