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Showing posts with label lighting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lighting. Show all posts

Monday, August 4, 2008

Lighting for Video: Instructional Links

Given that proper attention to lighting and technique is one of the things that beginning and amateur filmmakers can gloss over, and that it is also quite possibly the number one way to make your project look professional, here are a few useful and instructional links on lighting for film and video...

A good ARTICLE at CineObscure.com.

AMERICAN CINEMATOGRAPHER: A great resource, and they have back issues online with helpful photos.

The ARRI LIGHTING HANDBOOK, with information not solely limited to use with Arri's.

A FEW TIPS at FilmSchoolOnline.

Some QUICK TIPS on 3-Point and Interview Lighting, and a COUPLE MORE.

Some PODCASTS from Izzy Digital Video.

And a quick VIDEO from DVCreators on how to set up a 3 point shoot.

And finally, a good POST over at BlueSky-Web.
Posted by Jack Cabbage at 4:25 PM 0 comments
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Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Lighting: Selected Readings

Regardless of what you are shooting with - the EX1, HVX, XHA1, the RED, 35mm film, your cellphone - the skills of the people involved are always more important than the equipment being used. Eric Clapton will be able to produce better music by strumming a tennis racket than I could with a brand new Fender Stratocaster. And the same goes for making movies.

The question keeps arising in forums everywhere. How do I make footage on my A1 / Z1U / EX1 / HVX / DVX / (insert non-film camera here) look like film? Or even more challenging (and important), how do I make it look like a big budget production? Or at least professional? And the standard answers come back... Shoot in 24p, color grade carefully in post, tweak the camera's settings... And most importantly, learn about lighting. And the advice is never "here are three quick lighting fixes for dummies, use them." The advice is always "learn about lighting."

And it is sound advice. Lighting technique is one of the things that will set a professional project apart from the work of beginners quite quickly. To the layperson, it may not register what the difference is. To the trained eye, it will be obvious. And that's not even getting into the subtleties of what lighting can do to convey a mood, or the possibilities in going against lighting conventions for artistic reasons, and so on.

With that in mind, here are a few useful links on lighting. The more you know...

"IT'S NOT THE BUDGET..." from ProVideoCoalition.

COMPLETE EEJIT'S GUIDE to Film and Video Lighting for Low Budgets.

DIY LIGHTING at Shuttertalk.

TECHLEARNING: A CRASH COURSE in Lighting for Video.

UTEXAS LIGHTING TECHNIQUES for Video.

The following are also a few recommended books on the subject...

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Posted by Jack Cabbage at 8:59 AM 0 comments
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