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FORUMS General Gear Talk Flash and Studio Lighting 
Thread started 24 May 2011 (Tuesday) 12:31
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Looking for a starter lighting set up

 
foxhound
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May 24, 2011 12:31 |  #1

OK... i'm looking to dip my toe in the water of flash photography, i've been shooting for several years and have never really had much to do with strobes of any kind, i mainly shoot animal portraits and would like to maybe do some human portraits , and just have a decent arsenal of to have on hand should the need call for it, i've budgeted about $500 to start, would i be better with Speedlights with softboxes or something like Alienbees with BD's or umbrellas ? My main body is a 7D which has a wireless trigger incorperated i believe?, so do i need triggers?
any thoughts would be greatly appreciated


Canon 1D mk3 7D Gripped, [COLOR=Black]40D Gripped, XT Gripped, G10, 100-400L 70-200 2.8L 24-70L 50mm 1.8mk11
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SanchezPhotography
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May 24, 2011 15:19 |  #2

$500 is a great budget to start actually.

I started playing with off camera flash photography about a year ago and have built up a nice little setup that I think would match your budget.

First off, you want some speedlites. I also have a 7D and yes, you can use Canon brand speedlites to trigger wirelessly. The problem is, if you are outside in bright sunlight or there is not a direct line of sight between the camera's flash and the speedlite, it wont trigger. A solution to this is to get wireless triggers. Pocket wizards are the best, but they are very expensive and will probably take up all of your budget. I would suggest to get something cheap to start like some Cactus triggers (I have cactus V2s that I picked up from ebay for 35 shipped. Came with 1 transmitter and 2 receivers).

The canon brand speedlites are also a bit expensive (250+ to start for a 430EX II for example). I have one 430EX II but recently picked up two Vivitar DF383 flashes. They work amazing and have had no problems and cost me about $125 each on amazon shipped.

You'll need some light stands now. You can get light stands for about $20 or $30+. I personally picked up two manfrotto nano light stands at about $50 a piece. They are great because they fold up quite nicely and are great for traveling but unfold to a very nice size lightstand which you can use for all of your work with no problem.

Next you'll want 1 or 2 shoot through umbrellas. You can get these for about $20-$30 each as well. Brand doesn't really matter here.

Lastly, you need an adapter for your lightstand to hold both the flashes as well as the umbrellas. You can get these for about $30 each.

If you add all that up (assuming you get two of each):

(2) Vivitar DF383 @ $125 each
(1) set of Cactus V2s recievers/transmitter @ ~$35
(2) manfrotto light stands @ $50 each
(2) shoot through umbrellas @ 25 each
(2) umbrella/flash adapters @ $30 each
---------------
Grand total of approximately: $495.

I think that's a great start and pretty much resembles exactly what I have currently.

Please note though that I do not use ETTL. I'm all manual when it comes to the flash power/zoom as well as manual mode on my camera so I use the aperture/shutter speed to control the type of shots I produce. If you want to shoot ETTL with a wireless system, I think pocketwizard just came out w/ something that allows you to shoot wirelessly with their system without losing ETTL functionality. It's a bit pricey though (but worth it if you want to still use ETTL). Personally, now that I learned how to control the light manually, I have not used ETTL.

Check out this blog post I did a few days ago with a picture of the gear if you want a better look. Hope this helped!

http://www.jasonsanche​zphotography.com …r-portable-lighting-setup (external link)


Canon 7D | Canon 17-55mm f/2.8 IS | Canon 50mm f/1.4
http://www.JasonSanche​zPhotography.com/blog (external link)

  
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hawk911
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May 24, 2011 15:35 |  #3

gratuitous plug for my Elinchrom lights for sale. Nice setup that you won't regret buying


HAWK Photography Gallery (external link) FB Fan page (external link)|_My gear: 5d3, 70D & 40D (all gripped), 580exII, 550ex, Canon 24-70 L & 85 f1.8, 50mm f1.4; Tamron 70-200 SP Di VC, Canon 18-55, Sigma 1.4xtc; Elinchrom Whore, Skyport triggers, Speedotron BD and Kacey Grid, Vagabond minis

  
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foxhound
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May 25, 2011 08:59 |  #4

SanchezPhotography wrote in post #12471276 (external link)
$500 is a great budget to start actually.

I started playing with off camera flash photography about a year ago and have built up a nice little setup that I think would match your budget.

