Andrew Mason gets creative in the studio with inventive lighting techniques and a model.
| Studio Lighting and Flash
Most of the time the studio is a controlled environment where lighting ratios and precise positioning rule, but sometimes we need to break those rules and introduce some inventive lighting techniques.
A very nice, creative studio lighting techniques is to introduce movement. The burst from a studio light is somewhere around 1/1000 sec, which is fast enough to freeze any motion, so how do we capture movement in the studio? The answer is to introduce some ambient light into your set up. The ambient light can come from a window, or any constant light source. In these examples we used the lamp on the studio lights as a constant light source.
To capture a sense of movement in a studio requires a long enough shutter speed to catch the movement, but we don’t want our shot to be a complete blur. We need an element of the image to be frozen and sharp, so we can tell what we’re looking at. This is how to create the shot:
- Camera on manual mode, ISO200, aperture set to f/11, shutter speed 1/3 sec.
- In a dark studio, two studio lights pointing at a white background, slaves disabled, lamps turned up. Take a test shot with camera set as above, check image, and adjust power of lamps until you are happy with brightness of background.
- Turn off background lights, position model, and place a light on your model, meter light on model to f/11, and prevent this light from casting light on the background.
- Switch on background lights, ask model to dance, shoot.
Andrew Mason runs Photography Courses in London, through 36exp.


Support this site by making a Donation, purchasing Plus Membership, or shopping with one of our affiliates: Amazon UK, Amazon US, Amazon CA, ebay UK, MPB. It doesn't cost you anything extra when you use these links, but it does support the site, helping keep ePHOTOzine free to use, thank you.
I have a few examples where feet are very hard to freeze fast movement, this is one https://www.ephotozine.com/user/jackalltog-97593/gallery/photo/ice-breaker-dance-23408809
I'm using a £250 interfit head, so whilst its not top of the range its not too cheap either.
We have the same effect at the club i attend that studio lights don't freeze fast movement - older elichrom unites there.
A speedlite might freeze the movement more, especially at a lower power setting.
I know this article is really more about introducing slow movement into a shoot.
Kind regards,
Stuart
You must be a member to leave a comment.
ePHOTOzine, the web's friendliest photography community.
Join for free
Upload photos, chat with photographers, win prizes and much more.
ADVERTISEMENT