minatophase3 wrote:
I am getting close to setting up a small studio. I think I have decided on the Alien Bees Digibee package, but still need to get some backdrops. Can anyone recommend a place to get them? Also, what size would I need to shoot mostly children and family portraits.
Thanks,
Tim
You can get backdrops from Calumet and they sell many different types. I would suggest that you start with a mottled grey backdrop. With grey there is no colour bias in it at all and you can change the colours with gels on your background light. Even with digital it will be a pain to correct out a colour in your background, so start neutral.
For head and should shots of individuals and perhaps couples, a 4'X6' backdrop would be big enough. After that virtually any size will be too small for some things. Geez I had a client ask me what my backdrop for photographing her group was like. The problem was that her group had over a hundred people in it! I just told her that god didn't have a background that big!
With a little more seriousness an 8'X8' backdrop will do most four people groups and then the next size up should probably be based on the width of your studio. Having extra material to make a sweep is nice too. That way there's no seam.
Since all of my work is on location I use the Tote-a-Round products (Calumet used to sell these too) and they come in various sizes. My biggest is 8'X8' with an 8' sweep. Like those small reflectors these have a steel spring on the perimiter and the "twist up" into a circle for storage. The big one doesn't require any support other than a wall so I don't have to bring background stands. The smaller ones that I use for H&S shots are the lean-against-the-wall type too, but I prefer to hang them from one light stand. That way I don't need to have the wall define my "studio".
I've been using these backdrops for almost ten years now and I'm very happy with them. I do have to say that taking down the big one and getting it coiled up into a circle will take you 20 seconds one day and thirty minutes the next until you catch on to the trick! It also is something out off the three stooges if you try to set it up by yourself. With two people each person grabs a side and up it goes. By yourself you run from one side to the other since there's really no support from the edge steel. It's knd of droopy and takes a few trips to get it up. It can be done - and I've done it hundreds of times, but it sure is nice when there's someone hanging around that can help!
For a studio the extra expense of the Tote-a-Round compared to a hanging backdrop is probably not worth it, but for location work, it was the right answer for me.
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