I'm looking for the major horsepower to use in conjunction with shooting wetplate and/or daguerrotypes. Coating my own dry plates was bad enough- they're around ISO 1, and even with my 750ws monolights at full power, I was getting f4 or so. I would have had to do multiple pops to get to f8, considering the lens on the studio camera only goes to f5, and I didn't have enough depth of field on my still life.
My other option would be to go with some high-output fluorescents to get the UV needed for the antique processes, so my subjects aren't trying to sit still for more than 30 seconds at a time.
Why not a big, powerful HMI light? Yes your subject must sit for 10 to 15 seconds, but everyone had to do that in the 19th century.
Don't forget to soften the light with a shoot through scrim.
Broncolor makes such nice stuff that I can't afford.
looks like I'll just have to start saving my pennies, and shooting more photo jobs to cobble together the scratch to get a Broncolor set.
Anyone besides me remember the old Ascor system where you could daisy chain umpteen capacitor banks & dump it through the single "Sunlight" head 96,000WS?
I'm looking into my options for high-output studio flash units. I'm interested in which units are the most efficient, so that they really do put out something resembling what their watt-seconds suggest they do. For example, I know that the Speedotron BlackLine 48xx series has a guide number 50% higher than the 24xx series. Does anyone know where I can go to get this information consistently, to make an informed decision about lighting equipment? It seems like most manufacturers don't want to put out comparable information so you can't shop their equipment on meaningful comparisons.
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