View allAll Photos Tagged ringlight
Back in the studio shooting portraits.
Feel free to contact me if you are in London.
Collab and TFP also possible if cool project.
SJ
No time for shooting this week (it's moving week -- I'm buried in boxes!). Here's one from the hopper. Lucy says hello to all.
AB ringflash, 1/4 power, handheld. AB 800 w/ 10-degree grid aimed at Lucy's left side, from just behind.
"Come on Angela, let's test with us the new ringlight"
"No way! The color of my hair is wrong, you will not take picture of me until I change it"
"don't worry, we will use black and white film"
:-)
Spring 2015, Architecture Photograpy Laboratory (LFA) Dipartimento di Architettura, Florence
Original shot taken with a Polaroid Procam camera, loaded with Impossible Project 600 BW instant film, almost no post processing, just scanned.
What a striking face and I'm loving the catchlight in those eyes!
Model: Madison Nazzarette @nazzarette
MUA: Londieloo Blu
Photographer/Retoucher: Oooah Photography @oooah_photography
Sony A7
AF-S Nikkor 85mm f/1.8G
Post Processing done in Capture One/Photoshop CC
© 2016 Robert Stebler
"Invader!" Captured with a Nikkor 50mm f/1.4 lens mounted on an Olympus E-M10 III with a Fotodiox Inc. Nikon to Micro 4/3 Macro Focus Helicoid adapter. Lit with a Fotodiox LED 48A Ringlight.
SGW tries not to smile while posing during a recent shoot. She obviously struggled with this.
Strobist; AB ring light on a boom high and camera right. Bare AB 800 camera right and left. All at 1/8 power. Fired with a sync chord.
Constant ringlight as key, directly in front
2-Einstein 640 w/ bare cone, as rim, 135° approx 3' behind me on each side
Triggered with cybersync
Whatever color you can imagine, you can create, with the Selfie Starlite Prizmo Edition RGB LED Ring Light! Click here to learn more: bit.ly/3aGinUB
When I looked up the word "Benediction" the defintions that stood out were:
"Invocation of blessedness"
and
"A state of being blessed"
Playing with my diy ringlight. Might make it a double layer when I have time.
Strobist info:
Ringlight directly infront of the subject
Born in 1967, this almost 8 Pound beauty is Godzilla to my svelte Leica and Microscopic M4/3 gear. Heck even my fully loaded Nikon d700 feels light.
But this is one heck of a camera! It comes with TILT capability as STANDARD! 15 degrees of tilt!!!!!!!! On Medium Format that's wild!! My puny Nikkor PC-E 45mm does a measly 8 degrees....
MaMaMiya!
About the photo - Shot in my bathroom with my new 48.5cm florescent ringlight. Shot on Lucky 100 and self-developed with ILFORD DD-x.
Kate, from the shindig last night.
Strobist: ABR800 ringlight (thanks David Hill!)
Website - ModelMayhem - Facebook - Twitter
anaglyph
D7000.
Perfect for focusing! Not so powerful but only for very close objects ok. Extra Flasher (off camera) useful with extreme macro.
(This photo explains real simple how this DIY Monitor ringlight is supposed to work...)
Hello there folks,
How are you?
My name is Sebastien and i subscribed specialy because i had to share this great idea...
It's the most simple Do it Your Self Ringlight there can possible be!
I didn't see this idea around anywhere on Flickr and i searched alot for these things so if i am right i might set a new trend here.
Here's the thing: a friend of mine showed his new 23inch apple monitor and talked about how bright it whas and how it almost functioned as a lamp to light his room with, and demonstrated it to me in the dark.
I had my new Canon 30D with me and all the sudden i thought, yup, it's big, it's bright... Hey! it's a great candidate for a ringlight.!
So we quickly created some white shapes on black backgrounds and played around with these and we had some GREAT results!
Later on when i whas alone at my moms place, i whas sitting behind her old 15inch CRT monitor and thought: would the same trick work with this small thing? Well... here are the results of that session and of other sessions too, so judge for yourself.
You want to do this too?
There are some things you must know first though.
A monitor is in the end not THAT bright, so you need a dark room with as litle other light as possible.
You also must have a camera with good ISO performance, i shot this pictures on ISO 1600, and trust me, you will need it, shutter speeds are sometimes way below 1/30.
A fast lens, with a minimal F2.8 will help you here as well, and a good lowlight autofocus too, there is always manualfocus ofcourse.
Then when you match the most of these requirements there is only one thing left to do:
Point your camera at your face with it's back facing the monitor in the middle of your DIY ringlight shape , hold very still and say:... Cheese!!!
I Added some "Monitor Ringlights" (as i call them), so you can take of right away.
So have fun, it's the easiest way to find out what a ringlight will do to your pictures.
Greetings,
Sebastien,
the netherlands
I bought a ring light! As the name implies, it's a ring of small LED lights, powered by six AA batteries. It screws into the filter on the front of the camera lens. Mine does not attach to the hot shoe, and it doesn't flash. They've been around for a long time, but they're pretty inexpensive now.
Ring lights are used mostly for macro work, so I guess I have a mission! HSS, everyone!