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Volume  Volume1\Light and Shade\Book4

Entry#  196.


 Contents: Vol. 1  |  Vol. 2

 

On the relative size of shadows (196. 197).


THE BODY WHICH IS NEAREST TO THE LIGHT CASTS THE LARGEST SHADOW, AND

WHY?


If an object placed in front of a single light is very close to it

you will see that it casts a very large shadow on the opposite wall,

and the farther you remove the object from the light the smaller

will the image of the shadow become.


WHY A SHADOW LARGER THAN THE BODY THAT PRODUCES IT BECOMES OUT OF

PROPORTION.


The disproportion of a shadow which is larger than the body

producing it, results from the light being smaller than the body, so

that it cannot be at an equal distance from the edges of the body

Footnote 11: H. LUDWIG in his edition of the old copies, in the

Vatican library--in which this chapter is included under Nos. 612,

613 and 614 alters this passage as follows: _quella parte ch'e piu

propinqua piu cresce che le distanti_, although the Vatican copy

agrees with the original MS. in having _distante_ in the former and

_propinque_ in the latter place. This supposed amendment seems to me

to invert the facts. Supposing for instance, that on Pl. XXXI No. 3.

_f_ is the spot where the light is that illuminates the figure there

represented, and that the line behind the figure represents a wall

on which the shadow of the figure is thrown. It is evident, that in

that case the nearest portion, in this case the under part of the

thigh, is very little magnified in the shadow, and the remoter

parts, for instance the head, are more magnified. ; and the portions

which are most remote are made larger than the nearer portions for

this reason Footnote 12: See Footnote 11 .


WHY A SHADOW WHICH IS LARGER THAN THE BODY CAUSING IT HAS

ILL-DEFINED OUTLINES.


The atmosphere which surrounds a light is almost like light itself

for brightness and colour; but the farther off it is the more it

loses this resemblance. An object which casts a large shadow and is

near to the light, is illuminated both by that light by the luminous

atmosphere; hence this diffused light gives the shadow ill-defined

edges.


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