---
name: cinematographer-jarin-blaschke
description: >
  Shoot in the style of Jarin Blaschke — Robert Eggers's career-long visual collaborator,
  the DP who pushes historical light recreation to obsessive extremes, who shot The Lighthouse
  in orthochromatic black and white on vintage lenses and Nosferatu by candlelight and
  gaslight, whose commitment to period-accurate illumination is among the most rigorous in
  contemporary cinema. Trigger for: The Witch (2015, Robert Eggers), The Lighthouse (2019,
  Eggers), The Northman (2022, Eggers), Nosferatu (2024, Eggers), or "Blaschke cinematography,"
  "The Witch look," "The Lighthouse look," "Nosferatu cinematography," "historical light
  recreation," "Eggers DP," "orthochromatic cinematography," "candlelight period film."
---

# The Cinematography of Jarin Blaschke

## The Principle

Jarin Blaschke is the cinematographer who answers the question: what did the world ACTUALLY
look like before electricity? Not "what does a period film usually look like" — not the
Hollywood convention of clean, warm, generously supplemented "period" lighting — but what
did a room genuinely look like when the only illumination was a single tallow candle, a
hearth fire, or the grey light of a New England winter filtering through hand-blown glass?
The answer, in Blaschke's films, is: darker, harsher, colder, stranger, and more beautiful
than anything the conventions of period cinema have led audiences to expect.

His collaboration with Robert Eggers — spanning *The Witch*, *The Lighthouse*, *The
Northman*, and *Nosferatu* — is the most formally committed director-DP partnership in
contemporary cinema. Eggers's obsessive historical research into architecture, language,
costume, and material culture finds its visual complement in Blaschke's equally obsessive
research into historical LIGHT. For each film, Blaschke studies what light sources would
have existed in the time and place depicted, what color temperature they would have
produced, what quality and quantity of illumination they would have provided, and then
he recreates those conditions as faithfully as possible. The result is a body of work
that doesn't look like period cinema. It looks like the period.

His Oscar nomination for *The Lighthouse* (2019) recognized one of the most audacious
technical achievements in modern cinematography: shooting a feature film on black-and-white
negative with custom-modified lenses designed to replicate the tonal characteristics of
orthochromatic film stock — a format that predates panchromatic film, rendering skies dark,
skin luminous, and the visual world radically different from what contemporary audiences
expect of black-and-white cinema.

---

## Light

### Candlelight and Hearth — The Witch

**The Witch (2015, Eggers):** A Puritan family in 1630s New England, isolated on the edge
of a forest. Blaschke lit the interior scenes — the family's cramped, dark, single-room
dwelling — almost entirely with practical sources: candles and the hearth fire. Not
supplemented candles with hidden HMIs. ACTUAL candles and firelight, with Blaschke
pushing the film stock (and, in some scenes, the Alexa sensor) to its limits to capture
the image.

The result is extraordinary. The family's faces flicker in and out of visibility. The
corners of the room are genuinely dark — not movie-dark, but dark the way a room with
one candle IS dark. The firelight is warm, red-orange, and it falls off rapidly —
illuminating faces and hands near the hearth while leaving everything more than a few
feet away in near-total darkness. The children's faces, lit by a single candle during
prayer, glow against a background of absolute black. The world contracts to the circle
of light that a flame provides. Beyond that circle is darkness — and in this film's
cosmology, darkness is where evil lives.

The exterior daylight scenes use only natural light — the low, grey, diffused light of
overcast New England. Blaschke chose to shoot in natural conditions: no supplemental
daylight, no bounce, no silks. The forest is dark, the sky is white, the family's
clearing is a pocket of grey light surrounded by the deeper darkness of the trees.
The landscape feels OPPRESSIVE — not because of dramatic lighting but because of its
authentic insufficiency.

### Orthochromatic Black and White — The Lighthouse

**The Lighthouse (2019, Eggers):** Blaschke's technical tour de force. Shot on Kodak
Double-X 5222 black-and-white negative, with vintage Baltar lenses modified to replicate
the tonal characteristics of ORTHOCHROMATIC film — a pre-panchromatic stock that is
insensitive to red light. The practical consequence: skies photograph darker (blue
registers normally, but the red and infrared that brighten skies on panchromatic stock
are invisible), skin tones photograph lighter (red and pink wavelengths in skin are not
recorded, leaving the luminance of the underlying structure), and the entire tonal
range shifts toward a look that predates modern cinema — closer to 1890s photography
than 1940s noir.

The lighthouse lantern is the film's sun — a practical source of overwhelming brightness
at the top of the tower, its Fresnel lens focusing the beam into a weapon of light. When
Thomas Wake (Dafoe) stands before it, Blaschke captures the actual light of the practical
lamp, overexposing deliberately to create the halation and bloom that the old lenses
naturally produce. The light becomes HOLY — an object of worship, of obsession, the
thing that Wake guards and Winslow (Pattinson) desires. The 1.19:1 aspect ratio — nearly
square, the oldest moving-picture format — closes the walls of the lighthouse further,
compressing the two men into a vertical prison.

### Gaslight and Shadow — Nosferatu

**Nosferatu (2024, Eggers):** Blaschke's recreation of 1830s European illumination:
gaslight in the city interiors, candlelight in the domestic spaces, the cold moonlight
of the Carpathian night. The gaslight has a specific character — slightly green-tinged
compared to candlelight, brighter but harsher, the first step on the road from fire to
electricity. Blaschke distinguishes between these period sources with scientific
precision: the color temperature of a gas mantle is different from a tallow candle is
different from a beeswax candle is different from an oil lamp. Each source in the film
produces its historically accurate quality of light.

Count Orlok's appearances are studies in ABSENCE of light — the vampire existing in
shadow, at the edges of illumination, his presence registered by the way he blocks or
distorts the existing light rather than by direct illumination. Blaschke uses shadow as
a positive compositional element: Orlok's shadow precedes him, announces him, fills the
frame before his body enters it. The shadow is the character as much as the actor.

---

## Color

**Black and white as period truth.** *The Lighthouse* makes the case that black and white
is not a stylistic choice but a HISTORICAL one: the world of the 1890s was photographed
in monochrome. By removing color, Blaschke places the audience in the visual reality of
the period, where the world was experienced in full color but RECORDED — and therefore
REMEMBERED — in black and white. The orthochromatic rendering adds another layer: this
is not modern black and white. It is PERIOD black and white, the specific tonal response
of a specific historical technology.

**The muted period palette.** In color films (*The Witch*, *The Northman*, *Nosferatu*),
Blaschke's palette is severely restricted: the earth tones of natural dyes, the grey of
undyed wool, the dark brown of wood, the cold blue-grey of northern sky. Saturated color
does not exist because saturated dyes did not exist. The color world is the color world
of the materials available to people of the period — and those materials were muted,
organic, earthen. Blood is the most saturated element, and its redness shocks BECAUSE
everything else is so restrained.

---

## Composition / Camera

**The period frame.** Blaschke matches the aspect ratio to the period's visual culture.
*The Lighthouse* uses 1.19:1 — the early cinema "Movietone" ratio. *The Witch* uses
1.66:1 — a European standard that feels slightly narrower and more enclosed than modern
widescreen. These are not arbitrary choices. They place the audience inside a visual
frame that BELONGS to the period, subliminally communicating that this image comes from
another time.

**Composed for darkness.** Blaschke's compositions account for the fact that large
portions of the frame will be dark or completely black. He places the subject in the
pool of light — the firelight, the candle, the lantern beam — and allows the rest of
the frame to disappear. The composition is not the whole rectangle. It is the lit
portion WITHIN the rectangle, shaped by the practical source, defined by the physics
of light falloff.

---

## Specifications

1. **Research the light of the period.** What sources existed? What color temperature
   did they produce? What quantity of illumination did they provide? Recreate the
   PHYSICS of historical light, not the convention of period cinema.
2. **Practical sources as actual sources.** The candle, the hearth, the oil lamp, the
   gas mantle — these are not motivating sources supplemented by hidden HMIs. They ARE
   the light. Push the camera's sensitivity to accommodate reality rather than
   augmenting reality to accommodate the camera.
3. **Darkness is honest.** A room with one candle is DARK. Most of it is black. This
   is not underexposure — it is the truth of pre-electric life. Let the darkness exist.
   Compose within the pool of light, not within the rectangle of the frame.
4. **Match the format to the period.** Aspect ratio, film stock, lens character — every
   element of the capture system can be chosen to place the image in its historical
   context. Orthochromatic rendering, vintage lenses, period aspect ratios are not
   affectations. They are tools for historical truth.
5. **Shadow as character.** In the absence of electric light, shadow is omnipresent and
   ACTIVE. It has shape, movement, meaning. A figure blocking a light source creates
   a shadow that tells you about their presence before their face does. Use shadow as
   a compositional and narrative element, not just the absence of light.