Lately, I have been placing a diffuser in front of my hair light, which lowers its intensity and does not look harsh on the subject's hair. Is this a common practice, or am I not supposed to diffuse the hair light? Thanks.
yalemba Senior Member 635 posts Joined Sep 2003 More info | Jan 15, 2005 17:01 | #1 Lately, I have been placing a diffuser in front of my hair light, which lowers its intensity and does not look harsh on the subject's hair. Is this a common practice, or am I not supposed to diffuse the hair light? Thanks. Cameras: 1DX, 1Ds Mark III
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VegasPoboy Senior Member 950 posts Likes: 1 Joined Aug 2003 Location: Las Vegas, NV More info | Jan 15, 2005 19:07 | #2 yalemba wrote: Lately, I have been placing a diffuser in front of my hair light, which lowers its intensity and does not look harsh on the subject's hair. Is this a common practice, or am I not supposed to diffuse the hair light? Thanks. Most setups use a softbox or grid on the hair light so yes diffused is fine but if your model has dark hair you can get away with a un diffused light. $$$ in Canon Gear & Lighting Equipment
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Jan 15, 2005 19:57 | #3 I have an 18" honeycomb grid on the hairlight, but have placed a diffuser in front of it. Does the honeycomb diffuse the light? Cameras: 1DX, 1Ds Mark III
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chtgrubbs Goldmember 1,675 posts Joined Jul 2003 More info | yalemba wrote: I have an 18" honeycomb grid on the hairlight, but have placed a diffuser in front of it. Does the honeycomb diffuse the light? A honeycomb grid makes the light more directional without affecting the hardness or softness of the light modifier which it is mounted on. For a hairlight I use a 16x22" softbox with a grid. The softbox give me a softer light which has less tendency to burn out highlights and the grid helps keep the light from spilling onto the subjects shoulders or into the camera lens where it could cause flair.
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gmitchel Senior Member 306 posts Joined Oct 2002 Location: Tallahassee, FL More info | Jan 16, 2005 13:01 | #5 Permanent banIt depends on the highlight you want to create.
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chris.bailey Goldmember 2,061 posts Joined Jul 2003 Location: Norwich, Norfolk, UK More info | Jan 19, 2005 08:11 | #6 The only rule is there are no rules. Some of the best portraits I have seen come from a photographer who is prepared to experiment. The so called rules should only be considered a starting point.
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