You may need atleast two-four bulbs to get a decent aperture/shutter settings in medium/large format. Those bulbs are rather very expensive.
Is continuous light a requirement? A soft-box(rectangular/octogonal) will do a perfect job.
Color Rendering Index is one that I have forgotten to bring up.
I found a pair of similar but half the wattage/lumens. I am a little scared when using them because of all that glass, I worry the light stand will fall over and everything will shatter.
At least I don't have to worry about the house catching fire though...
Looking forward to your results... I'd be using black and white, so I'm not so concerned for the color balance.
I found a pair of similar but half the wattage/lumens. I am a little scared when using them because of all that glass, I worry the light stand will fall over and everything will shatter.
Nice M Carter!
I am very excited to start shoot my sitters with my new set of continuous light.
It has something different than flash that attracts me.
Finding a good spiral bulb is definitely hard. Hard enough that I've basically given up. I still keep a pair in my kit so that I can use them when the stars align.I went through a spiral fluorescent phase, but at the time, I couldn't get anything with decent clean color.
Hack, not to pick on you, but this recommendation (which I've seen a number of times in similar discussions on this forum and others) is, frankly, useless.First, you need a good light meter.Second, you need a window with light coming through it. (Free!)Third, you need a chair for the person to sit down.Pose the person, then click the shutter.
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