Livin The Dream
Suspended / Banned
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- Kris
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So are the rogue grids the way to go, or is there a decent cheapy alternatives? Could do with 3 of them.
Honestly, I don't see the point of grids w/ speedlights... the light is going through a fresnel/focusing lens and almost all of the light is very directional already.
However, I do see a benefit to snoots. Change the speedlight's distance to change the area of coverage, change the speedlight's zoom to change the outer falloff/transition.
Check out Lastolite strobo systems... Mount to a frame magnetically that you Velcro to your flash. Can also mount gels, barn doors, snoot and a gobo.
don't remember pricing on them, sorry.
I've used them for plenty of things, specifically for some of the series I did of the veg on black, where I want to keep the light very directional. Tend to use gridded softboxes for most of the food stuff though... But they have their use. Let me know if you want to 'have a play' and I'll let you borrow some bits if you want.This was my initial thought but the circular systems will change the shape slightly.
Are you using them for any of your product stuff Beth? Look decent, will check them out.
I've used them for plenty of things, specifically for some of the series I did of the veg on black, where I want to keep the light very directional. Tend to use gridded softboxes for most of the food stuff though... But they have their use. Let me know if you want to 'have a play' and I'll let you borrow some bits if you want.
My description of use was for a snoot... zoom position w/in the snoot can affect the overall characteristic depending on diameter/length of snoot. And the snoot will, of course, change the shape/pattern to circular. However, a larger diameter snoot may allow the original/rectangular shape to come through if the flash head is zoomed out too far.This was my initial thought but the circular systems will change the shape slightly.
So are the rogue grids the way to go, or is there a decent cheapy alternatives? Could do with 3 of them.
I think that the Magmod range is horrifically expensive for what it is, but then I don't like wasting moneyHave seen very good reviews of the Magmod system, though they are not cheap. Supposedly stay in place firmly and are quick to change. Popular with USA wedding photographers for this reason. Designed by one of them who got fed up of limitations of some of the alternatives.
http://www.essentialphoto.co.uk/brands/magmod/
^ being a cheapskate I've made a few of these.. gives you the option of different depths of grid.Could always try making a black straw grid (or 3). Works as well as anything
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c-ZH3nIWHCg
I think that the Magmod range is horrifically expensive for what it is, but then I don't like wasting money![]()
I wish you hadn't mentioned the discount Jay, currently hovering over a few items...
Especially as we all know that pretty much all of the well know brands get their stuff made very very inexpensively in China.quite a lot of photo kit seems overpriced in general for what it looks like it might cost to manufacture and make a fair profit margin
That's sort of true, and certainly there seem to be a couple of names out there that capitalise on their logo.Agree with you on price, though quite a lot of photo kit seems overpriced in general for what it looks like it might cost to manufacture and make a fair profit margin. I think quite a bit of it is down to brand snobbery, they know they can charge so they do. If we had to rely on the 'elite' brands, many of us would be priced out of photography, as it is it takes years to afford a fairly basic kit.
(My parcel from Lencarta is due soon and I just made use of Calumets 30% discount offer today for a small lightstand to match the one I got last year).
Especially as we all know that pretty much all of the well know brands get their stuff made very very inexpensively in China.
I buy from Chinese sellers simply because I can often get identical item that the British resellers offer but without the added 200% and more extra cost that is added just for having their British company logo added to the Chinese made kit.
I have given up on brand loyalty and I am financially better of for it.
I take your point, and there are certainly savings to be made by buying from ebay sellers based in Hong Kong.
But it's no longer true to say that goods are made in China "very very inexpensively", you're well out of date on that one.
However, there are various factors that you may (or may not) care about.
1. A lot of the "identical" items are in reality counterfeit.
2. Many of them are well under the required electrical safety standards. Forget what may be printed on them, e.g. CE (the joke is that this stands for Chinese Export) or ROHS, which is nothing more than a statement about the materials that they are made from that may or may not be true, these so-called safety labels get printed on everything and do not indicate that they actually comply with the regulations.
3. One of the reasons why our country is massively in debt and also has very high taxation is that these sellers evade both VAT and import duty, and although those of us who buy from them may think it's a good idea to be complicit in illegal activity, it's adding to our problems.
4. Those items that include batteries are also imported illegally, ignoring the safety regulations and endangering the passenger aircraft that they transported on, by mis-declaring them to be something harmless.
5. There is no warranty. Chinese companies don't understand the concept of either warranty or customer support. I remember one items on ebay where the seller stated that their goods were warranted but that faulty items must be received by them in Hong Kong within 14 days of them being despatched from Hong Kong, which of course is totally impossible to comply with as it takes much longer than that. Having spent a lot of time in a lot of different Chinese factories, all that I can say on the subject is that I personally would never buy any product that didn't come with a genuine warranty from a genuine British Company.
China used to be cheap but wages (and everything else, especially house prices) have soared during the last few years and they are now far from cheap. The Philippines and India are the new China, but there are massive problems with lack of infrastructure, poor education and badly trained workforces, so China, which sorted out all of these problems years ago, is still king - but probably not for much longer, it's just too expensive.
- If all that were true why do so many British companies import goods from china?
- Why would British companies have their company logos added to counterfeit goods that are made in China.
I doubt whether many do, at least not knowingly. Again, if you read what I said I think it will be clear that I was again talking about the counterfeit rubbish that's sold online. That's obvious because that statement directly followed my statement that "1. A lot of the "identical" items are in reality counterfeit." The fact of the matter is that with no enforcement, the CE and ROHS printing on products isn't necessarily genuine and there is no way of knowing whether those products are safe or not if you buy them online from an overseas seller.
- Why would British companies import goods with dodgy safety labels?
Sadly, this is bound to happen, and there have already been very serious plane fires caused by batteries, just type "plane fire caused by batteries" into Google. China was ignoring its own safety regulations until there was a series of massive explosions and a fireball at a docks warehouse in Tianjin on 12 August 2015. The official death toll is 170 but it's believed to be actually much higher. Now, the carriage of lithium batteries (and other dangerous goods) is very tightly controlled when they are exported by reputable couriers and sent by reputable factories but the stuff sold on Ebay/Amazon by these dodgy HK based sellers doesn't go through the proper channels and is usually mis-declared on the customs form, both to evade import duty and VAT, and to get round the regulations. Our own Customs and Excise knows this very well but they don't have the resources to stop most of them, and when they do seize illegally imported goods, nothing happens because the sellers are untraceable. Tell me, when you get these cheap goods from ebay, have you ever seen
- Planes would be falling from skies with frighten regularity if the batteries were as dangerous as governments would like us to believe.
If it's a genuine warranty (and by no means all of them are) then the cost for some simple products is virtually nil, but the cost of warranty for something like a flash head can be far higher than you would every imagine. And although some of these warranties aren't worth anything at all, long establised, reputable businesses like Bron, Elinchrom, Lencarta and Profoto not only provide genuine warranties, they also continue to repair products that are many years out of warranty, and some of these firms do it at or below cost[/quote][/QUOTE]Regarding the warranty UK companies ad a massive percentage to the price of good to provide warranties for good that rarely go wrong in the period of time that it is covered by a warranty. Many of us have experience of goods and equipment that go wrong very soon after the warranty expires yet we will have directly or indirectly paid for that warranty.