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Digital Photography Lighting equipment comes in two flavors:
Continuous (flood) Lighting and Flash (strobe) Lighting. For most
digital studio lighting we recommend continuous lighting.
Continuous lighting works with all digital cameras while flash lighting
requires semi-pro or professional digital cameras that provide "external
flash triggering". Continuous lighting is easy to master, particularly
with the white balance control of modern digital cameras. With continuous
lighting WYSIWYG, what you see in the viewfinder (LCD display) is what you
get. We only recommend using flash lighting for portrait imaging. For more
specifics see our page
Continuous vs. Flash.
Continuous
lighting comes in a variety of flavors from
"cool lites"
that use special flicker free compact fluorescent bulbs to basic bulb and
reflector units like our
ALZO 250 Kits.
We typically recommend continuous lighting for very small to medium/large
subjects. Our "cool Lite" continuous light kits are very popular for food,
cosmetic, biology imaging and for those who are concerned about the
environment.
Although
flash lighting has been favored by portrait film photographers, it
is more difficult than continuous lighting because exposure control is
performed manually and you will have many trial and error images and
lighting configurations to optimize the light on the subject. In all flash
lighting a Flash Meter is highly recommended.
The flash incorporated on digital cameras
will not produce professional results.
More on
photography lighting basics. |