Yeah they're fantastic IMO.
I like them. I don't feel they work all that well with Speedlites but others use them happily. Here's a link to a review giving a nice summary of the pros and cons. Note his point about lighting and the train
http://www.wexphotographic.com/blog/lastolite-hilite-background-review
I have the 6 x 7 and for up to 3/4 length portraits it works really well. I agree with the review I linked in that the train is a bit useless IMHO and I've never got a good result using it that made me feel it was worthwhile
It certainly comes into its own when you're trying to light a white background in a limited space. Using anything else would require a lot more room
PP for me takes about 5 mins max, eg;
![]()
... or failing that don't shoot full length ;-)
![]()
Apart from getting the lighting as good as you can in camera first, my PP is pretty much the same as this
Try about 18:20 in for the PP
Yeah me too, 1 stop is enough for meHave to disagree with Mark Cleghorn (again, and I'm not the only one) with his recommendation to over-expose the background by two stops. It is far too much and though it's not clear from the very blurry stills shown in that video, if you look carefully you can see how the excessive brightness has bleached the outline of the girl's hair. And that's dark hair - it would be much worse with a blonde model.
If you want a pure white background, it has to be blown, but 1% blown or 1000% blown is exactly the same shade of white. If it's over cooked, it does make for less mopping up of grey bits around the floor etc in PP, but important fine detail will be lost and unrecoverable. Aim to get the background just half a stop over-exposed, and no more than one stop max.
Oh, and to answer the OP, I think HiLites are brilliant![]()
Can same be done in light room?
How does the train attach??
Any good videos showing methods to get the train white or very close to the hilite white. dont normally use a light on the train and have struggled to get the train decent in photoshop so any videos would be helpful.
How does the train attach??
It's not black... it's white.Badly
Why on earth Lastolite decided to use black Velcro is beyond me!
It's not black... it's white.
It's a doddle. Lots of vids on it, and this is perhaps the easiest method
http://www.lastoliteschoolofphotography.com/using-the-hilite-for-event-photography
IMHO, the best results are obtained by optimising the lighting and then cleaning things up in Lightroom. It's very hard to get everything dead right in camera, but here's a guy, Keith Trainor http://www.lastoliteschoolofphotography.com/using-the-hilite-for-event-photography who does events photography with a HiLite and has to get it right first time and outputs SOOC simply because there is no time for any post processing. Note that he only has a one stop difference between the background and foreground lights![]()
Is this similar in photoshop asit is in tge lightroom video?