Lanta Light-Arch Exteriors-Aurora 12T - outdoor lighting
Lanta Light-Arch Exteriors-Aurora 12T
Dazzling and robust, the Lanta Aurora 12T™ is a tri-colour Outdoor Spot designed to enhance external features such as hotels, monuments, gardens and office blocks. Powerful LEDs need little maintenance and with low power requirements are both environmentally and commercially friendly. A mouthwatering range of pre-set RGB colour mixes and chases are included onboard, or as you'd expect, DMX signals are fully supported from remote control gear. In short, the Aurora 12T can be quickly installed, easily configured and run with a minimum of fuss.
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Mixing Flash and Ambient Light Part 1 - outdoor lighting
Mixing Flash and Ambient Light Part 1
Chris Burfoot teaches how to mix Flash with ambient sunlight
[Video Rating: 4 / 5[/random]
Very Nice Video.
ReplyDeleteGo'blimey! thanks for the tip guv' worked well for me.
ReplyDeleteuncle Fred is not fat
ReplyDeleteChris, thank you very much for your help!
ReplyDeletenice tut
ReplyDeleteCONTEST GIVE AWAY ! Green Screen Contest ( Open / World wide July 12, 2012)
ReplyDeletew ww.youtube.com/user/Lincoshop?feature=mhee
Exceptional - technique very simply explained.
ReplyDeleteThe flash will freeze the bride, and the garden isn't moving much, so won't be a problem.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tutorial. Very well explained. But I do have a question though ..... if I don't have a Light Meter, will using the meter on my dslr be the same? And how would I know what Aperture/SS to start off with? Thanks again for informative tutorial. :)
ReplyDeletelol yes i agree!!
ReplyDeleteI am 3 years late...
ReplyDeleteHey, I was thrilled to be able to get the answer right about lowering the shutter speed to brighten the ambient light. I've been reading Bryan Peterson's excellent book 'Understanding Flash Photography', and it's taught me a lot. Very clear, helpful video. If metronomic found it boring, why did he continue watching?
ReplyDeleteMost BORING tutorial ever.
ReplyDeletecan't you still get a sharp shot a lower than 60 of a second?
ReplyDeleteGood stuff! Normalize your audio...
ReplyDeletePerhaps turn up the gain on your sound input.
ReplyDeleteits all about dynamic range!
ReplyDeleteI could hardly hear you...
ReplyDeletePardon me - uncle Fred here. I shoot with one and may be two flashes - assuming the subject is stationery during a wedding shoot - and with my system I can vary the power of each group on my camera. The challenge in this type of photography is where you place your flash(es) ... as to the exposure, at least for me, varying it on my camera is a snap with TTL metering.
ReplyDeleteYes, it is more accurate than the light meter in your camera. Couple of quick points: The camera meter could be used in many different modes (spot metering, center-weight average, evaluative, partial) with dedicated lightmeters you can (not with all of them but with good ones): 1- Very accurate spot meter (more accurate than with the camera spot meter), incident light, reflected light (cameras only measure reflected light).
ReplyDeleteyou can also read ambient/flash ratio. hope this helped
I'm uncle Fred, but I would be using my Pentax Spotmatic and use available light. Although, I wouldn't follow you around like a puppy because that would be rude. You are trying to run a business, and I wouldn't be surprised if you punched me in the face. Instead, I would be taking candid photos. I love photos that capture real emotion. This is a very informative video. Does that light meter get a more accurate light reading then using the camera's meter?
ReplyDeleteThis video is super informative. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much! Great video! Very informative!
ReplyDeleteGreat vids.
ReplyDeleteWow, first serious video of photography I've ever seen! Excellent!
ReplyDelete