- Home Page - Video - Compact Cameras - SLR - Flash - Brackets -

Video and Movie Lighting

Ikelite
Pro Video Light

Underwater Kinetics
Light Cannon 100
HID

Ikelite
Pro-V8 LED
Video Light

Green Force
Squid HID
& LED lights

Greenforce Squid 250 head

Ikelite DS161 Movie
Combined flash and 15W movie light

INON

Inon video light

IST T-100 video light

IST Video Light

Fisheye
Compact halogen and LED lights

See also: Lighting arms

About Video Lights:
To qualify as a video light, a light source must have a high colour temperature (3200K or greater) and must provide even illumination (freedom from hot-spots). Ordinary torches are not good enough for the job, but video lights serve as excellent floodlight torches. For motion picture photography, a video light should preferably be fixed rigidly to the camera housing by means of a lighting support arm.
     For close-range working, a video lamp may be mounted directly above the housing. In this case, the lamp may be attached to a standard accessory shoe (if provided). For medium-range working, the lamp should be further away from the camera lens, and a longer articulated (jointed) arm is to be preferred. Arms with 1" diameter ball joints can support lights weighing up to about 3kg in air. The Ikelite 1.25" ball-joint system can support in excess of 3Kg in air. Other arms, particularly segmented arms, will droop when holding heavy lights in air, but will work acceptably underwater if not excessively loaded. See the Lighting Brackets section for available products.
     A video light can be used as illumination for digital stills photography. Generally, the level of illumination will not be as great as that obtainable from a flash unit; but the video light has the advantage that it provides artificial lighting when the camera is used in movie mode. Composing a still photograph using exactly the same light source as will be used during image capture also assists in making adjustments for the minimisation of flare and backscatter.



Phone 01404 812277