Michael Sewell
Suspended / Banned
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- Michael A. Sewell
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A close friend of mine is an educator for one of the largest UK based training companies within the hair salon industry. Rachel asked me to go along to a training event, where a new hair colouring system was to be launched. Take a few headshots, a few of the entertainment and training, and that’s it. Easy Peasy!
Well, I’ve known Rachel a long time, and it’s rarely been exactly as planned. It’s always bigger and far more complicated
Erm... what room?
I was given a space five feet by five feet, with two deeply padded and multicoloured walls. Now, I could actually stand just outside the allocated five by five feet, because there was a rail that governed one side of my designated area, a table for the second barrier, and of course the two walls.
Meh!
Well, we work with what we’re given, and I was given a very interesting wall
As usual, I had taken a shedload of lighting gear, ranging from 600Ws location heads, right through to the tiniest of miniature speedlights. The bigger lights were not really going to cut it here for a number of reasons. For a start, they would eat into my available space, and secondly, due to the minimal distance between light source and subject, I was going to need very little light anyway, and 600Ws was going to be a major overkill.
For the background, I used a manual speedlight (Yongnuo YN560 II) at a ¼ output, and placed so as to fire across the wall, skimming it. I had to flag it with a piece of cardboard and a lump of chewing gum (note to self: replace lost cards and elastic bands), to prevent any light contamination of my main subject.
Immediately above the background light, I placed a second gridded speedlight facing towards the subject. This provided the accent light seen frame left.
Finally, the main light was provided by a Lencarta Atom 180Ws, firing through a 90cm folding Octa at just above head height and barely camera right.
Nikon D3 1/125th sec ISO200 24-70mm f8
This second image was taken in the same manner
Nikon D3 1/125th sec ISO200 24-70mm f8
And the same again
Nikon D3 1/125th sec ISO200 24-70mm f8
This is the most basic of lighting, in the tightest of spaces.
Budget Version:
Other than substituting the Atom for another speedlight, you can't get much cheaper or much more basic. The folding 90cm Octa was an ebay special at about £15 or £20 and works fine , although the fixing bracket is flakey!
Things to bear in mind:
Even the steepest of challenges usually has a workaround. Here, the main challenge was getting the lighting gear and model within the 5x5 area, and then flagging the various light sources to avoid cross contamination.
Craig