Pierre Camille Petit belongs to that generation of film craftsmen for whom the image was not merely a profession, but a way of inhabiting the world. Born in Seine‑et‑Marne, he entered the film industry just after the war and, from 1947 onward, signed the photography of his first features. It was only the beginning of a dense career: nearly forty years spent shaping light, composing atmospheres, and giving each setting its own breath. He thus traversed an entire chapter of popular French cinema, working with Ralph Habib, Maurice Labro, Christian‑Jaque, and Michel Audiard. His signature can be found in films as varied as Le Masque de fer, Le Repas des fauves, Fifi la plume, Le Cri du cormoran, or Une veuve en or. His abundant filmography reveals a remarkable ability to adapt: comedies, dramas, adventure films, international co‑productions — he illuminated them all with the same rigor. On television, he also accompanied the rise of French serials, from Sylvie des trois ormes to Schulmeister, l’espion de l’empereur, where his sense of framing and light helped give these popular stories a strong visual identity. His final contribution, in 1985, was a documentary devoted to Marcel Carné — a kind of nod to the history of cinema he had served all his life. Pierre Petit died in 1997, leaving behind a discreet but essential body of work: that of a man who, film after film, shaped the visual memory of an era.