![]() Since then I've learned a lot about falloff, lumens, lux, CRI, and all that stuff. (Not that I've even had enough light to play with to choose a look anyway.)ĪRTIFICIAL LIGHT: My artificial light so far has been a DIY foam-board Lowel Ego with a socket splitter containing two cheap 100W-eq. ![]() At the iPhone's native ISO of 20, I can make it look like nighttime in here at 9AM, but because the walls are light, it's not exactly a low-key look. NATURAL LIGHT?: There are windows on two sides, but due to their design, the direction they face, and the outside overhangs, they don't let a lot of light in (from a photo/video perspective). I don't have a ton of floor space and there is only one good wall in the room to use as a background. It's roughly 14' across x 12' front-to-back x 8' high with light-colored walls (textured with an awful spray-on texture that I hate, but can't do anything about). WORKSPACE: Due to unfortunate life circumstances (pandemic + brain tumor while living abroad), my working space for the foreseeable future is my bedroom at my parents' place in the middle of nowhere. I'm doing it all on my iPhone 8+ with manual camera controls for now, because I know from experience that GAS is very real and that lighting is way more fundamental than your camera. I've been drowning in Amazon listings and YouTube reviews for the past month and I am stuck in "analysis paralysis," so I hope Reddit can help me out with some unbiased help.ĬONTEXT: I am a hobbyist just getting started playing around with food photography and talking-head videos. Tl dr- Are there any LED panels under $150 with CRI >= 95 that will give me more than ~2,000 lux 1 meter 5600K? u/shickey maintains a videography-themed weekly challenge subreddit, so if you're looking for something to shoot head on over to /r/DoCreativeĬamera, NLE, year started, general location Requests for feedback or comments must be posted in the monthly ‘I Made This/Feedback’ threadĪ full copy of the rules can be read here.Use of affiliate links must be disclosed in post.Links posted must relate directly to videography.If you're looking for professional-only discussion, give /r/videoprofessionals a shot! r/videography is a subreddit intended for all skill levels, from beginners all the way through to professionals to come together to discuss the trade. For videographers interested in weddings, events, live performances, music videos, TV, corporate, live streaming, sports, real estate, YouTube, home videos and more, welcome to /r/videography. Note: Camera and light stand are Not included.Destined for the big screen? Try /r/filmmakers. ![]()
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