स्टूडियोलाइटिंगगाइड
स्टूडियो प्रकाश गाइड
StudioLightingGuide
Studio Lighting Guide
This is a placeholder component. Add your functionality here.
Complete guide to professional studio lighting setup, modifiers, and techniques for portraits and product photography.
Características Principales
Three-point lighting setup (key, fill, back light)
Modifier selection (softbox, octabox, umbrella, beauty dish)
Light stand and mounting system overview
Color temperature consistency and white balance
Inverse square law and light falloff
Metering techniques for studio lighting
How to Use Studio Lighting Guide
Plan Your Setup
Determine lighting setup type: three-point, butterfly, loop, Rembrandt, or split lighting
Choose Modifiers
Select appropriate light modifiers based on desired effect and subject
Position Lights
Place key light at 45-90 degrees, fill light on opposite side, backlight behind subject
Meter Lights
Use incident meter to measure light intensity from each source
Calculate Ratios
Determine lighting ratio and adjust positions or power as needed
Shoot and Review
Take test shots and adjust setup based on results and histogram
Casos de Uso
Professional portrait sessions requiring controlled lighting
Product photography with consistent high-quality illumination
Fashion and beauty photography with specialized modifiers
Commercial advertising photography with complex lighting setups
Preguntas Frecuentes
What is three-point lighting?
Key light (main), fill light (shadows), and backlight (separation). The fundamental studio lighting setup.
What modifier should I use?
Softboxes for even lighting, umbrellas for broad coverage, beauty dishes for controlled soft light, octaboxes for catch lights.
How far should lights be from subjects?
Typically 3-6 feet away. Closer for softer light, farther for harder light and more efficiency.
Do all studio lights need the same color temperature?
Yes, for consistent white balance. Mix 3200K tungsten with 5600K daylight only intentionally.
What is inverse square law?
Doubling the light distance reduces intensity by four times. Important for controlling light falloff.