I was in the supermarket today (bad bad idea on a Saturday!) and there was a photographer set up in the back of the shop, taking photos of children for a "Bonnie Baby" competition in a local paper.
Anyway the point here is I was a wee bit confused with his set up.
He had two lights, at a HUGE height (over 6 foot high I would have said) each light was directly in line with him, but at either side (IYKWIM) they seemed large lights, big giant heads on them. The thing confusing me the most was he had brollies on the lights, set like reflector brollies but they were shoot through diffuser brollies, I thought at first maybe they were white reflectors, but I checked and they were definitely shoot through ones.
What would be the benefit of setting up like this, or was it just a flawed set up?
During all of the research I have done on lighting for studio portraiture I have never once seen this set up advised, so I am a little curious.
Anyway the point here is I was a wee bit confused with his set up.
He had two lights, at a HUGE height (over 6 foot high I would have said) each light was directly in line with him, but at either side (IYKWIM) they seemed large lights, big giant heads on them. The thing confusing me the most was he had brollies on the lights, set like reflector brollies but they were shoot through diffuser brollies, I thought at first maybe they were white reflectors, but I checked and they were definitely shoot through ones.
What would be the benefit of setting up like this, or was it just a flawed set up?
During all of the research I have done on lighting for studio portraiture I have never once seen this set up advised, so I am a little curious.