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Thread: Studio Portrait Lighting Question (1948)

  1. #1

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    Studio Portrait Lighting Question (1948)

    I have a nice modern set of studio strobes but this weekend I was in an old timey basement in Tonopah inhabited by a Studio Photog of 1940 - 1952 or so, and there was one of those giant flourescent lighting multi-bank thingies like shown in Abel's Professional Portrait Lightings of 1948 (same era exactly).

    It was 2 banks of 8 24" tubes on wings that could be swung to different angles, on a single sturdy stand.

    Should I have bought that? Will it do any magic that modern lights can't do better and easier?

  2. #2
    Big Negs Rock!
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    Re: Studio Portrait Lighting Question (1948)

    There are modern versions of the light you describe. The strobes are "point" source unless they are bounced or go through diffusion. The large bank of fluorescents gives a light similar to the strobe going through a large diffusion. Two different purpose lights and solutions for a photographers vision.
    Mark Woods

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  3. #3

    Re: Studio Portrait Lighting Question (1948)

    I like large banks of fluorescent bulbs, they can produce a really nice quality of light similar to large diffusion screens or softboxes. That said, I probably wouldn't bother with one from the 1940s; rewiring it, replacing the ballasts, and the cost of new bulbs just wouldn't be worthwhile. Of course, the stand might be useful...

  4. #4
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    Re: Studio Portrait Lighting Question (1948)

    There is a close up portrait of Louis Armstrong done with one of these that was published along with a backed up view of the actual set up in use. The portrait is some of the best lighting I've ever seen. May have been one of Halsman's Life magaine covers, but I'm far from certain on that. Anyway, in the right hands (like any sort of light) it can be quite a masterful tool.
    "One of the greatest necessities in America is to discover creative solitude." Carl Sandburg

  5. #5
    Mark Sawyer's Avatar
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    Re: Studio Portrait Lighting Question (1948)

    I'd say passing was the right thing, unless you were really desperate for lights. They wouldn't be that bright, and a diffusion screen will cut even more. Used without a diffusion screen, the reflections in the eyes will be a bunch of lines, (bleh...) Hot lights give the eyes small pupils and make the sitter squint. Stick with the strobes!
    "I love my Verito lens, but I always have to sharpen everything in Photoshop..."

  6. #6

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    Re: Studio Portrait Lighting Question (1948)

    Good insight all! One reason I passed was I didn't need one more giant thing in my space upstairs.

  7. #7

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    Re: Studio Portrait Lighting Question (1948)

    Joe Edleman has some videos on flourescent lighting set ups at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mtsKPaLMP7o Towards the end of video #2 there's some pretty nice portraits taken with them. Of course color film would need to be filtered.

    I put some together for my daughter to use and they work pretty well for headshots to 3/4 length. If you have to move them very far from your subject, intensity falls of fast. I just hung mine on some lightstands with cable ties.

  8. #8
    Big Negs Rock!
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    Re: Studio Portrait Lighting Question (1948)

    There are frost diffusions that one could placed over the unit with very little light loss. I wouldn't get them unless I had a need for them.
    Mark Woods

    Large Format B&W
    Cinematography Mentor at the American Film Institute
    Past President of the Pasadena Society of Artists
    Director of Photography
    Pasadena, CA
    www.markwoods.com

  9. #9
    Format Omnivore Brian C. Miller's Avatar
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    Re: Studio Portrait Lighting Question (1948)

    Lighting for sitters is always a problem. I have a 60" Photek Softlighter, and while it produces a wonderful even light, sometimes I wonder if people would be more comfortable if I set off flash powder. "Aaaahhh! The flash! The flash!" or "Why do all of your portraits look like that movie room scene in A Clockwork Orange?" (Strapped down, eyelids pried open) Teenagers and two-year-olds. Ech.

    Jim, I took a look at the current stuff offered by B&H. There's quite a lot of CFL lighting, including 4-socket adapters. Those are relatively cheap, and making a lightbox for it would be fairly easy. Also, there's some cheap light panels.
    "It's the way to educate your eyes. Stare. Pry, listen, eavesdrop. Die knowing something. You are not here long." - Walker Evans

  10. #10

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    Re: Studio Portrait Lighting Question (1948)

    I love fluorescent banks and I own a Kinoflo "Wall" (10 x 4ft fluorescent with diffusion and grid) ... it is "dim" compared to "flash" but it works wonderfully well to simulate window light and sky lights. I do use it mostly for portraits ... not that much different than using natural light and this gives you some control. I also use Mole hotlights and fresnels for portraits ... it's all about the lighting look you're after ...

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