Lighting Diagram
John Mueller
Registered Users Posts: 2,555 Major grins
Dont know if this would be the correct place to put this or if anyone cares.
I want to share my lighting diagrams for those who are interested.
Hope this to be one of many.
I would like to see others as well.
I want to share my lighting diagrams for those who are interested.
Hope this to be one of many.
I would like to see others as well.
0
Comments
Very helpful!
Cheers!
I have some questions - forgive my naivety -
what does the boom look like?
do you have a photo of your set up?
Can you explain how you meter your lights, and what you mean by combining for f8.
Complete noob wrt lighting!
thanks
ann
My Galleries My Photography BLOG
Ramblings About Me
The boom is an arm that attaches to a light stand.
This is for a two light set-up.
Meter each light seperate.Main @ f8 (adjusting power) turn it off and meter the fill @ f5.6.Turn both lights on then meter. F8 is my working number = combined iso 100 1/125s
Both lights (combined) should read f8. Turn down or moved both lights in equal values to get a meter reading of f8.
Hope this helps.
I'll try to get set-up pix this weekend.
Cincinnati Smug Leader
They should post their set-ups,diagrams and info as well.
I see that you did that in another thread..
The more people that do,helps others that want to learn all this stuff.
I had no lights 3 weeks ago and have lots to learn,so I thought I would start sharing my progress..
Cincinnati Smug Leader
Here's a picture of my ghetto setup. Stuff can be bought at home depot.
Two GE Reveal bulbs, two reflector housings, two white sheets of paper.
The end result after alittle tweaking in PC
SO far I'm aslo at HD/OSH level. Worked good for me:
Cheers!
The biggest issue for me was to get the (very fine, highly reflective and relatively small) target in focus while not getting all the unwanted "gory" details of the supporting material (like paper of fabrics). It's usually easy to get rid of with the solid stock objects (e.g. your sample), but if you start shooting necklaces and bracelets - forget about it, it'll take hours to clean one shot.
I got the best results from a sheet of very clean (keep the bottle of windex ready:-) glass and a white background (paper, foam, whatever) few inches under it. I used an empty aquarium set on its side on worktable and two halogen worklights from HD:-). Sorry don't have a shot of that setup.
HTH
Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
http://www.mcneel.com/users/jb/foghorn/ill_shut_up.au
Here is a picture using that setup.
Notice the double catchlights. You can always figure the lighting used by looking at the catchlights. I can't look a portrait or glamour shot now without studying the catchlights. Its really easy to see if a softbox, umbrella etc. was used. You can tell about placement of the lights by how big the catchlight is and what part of the eye the catchlight is at.
TML Photography
tmlphoto.com
#1 Black and white (forgot to turn it off in my 20D)
#2 Color
#3 Coins
#1 B/W object kinda blends with a background, prolly requires a different one.
##2&3 - nice. The only question is whether or not you want the shadow. If a little shadow's ok - no problem, otherwise you need to try the softbox and/or my glass thingie..
Yet again, on the objects that big and solid it's easy to handle in PS..
Good job!
Cheers!
I like this thread! Learned a lot of "how to" stuff already:-)!
Cheers!
Wish we had a thread just for lighting techniques.
As time allows.Ill try and post more diagrams,shot of my set-up and the results.
Keep up the great work
John
Cincinnati Smug Leader