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Jake Hicks Photography
  • Technique
    • Latest Techniques
    • FREE TIPS
    • Quick Tips
    • Video
    • Site Search
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    • Archives
  • Mentoring
  • >Online Workshops<
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Top 5 Jake Hicks Photography Articles of 2020

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2020 certainly hasn’t been without its surprises, and although many of us will be glad to finally put it behind us, let’s look back over the past 365 sleeps to see what was at least popular in the JHP Archives.

Number 1

Lighting Setup: Bounced Top Light 

A simple yet effective lighting setup is unsurprisingly always a popular article and if it includes a lot of colour and it can all be achieved in a tiny space like a home studio, it’s an almost guaranteed top spot contender!

This Bounced Top Light setup is easy to do and also requires next to no fancy kit and modifiers either, if you somehow missed my most popular article of 2020, be sure to check it out and give this one a go yourself.

Lighting Setup: Bounced Top Light

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Number 2

Using Low Contrast Lens Filters in Portraits

Why are so many cinematographers using Low Contrast filters today? Should you be using them for your work? Are they only for lights, or can you use them on your camera lens too? And are they different to the ‘diffusion filters’ you use on your lens?

If any of that sounds like a question you’d like the answer to, head on over and check out my monster article on low contrast filters and see if you can’t breath some more organic looking life back into your crisp and clinical looking digital shots.

Using Low Contrast Lens Filters in Portraits

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Number 3

Lighting Setup: Foreground Flare

Another quick and simple lighting setup makes it into the 2020 top 5 and for good reason, this one creates a very unique look thanks to its foreground element, and once again it can all be achieved in a home studio space too.

If you’re after a simple lighting setup that adds a creative element in the foreground via hand-held household objects, be sure to check this one out, and like I said, due it’s foreground element, this creates a very unique look every single time you try it!

Lighting Setup: Foreground Flare

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Number 4

DIY Scrim/Silk Frame For Huge Diffused Lighting Modifier

Ever wanted to get beautifully soft and diffused light? Not sure you want to commit to the cost of a ginormous soft box? This article shows you a DIY scrim I made for next to no money and it can all be dissembled and reassembled as many times as you like. These huge scrims are common place in TV and cinema as they are great lighting modifiers for location based shoots. If you think you’ll be shooting on location too, be sure to see if you can add this homemade modifier to your collection.

DIY Scrim/Silk Frame For Huge Diffused Lighting Modifier

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Number 5

Lighting Setup: Diffused Scrim Lighting at Home

Just made your DIY Scrim from the previous article? Want to use it to create some beautiful looking portraits? This article has you covered and in here I explain everything you need to know about making the most from you scrim. This article explains a variety of lighting setups for you to try and from beautifully soft light to the more engaging combination of hard light and gobo light, this article surely has something for you.

Lighting Setup: Diffused Scrim Lighting at Home

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So there you have it, the top 5 articles from the Jake Hicks Photography archives of 2020. I hope you all found something useful in there and I hope you all learned a tip or two. Big thanks to all of you who stuck around during 2020 to check these out as they were published and if you missed any of them at the time, I hope this was handy refresher of the best of the best.

Don’t miss a killer article in 2021!

Don’t forget to sign up to my newsletter to be sent all of these photo tips and techniques articles every month in case you miss one.


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Have you downloaded my FREE 50 page book yet?

I recently released a huge 50 page studio lighting book, absolutely free!

Book 1 - ‘Understanding Light’ is available now and it covers the fundamentals of reading the light in a studio. Follow the link below and download your copy now. This book is free to anybody who wants to check it out, but all donations to the project are certainly greatly appreciated.

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Tuesday 12.29.20
Posted by Jake Hicks
 

Super Simple 2 Light Still-Life Setup

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Big-shock I know. A coloured gel lighting technique from me is hardly surprising, but this time I’m scaling things down and today I’ll be sharing a super simple 2 light setup for still-life.

To be clear, I’m a million years away from being an even remotely good still-life photographer, but I thought I’d share this quick little setup as I had a few questions about some shots I shared in a recent article. Plus, if I, a know-nothing portrait and fashion shooter can throw together this still life setup, anyone can do it.

The article in question was discussing studio lighting clamps and brackets and in there I had photographed the aforementioned brackets with a super simple setup that added a splash of colour.

Take a quick look at the shots in question below…

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(Click to enlarge any of them)

If you missed the article then you can find it here 5 Clamps and Brackets Every Studio Shooter & Strobist Needs


The LED Lighting Setup - (yes, I will cover a strobe version later in the article)

So now that you’ve seen the shots, let me now briefly explain the setup I used to take these. This shoot was actually pretty irregular for me because ordinary 99% of the shots I take are captured with flash. However these were all captured with specialist LED lights. The reason I say specialist, is because these aren’t some 10 dollar LEDs found on Amazon and the quality of these LED lights is extremely high with an incredibly clean neutral colour. For those that may have used LEDs in the past, you may be familiar with some pretty ugly colour tones from some cheaper so-called ‘white’ light LEDs. This may not be a major issue if you can perfectly white balance them later in post, but if you’re using multiple colours in the same shot like I often do, balancing out the white will also shift the other colours.

