Lamp recommendation
/forum/topic/713722/0

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Rebel Guy
Registered: Feb 12, 2008
Total Posts: 644
Country: United States

I've been doing nightclub fashion runway style shots lately with my 20D and 430EX I...and just got a CB mini bracket...but now doing some portraits with they models just with the 430. I also have a Smith Victor KT500U, 2-LIGHT 500 TOTAL WATT KIT WITH UMBRELLAS... they use Tugsten bulbs....

Any recommendation on better bulbs to use? Flourescent or Halogen or ?
I'm here in SoCal for some local stores or I can buy online.

Thanks for any feedback.

-Frank



ngphoto
Registered: May 22, 2005
Total Posts: 133
Country: United States

Hi Frank
I did a little looking around For some Day light temp. halogens and could not find a thing. Easy to find fluorescent here is a link that will help you, it is a 85watt=300 fluorescent that is 5000k temp. the price is cheap $25 each hope this helps you and Good luck.
http://www.cowboystudio.com/product/15686/Daylight-85-Watt-5000K-Photo-Fluorescent-Light-bulb_198308.html

Nathan



runamuck
Registered: Oct 29, 2006
Total Posts: 4903
Country: United States

I almost started a fire using halogens. Never again. They are now part of a landfill somewhere.

CFL's are far better in your fixtures. No heat, no blown circuit breakers, no flicker, and you can actually see the results of lighting changes.

I checked resellerratings.com and found no mention of cowboystudios. Has anyone dealt with them?



Rebel Guy
Registered: Feb 12, 2008
Total Posts: 644
Country: United States

Nathan, thanks for the info. Are Fluorescent bulbs better than Halogen which are better than Tugsten?
Thanks.

-Frank



bacilonur
Registered: Aug 14, 2006
Total Posts: 2698
Country: United States

Those are continuous lights, right? You'd be much better off with some cheap Alienbees or even just a couple manual hotshoe flashes. They'll put out much more light than you'll ever get from 500 watts of continuous light.



ngphoto
Registered: May 22, 2005
Total Posts: 133
Country: United States

The main thing to think about is how much time do you want to spend in Processing your photos. If you look around it is hard to find a 4800+deg. kelvin Halogen that is cheap and that last more then 4 hours at 250 watts. It is not hard to find 4800k Fluorescent bulb that will last you 5 years or more of uses. Yes Bacilonur is right if you have the money to do so.
If you are really getting in to It and are getting Paid for Then spend the money, But if Not go with fluorescent they are cheap.Then work your way in to some Monolights.
Good luck



ngphoto
Registered: May 22, 2005
Total Posts: 133
Country: United States

Hi again
I found the Fluorescent on Amazon, here is more info about COWBOYSTUDIO.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/B001ME7GPU/ref=dp_olp_0?ie=UTF8&qid=1228276416&sr=1-2&condition=all



cwebster
Registered: Oct 03, 2005
Total Posts: 3050
Country: United States

The two biggest problems with using CFLs for photo lighting is 1. they aren't bright enough (so you end up shooting at ISO 1600 and f/2.8 at 1/60) and they aren't dimmable. So you can't put a fill light up close, so it's soft and wraps around the subject, without it being too bright.

CFLs are also notorious for not being consistent color / temp. Just because 2 CFLs have the same CRI or color temp, doesn't mean they will actually match when you start shooting.

Like bacilonur, I suggest you get one entry-level studio strobe, like an AB and learn from there. You won't learn much about studio lighting with lights you can't control.

<Chas>



runamuck
Registered: Oct 29, 2006
Total Posts: 4903
Country: United States

ngphoto wrote:
Hi again
I found the Fluorescent on Amazon, here is more info about COWBOYSTUDIO.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/B001ME7GPU/ref=dp_olp_0?ie=UTF8&qid=1228276416&sr=1-2&condition=all



Thanx for the info.



Rebel Guy
Registered: Feb 12, 2008
Total Posts: 644
Country: United States

Thanks ngphoto for you time researching for the CFL's for me!



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