Rolando Gomez. Rolando Gomez's Lighting for Glamour Photography: Techniques for Digital Photographers. 2010

(Greg DeLong) #1
softboxes or beauty dishes to give you the color
of light produced by tungsten but not the
harshness, heat, or power consumption that is
the domain of traditional tungsten lamps.
Both RoloLight and Kino Flo offer optional
“tungsten” (3200K) fluorescent bulbs, though
normal still photography requirements can be
met with their traditional 5000K bulbs. Please
keep color temperature in mind if you build the
poor man’s light. Do not use standard, cheaper
fluorescent bulbs—if you do, you’ll get whacky
lighting or color casts. Instead, use the bulbs
mentioned in the “Poor Man’s Light” section.
They cost about a dollar more per bulb.

Flashtubes.


Light is the life of the image. When we can’t use
natural light, we use artificial light—usually
flash, as it too will produce the necessary color,
texture, shape, and form. Choosing a flash unit
should not be done haphazardly. You are mak-
ing an investment in something that should
serve you for years. Your purchase should be
based on making an informed decision, not im-
pulse buying.
Before we purchase any type of light, we
must look at the light source itself—not the box
that houses it. Lighting varies not only by man-
ufacturer but by lax or tight manufacturing tol-
erances and the materials from which they are
constructed, inside and out.
Lights vary in the color temperature of the
light they produce, and even though the Kelvin
scale is large in gamut, the main color tempera-
tures all photographers should know is 3200
Kelvin (K) for tungsten lamps and 5400K for
the ideal flash output. While some flash units
will vary from 5000 to 6000K, 5200 to 5400K
is the ideal range (less cold-colored). Well-built

LIGHTING BASICS 31

at 3200K (or tungsten). If I trigger the flash itself, which


is at 5400K, I get clear light—the same as the fluorescent


lights. Either way, you can freely add accent lights to your


image.


This is a great lighting setup for producing beauty and

headshots (although not much else) and works especially


well with older models, eliminating wrinkles with no fuss.


Plus, because it’s the same temperature as most photo-


graphic light sources, I can keep my camera at a 6000K


white-balance setting and still get the added warmth I like


in my images.


Kristen was photographed with the “poor man’s light.” She
was posed with her shoulders slightly turned to accent her
bustline (as op posed to a straight-on pose). (CAMERA: Olym -
pus E-1 with an Olympus Zuiko 14–54mm wide zoom lens.
SETTINGS:80mm effective focal length,^1 / 60 second shutter
speed, f/3.5, white balance 6000K, ISO 200)

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