detune
Member
Just wondering whats the difference of a bit square soft box or the octagonal ones... Obviously the light must be shaped differently but is it obvious?
Thanks
Doug
Thanks

Doug
Flotsam said:I think that much of it has to do with the desired shape of catchlights in the eyes in portraits and reflections in shiny objects.
THANK YOU!!! (Three exclamation points) for that site! There is a WORLD of useful information here. I've only skimmed superficially, but I'm sure that it will intrude on my busy (argggh!) schedule in the future.bjorke said:The spill shape will change too. The bigger the box and the closer it is to the subject, the more you'll see a difference.
IIRC, http://www.photoflexlightingschool.com/ has some pages relating to different types (essentially some sample setups to show you why you need to buy their various sorts of kit)
doughowk said:An area Pro prefers umbrellas with diffusers to softboxes. One reason is the catchlight is more natural.
Also, Thank you for the above link - much to learn.
Flotsam said:I think that much of it has to do with the desired shape of catchlights in the eyes in portraits and reflections in shiny objects.
I've never liked umbrellas, especially big ones. They are too self-filling. I like to have more control over the light. Small light boxes or hard lights.blansky said:The problem with umbrellas is that the light sprays everywhere and is not controlled the same as with a softbox. If a person has a catchlight fetish and only likes round ones you can buy an insert for a softbox that makes it round.
Michael
Flotsam said:I've never liked umbrellas, especially big ones. They are too self-filling. I like to have more control over the light. Small light boxes or hard lights.
Yes, in some cases, but more so I feel to provide maximum surface area with shallow depth, the main point of a soft box being to increase the physical size of the light source, so the "highlight" is larger than the subject, and the light wraps the subject evenly from a greater arc of angles. What we call soft light could also be called large light. Not about intensity, but size.
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