• Welcome to Photrio!
    Registration is fast and free. Join today to unlock search, see fewer ads, and access all forum features.
    Click here to sign up

Suggestions for lighting an ice rink

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
202,907
Messages
2,847,370
Members
101,534
Latest member
michaelhfreeman
Recent bookmarks
0

backseatpilot

Subscriber
Joined
May 28, 2022
Messages
23
Location
Massachusetts, USA
Format
Multi Format
Wasn't quite sure where to put this - hopefully this is the right forum.

I don't do a whole lot of sports photography, but I have an opportunity to go a little nuts so I'd be interested in getting some feedback on some ideas. One of my other interests is curling, and I've kind of established myself as the club photographer. We held a bonspiel last summer which I shot, and the images came out... fine. The club was very happy with them, but I'm kind of a perfectionist so maybe I'm being overly critical. I did the "action" part of the event with available light (overhead flourescents) only, because I was told the players would be very sensitive to strobes going off. The light's about what you would expect from a bunch of industrial fluorescent lighting. (This is what I shot last year - Flickr album). Generally kind of flat and unflattering light, darkened faces.

I'm going to shoot the same event this year, and I know I can do better. I want to do better! I have several months to think this through (and many league nights to experiment ahead of time). I've read through Strobist's old posts on shooting local basketball, and I'm thinking a lot of the basics would be pretty similar with the one added wrinkle of trying to make the strobes as unobtrusive to the players as possible. I'm thinking either clamp a strobe to the glass at either end of the rink or some tall light stands, pointed down at the ice and then... flag the light so it doesn't carry down the rink?

I'm willing to put some money and effort into this.
 
I think you should stick with the existing available light, but perhaps change the type of colour film you are using and/or make sure you have the correct filtration for colour balance.
 
Is this the same lighting as a typical hockey rink? And are you shooting film or digital? If digital, hockey shooting tends to underexposed so I shoot +2, works every time. Never shot hockey on film, but I would think a typical film camera meter will also underexpose the same amount.
 
Wasn't quite sure where to put this - hopefully this is the right forum.

I don't do a whole lot of sports photography, but I have an opportunity to go a little nuts so I'd be interested in getting some feedback on some ideas. One of my other interests is curling, and I've kind of established myself as the club photographer. We held a bonspiel last summer which I shot, and the images came out... fine. The club was very happy with them, but I'm kind of a perfectionist so maybe I'm being overly critical. I did the "action" part of the event with available light (overhead flourescents) only, because I was told the players would be very sensitive to strobes going off. The light's about what you would expect from a bunch of industrial fluorescent lighting. (This is what I shot last year - Flickr album). Generally kind of flat and unflattering light, darkened faces.

I'm going to shoot the same event this year, and I know I can do better. I want to do better! I have several months to think this through (and many league nights to experiment ahead of time). I've read through Strobist's old posts on shooting local basketball, and I'm thinking a lot of the basics would be pretty similar with the one added wrinkle of trying to make the strobes as unobtrusive to the players as possible. I'm thinking either clamp a strobe to the glass at either end of the rink or some tall light stands, pointed down at the ice and then... flag the light so it doesn't carry down the rink?

I'm willing to put some money and effort into this.

I don't even see a problem. You have the great advantage that the ice is acting as a great reflector, bouncing light into the shadows from the overhead lighting. I think,you've done the best one can do in this situation!
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom