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- Stevie
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Remember to drop the speedlights wide angle glass...my 550EX fills the smaller one fine...and the FITP flash does so at full pelt and wide angle...
STEVIER
STEVIER
If you have the sandwich of material...dont cut all the way up or down...then throw a bit of needle & thread at each end...SORTED...!!!
STEVIER
This shot shows you what it was like before the key light. You can see clearly that the 540ez is having a hard time lighting it all evenly. But then it was on 1/2 or 1/4 power - I cant quite remember - I would imagine I could do a lot better given a bit more time to set things up. Still not too bad. I think that the creases would dissapear with a flash lighting the other side of the highlite too...
Yes I'm fairly sure 2 flashes would be required... I'm currently looking at some Lencarta studio flash kit which would leave both my speedlights free to light the box.
Edit: Re your edit - I would normally have some fill light set up which would naturally soften the shadows but yes I can see in this case I would need to achieve that in post. The shots above really were just a tester and don't represent a setup I would typically use.
i have managed to be one of the first people to pick up one of FITP's large hilites second hand lol.
i have sold a lens to fund a second sb600, so i now have 2x sb600's c/w konig light stands and ball heads etc etc and i have one of FITP's 33" brollies.
do i have enough equipment to have some success with the hilite?
one poking inside the hilite and one infront of the subject? or do i need two flash's to successfully light the hilite?
Al
EOS JD, do you use a meter to set your background lights or just chimp it as you go??
cheers, so if i exhaust my sb600 fleet on the hilite, should i then be considering another for the subject, or would the camera onboard be sufficient?
cheers, Al
TBH as Hilite would be mainly used indoors...Been considering buying a single plug in flash...Cheap of course...
Lets the flashes run on battery at reduced power...so more use...got extra rechargables but dont want to have to keep replacing them...
Cheap plug in flash...any ideas recommends...
STEVIER
Gary,
Agreed - it looks like a lot of post required from the current images posted, but I think with a little work it will be possible to achieve much better results. Although I'm not sure its realistic to get a portable & completely post-free set up - but I'd bet we can get pretty close!. My examples that I posted are miles away from this - but then they were done with just two speedlights. I've got some more lights turning up this week so should be able to light the thing properly!
Out of interest how many lights do you use in the studio to achieve processing free results?
Jeremy.
I'll be in a position to use 4 lights later in the week (albeit using 2 speedlights for the hilight, not powered strobes) so I'll post some more pics and see how close I can get. I guess for me I'm not doing (or planning on doing!) large volumes of work so I can get away with spending a little more time doing my PS than you can.
Be interested to see your setup guide - have been watching your studio/shop thread for some time!
Jeremy.
I don't want to be the voice of discontent, but if you are doing any volume with these things, surely you will be heading for a breakdown with the amount of post processing on those floors?
There HAS to be a solution which allows you to get this right in camera, and not require ANY processing. Otherwise, your shoot time is going to be doubled at least with the amount of work required on each file?
I have built one of these in the studio and now have it processing free, but my floor is hardly portable. If you can find a reflective white or see through material which is highly portable, then you are into a winning setup.
Also I can't see how these could possibly work with only one BG light, at least not properly?
Gary.
Gary
PP on the floor takes me anywhere from 20 seconds to one minute max! I appreciate that might be a minute longer than you want to spend but for most of us it's not a problem. When I did the nursery images it was more of a pain when I was editing 800+ images although many of them did not incude the floor in the shot.
Gary
PP on the floor takes me anywhere from 20 seconds to one minute max! I appreciate that might be a minute longer than you want to spend but for most of us it's not a problem. When I did the nursery images it was more of a pain when I was editing 800+ images although many of them did not incude the floor in the shot.
This one seems to have quite a bad overexposure issue Gary. Is it recoverable?
Also you have to be aware that very few people using these items have a studio and few if any will be running a full time studio. A small bit of PP work is not an issue to most of us but I can see that in running a studio, you need the setup to be as PP free as possible (time=money).
There's a video on youtube where a guy uses a couple of cheap strobes pointed directly at the floor to burn out the floor. If I had a spare light I'd probably use my rotalux strip box to light the floor but as it stands it doesn't really cause me any great issues.