First off, you want some speedlites. I also have a 7D and yes, you can use Canon brand speedlites to trigger wirelessly. The problem is, if you are outside in bright sunlight or there is not a direct line of sight between the camera's flash and the speedlite, it wont trigger. A solution to this is to get wireless triggers. Pocket wizards are the best, but they are very expensive and will probably take up all of your budget. I would suggest to get something cheap to start like some Cactus triggers (I have cactus V2s that I picked up from ebay for 35 shipped. Came with 1 transmitter and 2 receivers).

The canon brand speedlites are also a bit expensive (250+ to start for a 430EX II for example). I have one 430EX II but recently picked up two Vivitar DF383 flashes. They work amazing and have had no problems and cost me about $125 each on amazon shipped.

You'll need some light stands now. You can get light stands for about $20 or $30+. I personally picked up two manfrotto nano light stands at about $50 a piece. They are great because they fold up quite nicely and are great for traveling but unfold to a very nice size lightstand which you can use for all of your work with no problem.

Next you'll want 1 or 2 shoot through umbrellas. You can get these for about $20-$30 each as well. Brand doesn't really matter here.

Lastly, you need an adapter for your lightstand to hold both the flashes as well as the umbrellas. You can get these for about $30 each.

If you add all that up (assuming you get two of each):

(2) Vivitar DF383 @ $125 each
(1) set of Cactus V2s recievers/transmitter @ ~$35
(2) manfrotto light stands @ $50 each
(2) shoot through umbrellas @ 25 each
(2) umbrella/flash adapters @ $30 each
---------------
Grand total of approximately: $495.

I think that's a great start and pretty much resembles exactly what I have currently.

Please note though that I do not use ETTL. I'm all manual when it comes to the flash power/zoom as well as manual mode on my camera so I use the aperture/shutter speed to control the type of shots I produce. If you want to shoot ETTL with a wireless system, I think pocketwizard just came out w/ something that allows you to shoot wirelessly with their system without losing ETTL functionality. It's a bit pricey though (but worth it if you want to still use ETTL). Personally, now that I learned how to control the light manually, I have not used ETTL.

Check out this blog post I did a few days ago with a picture of the gear if you want a better look. Hope this helped!

http://www.jasonsanche​zphotography.com …r-portable-lighting-setup (external link)


Thanks for taking the time to reply i appreciate it


Canon 1D mk3 7D Gripped, [COLOR=Black]40D Gripped, XT Gripped, G10, 100-400L 70-200 2.8L 24-70L 50mm 1.8mk11
28-105 Canon 580 exII
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Kechar
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May 25, 2011 09:32 |  #5

Been at least three threads like this in the last day or so.
I think we need a "I Need A Starter Kit" forum...or a sticky with basic information on various indoor/outdoor starter kits!


flickr (external link) KCharron.net (external link) - 5D mark III (gripped) | 24-70 2.8 VC | 85 1.8 | 50 1.4 | 70-200 2.8L
[LIGHTING: 3 Einsteins, AB400, CyberCommander, 2 VLMs w/2 spare bats, 2 64" PLMs, 24x32 softbox, 22" BD, grids and diffusers, Avenger stands and boom.]

  
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foxhound
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May 25, 2011 10:19 |  #6

hawk911 wrote in post #12471378 (external link)
gratuitous plug for my Elinchrom lights for sale. Nice setup that you won't regret buying

Are they a good starter set up ? and what kinda money would you want for them


Canon 1D mk3 7D Gripped, [COLOR=Black]40D Gripped, XT Gripped, G10, 100-400L 70-200 2.8L 24-70L 50mm 1.8mk11
28-105 Canon 580 exII
FLICKR (external link)

  
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foxhound
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May 25, 2011 10:22 |  #7

Kechar wrote in post #12475865 (external link)
Been at least three threads like this in the last day or so.
I think we need a "I Need A Starter Kit" forum...or a sticky with basic information on various indoor/outdoor starter kits!

Certainly sounds like A good idea, there are so many variables and brand names to know whats good and whats not, it would be great if someone had the time to write up a little something on, inside vs outside lighting and the differing brands out there


Canon 1D mk3 7D Gripped, [COLOR=Black]40D Gripped, XT Gripped, G10, 100-400L 70-200 2.8L 24-70L 50mm 1.8mk11
28-105 Canon 580 exII
FLICKR (external link)

  
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foxhound
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May 25, 2011 10:24 |  #8

Is this a good starter set up
http://london.kijiji.c​a …be-Kit-W0QQAdIdZ264818116 (external link)
and could this be made portable by adding a power unit to it ?


Canon 1D mk3 7D Gripped, [COLOR=Black]40D Gripped, XT Gripped, G10, 100-400L 70-200 2.8L 24-70L 50mm 1.8mk11
28-105 Canon 580 exII
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Alejandro ­ Sandoval
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May 25, 2011 10:29 |  #9

Don't get caught up in the brand name thing. get one light one, light modifier one stand and one reflector....learn how to use it, master it and prolly you will need just one more light....Again whatever your wallet allows...


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mtimber
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May 25, 2011 10:31 |  #10

I use the older canon 430ez and 540ez flashes with yongnuo 602 triggers.

Wonderful...

You have to set the power manually though, but that soon becomes instinctive...


"The general rule for flash photography is that you want the flash to go off while the shutter is open" (Titus213)

  
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PLLphotography
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May 25, 2011 10:32 |  #11

When I started out, I pieced together an inexpensive portable lighting kit. I wanted something portable and easy to manage.

I came up with this...

Shopping List:

Yongnuo-560 III Manual Flash (external link) (built-in wireless triggers)@ $85 each x2 = $170

RF-603 tranceivers (external link) - $23

TWO 42" umbrella softboxes (external link)or ONE 60" reversible umbrella (external link)- $30

TWO light stands (external link) $40

Umbrella mount (external link) $30 X 2 = $60

Hot-shoe mount (external link) $8.99 x 2 = $18

total of around $350....less than the cost of one 580 EX II flash.

add a 42" 5-in-1 reflector (external link)for another $22, and you are still coming out cheaper than a single 580 EX II flash.

with the many brands of all of the equipment I've listed, you may prefer something else, but this "kit" is more of a starting point and you can add/subtract/replace as necessary.

you don't have to go all crazy when starting out with off-camera flash :-)

UPDATE: I just wanted to comment that prices can and will fluxuate, and the prices listed here may not reflect current market pricing. However, I still believe this to be a great general list for those interested in off-camera flash, and is still a better bargain than a single 580 EX II speedlite.


Phillip - phillipwardphotography​.com (external link) | Instagram (external link) | Donate to POTN

  
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HughR
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May 25, 2011 12:41 |  #12

Your 7D wireless will work perfectly using Canon Speedlites and ETTL. I've been using a 430EX wirelessly with my 60D since last October, and it works very well both indoors and out. I just got a 430EX II as a second flash, so now I have the capability of setting A:B ratios from the camera. Also, this gives me 4 light sources: 2 wireless flashes, the camera's pop-up as fill, and ambient if desired. If you go with the 7D wireless and Canon flashes, you don't need any triggers at all.
I've got light boxes to attach to the flashes (see equipment list below).


Hugh
Canon 60D, Original Digital Rebel (2003)
EFS 15-85mm IS USM, EF 70-300mm IS USM, Tokina 11-16mm
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mtimber
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May 25, 2011 13:35 |  #13

Problem with using the IR on the 7d is that:

A) Will only work with line of sight.
B) Bright sunlight can mess it up.
C) Flashes are very expensive.


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mrrod2001
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May 25, 2011 13:49 as a reply to  @ mtimber's post |  #14

Just want to throw out the Calumet Genesis option, there cheap and you can get 1 or 2 light kits. there also on sale once or twice a year. With that you can add on some cactus or yongnuo triggers and your good to go.

http://www.calumetphot​o.com …_200_2_light_ki​t/cf0502k1 (external link)




  
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HughR
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May 25, 2011 14:00 |  #15

mtimber wrote in post #12477390 (external link)
Problem with using the IR on the 7d is that:

A) Will only work with line of sight.
B) Bright sunlight can mess it up.
C) Flashes are very expensive.

A. Outdoors line of sight is indeed necessary. Indoors, reflections mean that you can shoot around corners in modest sized rooms without line of sight.
B. I have shot at 25 feet in sun on new snow, and it worked perfectly last February. Therefore, I don't think B is much of a problem within the range Canon specifies.
C. The decision on flash expense is up to the buyer. DSLRs are arguably very expensive as well.


Hugh
Canon 60D, Original Digital Rebel (2003)
EFS 15-85mm IS USM, EF 70-300mm IS USM, Tokina 11-16mm
Speedlite 430EX, Speedlite 430EX II,
Qbox 16 pro, Lastolite EZbox 24x24, Lumiquest Softbox III

  
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