Home (Softbox)
Home  
 
 
Home » Photography » Softbox


 

Softbox

Photography Soft lightingSoft-focus

SOFTBOXES: The light created from a softbox has similarities to that of an umbrella but it’s much more efficient.

 


Softbox
A box with a diffuser panel that attaches to the front of a flash to give soft even light. Any visible highlights such as catch lights in eyes, reflections in silverware will be neat and square.

Softbox vs. Umbrella: Which One Should You Use?
Tweet
Average of 29 ratings: 3.5 stars ...

Vu-Pro's Viper Softbox Lighting Kit puts studio lighting back into the realm of hobby photographer's budgets. With three light heads putting out 1000 watts of adjustable light each and vented softboxes, this kit gives small budgets big spending power.

Softbox
A Softbox is a lighting unit that directs the light in a single direction and typically diffuses the light by having fabric or gel diffusion in front of the light fixture.
Split Toning ...

SOFTBOX LIGHTING
To remedy this lighting of the shot, we deactivated the built-in flash, set up a Photoflex Starlite Medium Digital Kit on a Boom and started out by placing it about 2 feet directly above the turtle.

SoftBox Positioning
I knew that I wanted to keep the lighting simple, so I decided to use a two-light kit to light the guitar and room scene.

Softbox
Large, diffuse light, usually with electronic flash as the light source. Over cast days produce very soft lighting with little contrast compared with a bright sunlit day which will produce harsh shadows and strong highlights.

Softboxes come in all sorts of shapes and sizes but most of them work in the same way-the softbox replaces the reflector that would normally be fitted to the flash head, the light spreads around inside the softbox, ...

A softbox is an all-white enclosure that takes harsh direct light and diffuses it all around the product you're photographing. It has one purpose. Eliminate shadows so your customers can see all the details in the product you're selling.

A large softbox illuminates with very soft light. Courtesy of Smith-Victor.
The photo of the head on the left was taken without a diffuser, the one on the right with one.

Although the softbox was very close, the light remained hard, from the model's perspective; only a very narrow strip light could be seen. As such, this light emphasizes the structure of the skin and is best used with models having very good skin.

I chose to use a softbox to replicate the soft, diffused light that I associate with bars and pubs. You can see my entire lighting set-up below. The perspective is just higher than that of the final image.
Starting the Exposure ...

“The lighting for this shot was very simple, just one big softbox on a Bowens 500 head. I was in close shooting at ISO 100, 1/250 at f20 using a Tamron 90 Macro Lens.

When used with a good-size softbox, like 24 x 24 inches, they will provide nice soft illumination quite suitable for portraiture. These are made by numerous manufacturers, like Lowel, Photoflex, Smith-Victor, and others.

In fact, it's almost as if he shot them in a studio: The blinds sit centered on the white seamless formed by frozen river and always overcast sky, illuminated by the unvarying light of a cloudy softbox, vivid in color and detail.

Studio flash units (the big kind that plug in the wall) are frequently used with photographic umbrellas or softboxes to give the light source a larger surface area.

You'll have all the benefits of a 16x16-inch softbox by wearing a white shirt. Instead of aiming your flash conventionally, hold your camera about 8 inches from your chest and pivot the flash to bounce off your shirt.

hello there just a quick question realy i have 2 portaflash 336vm lights with 40inch softboxes on them, my question is i shoot on a pure white background with around 4 poeple on my paper rolled background nut instead of it showing pure white it' ...

As the contrast of a scene is lowered (such as when the sky is overcast or multiple softboxes are used in the studio to even out the light and to fill in all the shadows), ...

Diffused light occurs when a cloud cover disperses sunlight similar to what a softbox does to a flash head in the studio. It is soft and shadowless, and your subject can be placed anywhere where the background is complementary to the composition.

It's a bit like using a large softbox for lighting. Shadows (and what shows up in the image is the shadow of the dust spot) are light and soft. At small apertures it's like using a small pinpoint spotlight and shadows are dark and hard edged.

Studio flashes can be equipped with diverse accessories, such as softboxes, filters, reflectors, Fresnel lenses etc. to achieve special lighting or effects.

อุ"ก๓์อย่างเดียว-ี่คนพวกนี้ไม่สนใจ แต่เ"็นสิ่ง-ี่มี"ระโยชน์มาก คืออุ"ก๓์กำเนิดแสง และ"รับ"รุงแสง (เช่น แฟลช หรือ Softbox) ...

Even better would be a mobile studio light with a softbox or umbrella. Just make sure you get the lighting direction from the flash right so that it doesn't contradict the direction of the lighting in the background - that can look awful.

of cloth, to hold in between the point light source and the subject. This will effectively increase the size of the area of the light source to that of the diffusing material. In studio flash heads, this is normally achieved by means of a softbox.

They can be fitted with all sorts of accessories like softboxes, umbrellas or "barndoors" to soften or direct the light. Color temperature is exactly 5500 Kelvin, just like midday sun, so there are no color casts such as with tungsten light ...

See also: Light, Photograph, Camera, Lighting, Time

Photography Soft lightingSoft-focus

 
 rssRSS