bmattock
Veteran
OK, I'm pretty much convinced that I need to have some lighting for my portrait shoot coming up. I could probably get by with available light in my situation if the weather cooperates, but I don't know how that will work out at the time, so...
Here's the situation. I will be taking a formal portrait of the bride several weeks in front of the wedding. She'll be all dolled up in her wedding kit. We'll use my living room, which due to finances is completely devoid of furniture.
Hardwood floors - shiny. Walls are pale yellow. Ceilings are white and 10 feet tall, textured surface (but not that horrible acoustic popcorn stuff - 80 year old painted plaster stuff). There are windows regularly spaced on two walls - a lot of light in the mornings. Gets very dark in the afternoon and at night, windows face east and south. The room is long and narrow - 32 feet long by maybe 15 wide. At the narrow end of the room, a brick fireplace painted white, decorated with candles and clocks and stuff. Very nice antiquey look.
I will be shooting 6x6 on 120 film - Bronica C2 SLR bodies with Stroboframe flip-flash and Vivitar 285HV on a tripod. Color print film, I guess some B&W. May do some 35mm as well as a backup, since in my small town, I have to mail away the C41 process 120 - no local processors.
I want to put a light behind the model to highlight her hair, and a sidelight to light the side away from the windows. I was thinking of two continuous lights, but I noted that the color temp is not right for outdoor c41 film - I guess I'd have to use a filter? No experience with that.
I could get another couple of flashes - and I *think* I can get something that lets me mount them on a couple of cheap tripods from Walmart, right? I'm a bit confused here.
I would need to trigger them somehow. I understand I can get 'peanut slaves' from Adorama/B&H, etc - I guess they sense the main flash and fire their own light, yes? Or am I wrong about that? Or, I could get long flash sync cords - and some y-splitters of some kind. Would that be better? I know I can do some kind of wireless thing - but the transmitters/receivers seem a bit pricey for a first-time experiment - might be good long-term investments, but not now.
I thought I'd bypass the fancy stuff - barndoors, snoots, gobos, and whatever else for now. Just flash on fairly low power output aimed correctly, nothing fancy. I might be able to rig something to go between the flash in back of the model and the camera so I don' t get flare, but that's about as fancy as I can imagine.
Oh yes, and I have a Sekonic L-358 meter with an incident light dome and a flash fire/measurement capability. It does not have the optional radio transmitter, but it does have a PC-cord outlet to fire the flash(es).
So that's it. I feel I'm getting close, but I'm still a bit confused on some things.
Any help would be appreciated!
BTW - I will have a couple of opportunities to practice with this to make sure I'm doing it right before the actual shoot - so I won't be doing it cold.
Thanks,
Bill Mattocks
Here's the situation. I will be taking a formal portrait of the bride several weeks in front of the wedding. She'll be all dolled up in her wedding kit. We'll use my living room, which due to finances is completely devoid of furniture.
Hardwood floors - shiny. Walls are pale yellow. Ceilings are white and 10 feet tall, textured surface (but not that horrible acoustic popcorn stuff - 80 year old painted plaster stuff). There are windows regularly spaced on two walls - a lot of light in the mornings. Gets very dark in the afternoon and at night, windows face east and south. The room is long and narrow - 32 feet long by maybe 15 wide. At the narrow end of the room, a brick fireplace painted white, decorated with candles and clocks and stuff. Very nice antiquey look.
I will be shooting 6x6 on 120 film - Bronica C2 SLR bodies with Stroboframe flip-flash and Vivitar 285HV on a tripod. Color print film, I guess some B&W. May do some 35mm as well as a backup, since in my small town, I have to mail away the C41 process 120 - no local processors.
I want to put a light behind the model to highlight her hair, and a sidelight to light the side away from the windows. I was thinking of two continuous lights, but I noted that the color temp is not right for outdoor c41 film - I guess I'd have to use a filter? No experience with that.
I could get another couple of flashes - and I *think* I can get something that lets me mount them on a couple of cheap tripods from Walmart, right? I'm a bit confused here.
I would need to trigger them somehow. I understand I can get 'peanut slaves' from Adorama/B&H, etc - I guess they sense the main flash and fire their own light, yes? Or am I wrong about that? Or, I could get long flash sync cords - and some y-splitters of some kind. Would that be better? I know I can do some kind of wireless thing - but the transmitters/receivers seem a bit pricey for a first-time experiment - might be good long-term investments, but not now.
I thought I'd bypass the fancy stuff - barndoors, snoots, gobos, and whatever else for now. Just flash on fairly low power output aimed correctly, nothing fancy. I might be able to rig something to go between the flash in back of the model and the camera so I don' t get flare, but that's about as fancy as I can imagine.
Oh yes, and I have a Sekonic L-358 meter with an incident light dome and a flash fire/measurement capability. It does not have the optional radio transmitter, but it does have a PC-cord outlet to fire the flash(es).
So that's it. I feel I'm getting close, but I'm still a bit confused on some things.
Any help would be appreciated!
BTW - I will have a couple of opportunities to practice with this to make sure I'm doing it right before the actual shoot - so I won't be doing it cold.
Thanks,
Bill Mattocks