| 
	
 | 
 Posted by nobody special on 11/03/06 15:45 
100 bucks can rent you a very professional kit over the weekend, that 
is more controllable and flexible than anything you're going to cobble 
together from Home Depot parts. Try that, get a feel for working with 
real pro lights and you'll know what to save up for when you buy your 
own eventually. 
 
A lot of what you're asking depends on what kind of look you are going 
for. If you want it very natural looking, you're going to concentrate 
on motivated  practical sources already in the shot, then supplement 
those to enhance necessary detail or create a mood to taste.  What are 
you planning to do with the window, for example? Use it or not? Right 
there is a major issue. 
 
You can do a ceiling bounce on a white ceiling using a reflector 
worklight just to bring up the overall light level without adding 
shadows. Similarly you can bounce off a white wall that's out of shot 
to just bring up the average levels inthe scene. Just because the 
camera says it can pick up a shot in one foot-candle doesn't mean 
that's always a good idea, much less a quality shot. So bring the 
overall level up a tad using a bounce, that is cheap to do with the 
home depot type light and maybe a gel to add a subtle color cast.  You 
can work in close to actual working lights in the scene and add bounce 
cards or reflectors to add fill on the opposite side of the key. 
 
You can make a big softlight cheaply, using a tapered box (truncated 
4-sided pyramid) made from gaffer tape and white foam core and a piece 
of toughspun diffusion, all clipped tot he front of one of those 
damnable work lights, and this will give you a great look for the close 
in shots, but the spill will need to be controlled using flags or an 
eggcrate type grill attached tot he front of the unit. It is vital to 
leave plenty of air circulation space around the foam core where it is 
attached to the light; do this right and the foamcore doesn'y even get 
noticably warm after hours of use. Do it wrong, you'll have a more 
exciting production than you planned for. 
 
As to how to light the scene: is the action pretty static, or do they 
move all around the room? If it's static, you can do a variation of 
classic three-light setup: you make the keylights for each actor do 
double-duty by also working as the full for the opposite actor. For two 
actors that's two crossed keys and whatever backlight you want to add, 
combined withthe motivated practicals already in the shot. 
 
If they move a lot, then I'd block the action out and arrange 
practicals and fills to create pools they move into and out of.
 
  
Navigation:
[Reply to this message] 
 |