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♪ [music playing] ♪
- Hi. This is Jay P Morgan. Today on The Slanted Lens,
we're gonna talk about what should be a simple principle
but can be kind of complicated to apply.
We're going to talk about how you combine your practical
or Tungsten lights, in a room, or on your set,
with your strobes and how you combine those two together.
It's a very simple equation.
On the exposure triangle, both the strobes and the Tungsten lights are
controlled by the ISO.
But your aperture is going to control your strobes,
and your shutters are going to control your patio lights.
So let's apply this on set and just see,
what we get when we try to control our strobes
with the aperture and all these light bulbs, with our shutter speed.
♪ [music continues] ♪
If you'll balance the room lights with your strobes,
it really gives the room a lot of warmth and depth.
It gives the room a sense to be lived in, and it makes it look more real.
So it's really important to give life to those practicals
by giving them an exposure, so let's see how we can do that.
So when you're shooting, you have two lights versus your strobes,
and your practical lights in a room like lamps and other Tungsten.
Let's look at the exposure triangle because it's going to help us
understand how to balance this two different light sources when we're
shooting with two lights that is in the same room.
Our exposure triangle has three parts: ISO, shutter and aperture.
The ISO controls the scene overall, as we raise it up or down,
we're gonna get more or less exposure. It affects both the light bulbs
in the shot and strobes equally. This leaves us two areas on the exposure
triangle that allows us to control two different light sources, the shutter speed
and the aperture. The shutter speed affects the light bulbs or Tungsten lights
and the aperture controls the strobes. Let's talk about why that is.
In a dark room where there is very little ambient light, the shutter speed does not
affect the strobes. It can be long or short,
it just has no effect on the strobes.
The flash duration of strobes is too fast to be affected by the shutter speed.
The only exception to this rule is that faster shutter speed that's faster
than 1/80th of a second, they are going to start to clip the flash duration
of the strobes and darken the image, but most of the time we're balancing
light bulbs to the practicals of the room with the strobes,
we're going to want longer shutter speed so this is not a problem.
So the strobes are not affected by the shutter speed
so the aperture is going to control the strobes.
If I turn my strobes on, I got a reading of f8
at my subject and with the light meter, I set the cameras after to F8.
The light bulbs in the room, at 1/60th of a second,
are gonna be way too dark,
so we're going to need and lengthen that shutter speed.
I now lengthen the shutter speed until I get a correct exposure
on the practical lights or light bulbs in the room. It's a
very simple equation. Let's take a look in an example. My strove exposure is F14, the
shutter is 1/50th of a second. His face has a correct exposure but the light bulbs are
a little dark. I want to make them brighter and not affect his face. I'm
going to lengthen the exposure to see what it does to the light bulbs. Here we are at
1/25th of a second. Press much time so obviously they are brighter. We're going
to go to 1/30th of a second, obviously the bulbs are getting brighter, he's away from
the bulbs and not staying next to them,
so the light bulbs are not affecting his face at all.
Here's 1/6th of the shutter speed and starting to pull out.
When we're using a high aperture like F14,
we're going to need a very long exposure for those light bulbs.
But remember, we're looking at these light bulbs,
we're looking at the filament of the light bulbs,
so it's like looking directly at the flash tube.
If this was in a lamp, it would need to be much longer,
because we're not looking at the direct light source,
we're looking at the effect of the light source.
I'm going to 1/25th of a second, and for me that looks the best.
It's really a matter of personal opinion,
but I like 1/25th of a second. Let's move on to our shoot.
We did a shot combining light bulbs with strobes and let's see what we got.
We hung 30 light bulbs from cords in a shot,
30 sounds like a lot, but it wasn't as many as I thought it would be.
These are old fashioned light bulbs, they are fun to work with,
you see that really fun-filament inside the bulb?
I wanted to have a black and white image,
black cords with white lights, black hair with our model,
and the white dress had some black accents. She is standing in the middle
of the light so the shorter I can make my shutter, the less exposure I'm going to
get from the light bulbs on her face. I'm on a Tamron 70-200mm lens, my focal length is
about 120mm, it's slightly long.
My aperture is F6.3, because I want a shallow depth of fields,
so light bulbs had a lot of focus on the background.
I started making exposure at 1/4th of a second,
and shortened them until I get the best exposure.
Here's my image at 1/50th of a second. The exposure is almost too long,
I'm starting to see just a little bit of light on her face but I think I'm okay.
We're gonna move forward at 1/50th of a second. I then added the background
strove, I dialed the power down on those, until they looked good as a light
background. I then added a flexible flash upfront with an octadome,
it has a grid on it. It's going to come underneath,
because I wanted to look like a soft glow of the lights on her face.
I then added another flex flash as a rim light on her,
it's got a 7 inch reflector with a 40 degree grid in it.
Here's some of the final images from this set-up.
♪ [music playing] ♪
Just to change things up, I then added a blue jell up to the background light
and shot some more images.
I added a 39 inch reflector, just to add a little bit of feel on her face.
Here's some of the final images from the set-up.
♪ [music playing] ♪
It's not a hard concept to grasp, but a hard principle to apply.
This principle is the same for sunsets,
outside lights at night, lamps, any kind of constant light source.
Aperture controls the strobe, the shutter controls the secondary or constant
light source. So go out and apply this principle, make it work in the images you
are shooting, just keep those cameras rolling, keep on clicking.
Welcome back to Lens Pro To Go. Great responses that we've had in the past and
joining us once again. They have a great rental service where you call them up, you
can use either your app or you'd call them up or you can e-mail them.
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It's just a great service. I find it very useful when I'm on location.
Lens Pro To Go.
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♪ [music playing] ♪
We had a great time shooting with that FlexFlash on set with all those
lightbulbs. It really was an easy thing to be able to illustrate how you combine
Tungsten or your practical lights with your strobes, so I hope you find that very
interesting. I hope that formula makes a little more sense to you now.
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