sk66
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 9,557
- Name
- Steven
- Edit My Images
- Yes
I was playing around with a concept image and this is one of the versions I took. Shot on black using two spots. One for the pool of light, and one for the central pawn. The result has pretty heavy shadows cast by the pieces and I can't really come up with a good way to avoid that. The lights I used were (essentially) LED flashlights, but I am in no way limited to that.
I considered a BD. But gridded it would make "the tops" a lot hotter than the rest (unless there was a lot of bounce from the board). At 22" it would have to be VERY close to keep the pool of light tight, particularly if diffused in order to get more wrap... and that would probably prohibit the angle of the shot as well as have a lot of falloff.
Anything "smaller" than the pool of light/board is going to cast outward shadows similar to what I have. I considered fill (tried reflectors but there wasn't enough spill) but that seems likely to ruin the pool of light...maybe flagged off of the floor/board? That seems difficult at best... I just can't see getting fill that far into the scene while also keeping it off the floor.
I did a similar shot on white using a much larger light source (4ft light ~3ft away) which of course eliminated the hard shadows... but then I'm left with some tedious selection work in post in order to fake the BG/pool of light.
I really can't come up with an obvious answer... what am I missing?
About the only thing I can come up with is something like the BD with diffuser and a DIY large/reflective snoot.... it's starts larger than the board at a distance to reduce/minimize falloff/hot spots (and to allow the angle of the shot), and the "reflective snoot" helps hold the edges and pushes light back towards the middle.... sounds like a bit of a PITA.

The First Move by Steven Kersting, on Flickr
I considered a BD. But gridded it would make "the tops" a lot hotter than the rest (unless there was a lot of bounce from the board). At 22" it would have to be VERY close to keep the pool of light tight, particularly if diffused in order to get more wrap... and that would probably prohibit the angle of the shot as well as have a lot of falloff.
Anything "smaller" than the pool of light/board is going to cast outward shadows similar to what I have. I considered fill (tried reflectors but there wasn't enough spill) but that seems likely to ruin the pool of light...maybe flagged off of the floor/board? That seems difficult at best... I just can't see getting fill that far into the scene while also keeping it off the floor.
I did a similar shot on white using a much larger light source (4ft light ~3ft away) which of course eliminated the hard shadows... but then I'm left with some tedious selection work in post in order to fake the BG/pool of light.
I really can't come up with an obvious answer... what am I missing?
About the only thing I can come up with is something like the BD with diffuser and a DIY large/reflective snoot.... it's starts larger than the board at a distance to reduce/minimize falloff/hot spots (and to allow the angle of the shot), and the "reflective snoot" helps hold the edges and pushes light back towards the middle.... sounds like a bit of a PITA.

The First Move by Steven Kersting, on Flickr
Last edited:

