Rolleiflexible
Member
Guy, greetings. As Morpheus said: Welcome to the real world. 

I'd probably start with three lamps of the same wattage, just because it's easier to conceptualize a hollywood setup that way, where the power of the light is controlled mainly by distance from the subject.
thanks to all for your responses. i realize there is no "one" answer to my question. but, on the other hand, i'd rather not just start buy lighting wearing a blindfold, so to speak.
Chris, i'm surely going to try to shoot single portraits before i try groups. and, i've found that very few faces are flattered by close-ups that are too close. from head and shoulders to 3/4 is where i'd like to start.
would it make sense to start with 3 lamps (key, fill, and hair) with a 100W, 150W, and 250W bulb? or would some other combination of wattages be better? or should i get 3 lamps and 3 bulbs of each wattage, just in case?
btw, fwiw, my primary shooting space is 23 feet in length (over 25, if i move some stuff out of the way), 11 feet in width and 12 feet in height.
Your shooting space is of course relative to the format and focal length to be used and the subject "height" you want to cover (in this case, your max is 3/4), so your space seems fine .. I mean, even under worse conditions in a more cramped space you could still have your subject stand with their back actually touching the wall . . . this was done all the time in the days when the long exposure times required that the subject not move even a hair's breath. That's why, even today even with digital (ewwe, I said it) the "look" evokes a Hollywood pose. PS - Don't forget electrical and ventilation issues.
between this thread and the referenced thread on MM, there seems to be sharp disagreement as to whether 1k or 2k Watts are the minimum required, or more than 300W is way too much, or whether 50W will do nicely.
since i can just as easily get 100W, 150W, or 250W, or 2x250W (ie, 500W total) halogen bulbs, is there any consensus on:
1. how many lamps i should start out with?
2. what wattage they should be?
(sorry to be so cranky this morning, but i'd like to avoid "buyer's remorse" if possible -- not so much as to money (although that is a factor), as much as wasted time on disappointing results, going back and forth, etc.)
As far as "Hollywood" portraiture is concerned if you accept the premise that George Hurrell wasn't the only photographer of that era even one light (presumably a fresnel spot) can be enough. A.L. ("Whitey") Schafer was a sometime-proponent of this technique, using it to create many excellent portraits of Loretta Young, for example.
Having said that, I tend to agree with David. Three lights of equal output are good for a basic setup; four if you want to light the background (I do). If you want to go full-speed-ahead, I'd say at least five lights and a small selection of bulbs (or, for the Hollywood purists, "globes") of different wattages. And, always: BARN DOORS and a good lens shade! Lastly, unless your prefer your main light to always come from the side, you'll be frustrated unless you acquired a boom.... or two. Anyway.. you have the book. Take a look at it for specifics.
... you could still have your subject stand with their back actually touching the wall . . . this was done all the time in the days when the long exposure times required that the subject not move even a hair's breath.
That's why, even today even with digital (ewwe, I said it) the "look" evokes a Hollywood pose.
PS - Don't forget electrical and ventilation issues.
....David and Sander, among others, are shovelling-out some excellent advice on this thread (and on the whole forum!) on the Hollywood style .. perhaps more relevant to your question.
Singlo, are these 35mm shots you posted? They are very nice, considering the generous "studio size" you have to work with (madness indeed!). Nice tonality and the look is certainly good, lovely model, by the way. Which film, camera & lens setup were used? tim
i've subsequently purchased 2 solo units of the same make, and now plan on rsplitting the dual unit into another 2 separates, thus totalling 4 lamps. i also have 6 250W halogen bulbs, 3 150W bulbs, and 3 100W bulbs.
and, i bought a 50-ft roll of cinefoil.
Yeah i love this photo. This was done with overhead light on boom arm.regarding a one-light shot of Loretta Young, i found this shot by Horst, which seems to have been taken with one light (to my untrained eye):
http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/0810941635/ref=sib_dp_pt/002-1913424-6634468#reader-link
Also get some wooden washing line pegs to rig the cine foil to the light. Don't use gaffer's tape as it may melt.i plan on using the cinefoil as a sub for barn doors, until i can figure out which "real" photo lamps to use.
have you ever seen a shot taken with digital, then tranferred to silver-based film, and then optically printed in a wet lab on fibre-based b&w paper?
Here are a few pics taken a few days ago in my "zoo cage studio"-well it is my tiny bedroom full of furnitures and lights; so cramped that the model stands a foot from the background and there is no room for hair lights. Working space here is 1.5m x 2.5m; madness isn't it? Can it get any worst? . . . PS photos taken with one to two fresnels or Dedo plus two Chimera as softlights. They were not intended to look like Hollywood style but I just played with the lights drawing inspirations from old hollywood photos. - Mr. Satan
Auteur theorists will no doubt rise in revolt, but I think like the Novelle Vague owed its revolutionary styles of production to a basic technical break-through in lightweight location equipment, so to did Hollwood Studio "styles" emerge in their fight to regain enough illumination to continue their film factory output.
Just out of interest.....According to David Brooks(somewhat anti-Hurrell), old Hollywood masters used Kodak Tri-X ASA 320, the old film is red sensitive which is "favorable to skin tones, brilliant highlights, and soft contrast shadows" :
http://forum.shutterbug.com/forum/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=4845&an=0&page=2#Post4845
He noted:
If you stick a light red filter (not deep red) on modern B&W panchromatic film, you can imitate the red sensitivity of old Kodak Tri-X right? Maybe not a good thing to do in practice because it darkens the viewfinder plus loss of light...also lightening the lip tone of women.
why is it so difficult for so many Strobocops to grasp that the quality of strobe, especially on the human complexion, is not the same as tungsten?.... I'm using strobes and all that 'blue light' hitting my models was picking up tons of freckles and other nonsense that I didn't want to have anything to do with.
why is it so difficult for so many Strobocops to grasp that the quality of strobe, especially on the human complexion, is not the same as tungsten?
Just a little bit of chauvinism from me here, but the Nouvelle Vague owes a big deal to Michel Brault, a cinematographer and director from Québec, who worked for the NFB and collaborated with the Éclair company in France to develop the first shoulder-held 35mm camera...
Just a small point, but as far as I know (and I could be wrong) the camera he collaborated on with Jean-Pierre Beauviala was the legendary 16 mm NPR ('noiseless portable reflex'), first produced in about 1960. I still have one, by the way. You can see the cameras themselves in action in a few movies - the sighting I remember the best was in Themroc.
Best,
Helen
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