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twalker294 Registered: Aug 17, 2003 Total Posts: 272 Country: United States |
Hello all. I have a question for the studio lighting gurus. Tonight I am playing around with various lighting setups and positions to see what works best for general portriature, apart from what I usually do which is the standard camera in the middle, main light on the right at 45, fill on the left at 45 about 1 stop under the main. ![]() Now, for this one I had the main light (Alien Bees B800 into a 32 inch white umbrella) to the right of the camera at about 30 degrees from the subject, distance around 5-6 feet. The fill (Vivitar 285HV into a 12 inch white umbrella) was at almost a 90 degree angle to the subject relative to the camera on the left side, and about 6 feet above the floor, with the umbrella pointing downward at the subject. Distance from the subject to the fill light was about 3 feet. The camera was about 2 feet off the ground (me crouching down at the doll's eye level.) First of all, am I crazy that I like the results of this lighting arrangement? Please be honest -- I won't get my feelings hurt if you tell me I'm crazy. Second, is this a "normal" fill position (so far above the subject) or are there consequences of using this positioning that I'm not thinking about? In this position it almost acts as both a fill and a hair light which is why I think I like it. Comments welcomed! Thanks Todd |
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dhphoto Registered: Feb 16, 2003 Total Posts: 8073 Country: United Kingdom |
This is not an unusual way of lighting portraits, we used to call it the 'semi-clip'. You are starting to light the hair from this angle and give some depth to the face. It can be quite a useful trick with spec wearers (although you'd have to move the front light wider too). For more mood you can move the light further round the back and increase the power a bit to give more 'clip' effect. |
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twalker294 Registered: Aug 17, 2003 Total Posts: 272 Country: United States |
dhphoto wrote: |
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Steve Tinetti Registered: Jan 12, 2002 Total Posts: 2279 Country: United States |
Todd: First of all, I'm not lighting guroo, heck I can't even spell gooru. |
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ShootsQA Registered: Oct 28, 2003 Total Posts: 26 Country: United States |
Todd, I'm just learning as well and what I'm beginning to realize is that there are a lot of different styles and techniques out there and there is no longer a 'norm'. Just browse the different photography websites and you'll get all kinds of great ideas, they just depend on what you are trying to achieve. Instead of worrying whether some setup is normal, just continue to experiment until you like what you see. Just this last weekend I shot about 400 test shots with my 10D in my makeshift basement studio and would change lights and ratios about every 10-15 shots. Most turned out pretty crappy but I found 3 setups that I really liked but they're probably not 'normal' or they would violate some guru's idea of the right way to shoot. |