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M8 and Studio photography


egibaud

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I've been looking at some beautiful studio shots in this forum.

I am just an amateur M8 photographer, but I am planning to buy some lighting material.

 

- What make and power would you recommend me?

- How many lights to start with?

- What syncro cable are you using? can it be directly attached to the M8 flash socket or should I use an adapter?

- Would you recommend an infrared or radio syncro remote control? can they be attached directly to an M8?

 

I saw some Multiblitz kit, that have 3 spots of 600 Watts each, it comes with umbrella and box, do you think theses kits are ok for shooting full height models?

 

Eric

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I've been looking at some beautiful studio shots in this forum.

I am just an amateur M8 photographer, but I am planning to buy some lighting material.

 

- What make and power would you recommend me?

- How many lights to start with?

- What syncro cable are you using? can it be directly attached to the M8 flash socket or should I use an adapter?

- Would you recommend an infrared or radio syncro remote control? can they be attached directly to an M8?

 

I saw some Multiblitz kit, that have 3 spots of 600 Watts each, it comes with umbrella and box, do you think theses kits are ok for shooting full height models?

 

Eric

 

hi eric,

 

mostly it will depend on how big your studio is. i use generators/flashheads/light formers and softboxes from profoto (1 generator with 2400w and one with 4800w) and i can attach up to 7 flashheads, so its for even complex situations enough :) and i'm very happy with them. also i have in the studio misc. old flashes (without generators) and misc. tubes, barnheads etc.

as for triggerng the flashes/generators i use pocketwizards. as my generators have built in receivers for them. but also on the old flashes its no problem to use them, because you can connect the receivers through cables to nearly any flash.

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eric.... you know what you want from studio and studio lights....

 

ok .. i guess it should be profilux rite? they are great. 600w should be really enough for you. dont forget, you lenses are small lenses and they have more oopen optimal and woring apertures than the mediums and big formats. so you dont really need stronger flashes... 600 can take almost anything you can imagine. quality of profilux is great...

three lights is more than enough for bigginer and really good photographer :)) but first make sure you know who to work properly with one light :)) also make sure you get some nice flash matter... the multiblitz is cool, it is actually gossen.. gossen is great

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Eric!

 

My set up is two Bowens 500 w

I do use radio trigger, but infra red do work inside as well

 

Later one I'll supply with one strobe more and a travel pack (batteries)

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Eric!

 

I do use radio trigger, but infra red do work inside as well

 

what make is the trigger? Bowens too? do ou fit it directly on the camera or do you need an adapter?

 

Thanks,

 

Eric

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what make is the trigger? Bowens too? do ou fit it directly on the camera or do you need an adapter?

 

Thanks,

 

Eric

 

Yes it is trigging the strobes and it fits on the camera hot shoe

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A few comments, if I may:

 

1. MultiBlitz makes an IR trigger. It is the second item down in this url at the U.S. distributor: http://www.rtsphoto.com/html/multbtz5.html

 

2. The 600 w/s may, depending on your use, be too much, even though you can stop down the units. There is a weight and size penalty with the larger units as well as longer recycle times. Here is the spec page for the Profilux, again at RTS's website:

http://www.rtsphoto.com/html/multbtz2.html

The differences may not seem like much on paper, but, imho, they are worth thinking about, hard. Don't forget price and remember, I suggest, that for inanimate objects you can use multiple flashes, at least in some cases.

 

3. The Pocket Wizards work well (including 1/250 flash sync), but at a price. You'll want a one piece connector that has to be bought separately. Jury rigging miscellaneous parts together means something will come loose, at a bad time, too.) You only really need two PWs (camera and one flash) and can rely on the built in slave in the Profilux (visible or ir) unless you are in a shared environment.

 

4. Using monoblocs and having three means you have some redundancy and do not have a single point of failure in your lighting system like a big power source. Having two triggering systems is similarly good. You could use a wire trigger as backup but radio and ir is elegant, and not too expensive if you already decided on the radio (PW) for other reasons.

 

I hope at least some of this is useful.

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