Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/09/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On 9/16/05 2:34 PM, "Eric" <ericm@pobox.com> typed: > David: > >> i am leaning toward the Alien Bees. > > That's what I got. > > http://www.alienbees.com/flash.html > > The B1600. 13 ft light stand. I can't imagine wanting to extend a light > up > 13 ft...the 10 ft would be more than sufficient for me in terms of height. > But I liked the idea of a larger footprint. 4 ft vs 3ft for the 10ft. > Since I'm hanging a 5' umbrella off it, I wanted a stand that was as stable > as possible. > > I got the 5 ft translucent white umbrella. (The 32 in one, too. Just > because like Mark said, it's like an elephant in an elevator. :) > > I'm just glad that 5 ft was the biggest umbrella alien bees has. > Otherwise, > I'd have probably gone larger. :) I think this is really a good size. > Not > *too* unmanageable, but it's like a good sized window. > > -- > Eric > http://canid.com/ > Makes of a real nice light quality from what I see on your shots but I bet you'd have even better luck not shooting through but bouncing off. You'll get a softer none shadow which works out will for lighting up a whole room and not having your f stops changing too much from one side of the room to the next. It might just work put it up against a wall where it probably is anyway or you can put a back cover on it for a tad more efficiency. Or if your wall is near white just use bounce flash. In other words the wall. My favorite technique I've done family portraits this way the sitting on the sofa vanilla varietals. The whole wall which you've got lit with your head with a simple reflector or a flat one or bare bulb pointed in that direction (the flat thing prevents back spill directly onto your subject itself) becomes the light source itself. Or ceiling which tends to be white ceiling paint and also tends to be where light fixtures as well are luminaries such as the sun and moon and Venus tends to be fixated. In orbit of course. Around us. Mark Rabiner Photography Portland Oregon http://rabinergroup.com/