The LEDs in question are the Spiffy Gear Spekular Modular LED Lights. Essentially these LEDs consist of 4x 30cm/12” bars that you assemble in a variety of ways and the key feature I wanted to use these ones for, was their ability to be assembled in a square like you see below.

The Spekular LED lights consist of modular 30cm bars that can be arranged in a variety of ways…

The Spekular LED lights consist of modular 30cm bars that can be arranged in a variety of ways…

I actually have two sets of these so I had one square of lights above my items to light them with white light, and then I had one set of square lights beneath the objects with a blue gel to add that colour.

Take a look below at the setup in question.

My super quick and dirty still-life setup that has white light above that I can shoot through and blue light below to get the coloured edges.

Click to enlarge any of the above shots…


 

The Strobe Lighting Setup

Now as excellent as those LED lights are, I fully appreciate that not everybody will have access to them. Yes they are extremely convenient, but if you don’t have these strip LED lights, is there a workaround for a very similar look from strobes?

Unsurprisingly, yes there is and I shot a few random images of cameras earlier today to show you the quick and simple strobe alternative.

Creating the Coloured Edges

One of the key features of this setup is the coloured edge light that wraps around our objects. This is incredibly important to have on products that are dark when they are photographed against a dark background as this helps them to stand out. With the LEDs we had a perfect square with a hole in the middle, but for the strobe version, we’ll have to make a small addition to a basic modifier. The modifier in question was a small 60cmx60cm softbox, this is something that nearly every strobe shooter has and the addition we need to make, is to black out the centre so that only the edges of the soft box are visible.

In the example shot I’ve included here, I’m using black velvet to sit in the centre of my softbox. I have a few sheets of card that I’ve wrapped in black velvet to use as flags in the studio, but you can simply fold any black fabric into a square and place it in the middle of your softbox.


Gelling the Softbox

There was one other addition that I made to the softbox and that was to add a coloured gel to it. This is of course up to you and you don’t have to add a coloured gel to your setup, but the added separation of colour against the white light from the front can help to add not only visual impact, but more visual depth and separation to the object you’re shooting.

Gelling a softbox is easy and you don’t need a huge gel to cover the front of it. All you have to do is open up the front diffusion cover and place a gel over the flash bulb on the inside. As long as the flash tube is covered by the gel, all light from that strobe will be coloured. I just used a few small strips of tape to keep it in place and that was it.

One word of caution to you though; if you’re going do this on older strobes that have tungsten modelling bulbs, be sure to either turn the modelling bulbs off, or simply unscrew the modelling bulbs and remove them whist you’re using the gel.

Failing to do so will result in your gel melting.

The last thing I did with the softbox was to mount it pointing straight up in the air via a floor stand and you can see that in one of the pictures above.


Placing the Objects

This can be as easy or as hard as you make it, but essentially we just need a transparent surface for our objects to sit on. This surface needs to be suspended above our softbox and the distance you place it from the softbox will change the lighting you get on the objects. For example if you have the objects very low to the softbox, you will get a far larger rim of light around them. Raise the objects up off of the softbox and the rim of light will get slightly thinner.

I probably had my transparent surface around a 10-12” (20-30cm) above the softbox but I highly recommend you experiment with this as the type of object you’re photographing will also require you to adjust its height too.

The (first) transparent surface I used was a large sheet of glass from a picture frame… it broke when my object fell over and went through it :( So be careful if you’re using that method. The second transparent surface I could find was a small piece of perspex and that’s what you can see in the images here. I used some light stands and clamps to raise it above the softbox, but you could rest it on anything from chairs to stacks of boxes.


The Key Light

Last but not least is of course the key light. This is the light that will actually illuminate your objects from the front. In the original LED setup that I mentioned above, I was using a ring of LEDs to shoot through, but that’s not necessary here. In fact I just used a cheap white umbrella, but another softbox or even beauty dish would also work just as well too.

Place that white light above the object and by ‘above’ I mean that even though the object is lying flat, place the white light in a way so that the object appears to the lit from above.

Click to enlarge

This setup not only requires very limited kit, but it also requires very limited space too. Plus once it’s setup, you can play around with a few variables to get some different looks too. Change the gel colour, raise the object higher or lower to effect the edge light size and even add reflectors or additional lights to get a better looking object light.


The Results

If you’re interested to see how my test shots for this article turned out, take a look below.

(Click to enlarge any of them)

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Closing Comments

Like I stated at the top, this is actually a super simple setup and it only requires two lights, very basic modifiers and practically no space whatsoever to achieve. So if you’re after a quick and easy way to shoot some products, hopefully this may well be of use to you.

Lastly, for those that may have been curious as to exactly what that blue edge light was doing on its own, take a look at the shots below to see what the images looked like with just the blue light on.

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Click on any of the shots above to enlarge them


Thank You

Thanks for checking out this article and spending a little bit of your day with me here. I hope you found it useful and that you left here with a little more knowledge than when you arrived. If you did, then this was worth it. As always, if you have any questions or comments about the setup or if something doens’t make sense, then by all means fire-away in the comments below and I’ll do my best to answer what I can. Thanks again and I’ll see you in the next one.

Don’t forget to sign up to my newsletter to be sent all of these photo tips and techniques articles every month in case you miss one.


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Have you downloaded my FREE 50 page book yet?

I recently released a huge 50 page studio lighting book, absolutely free!

Book 1 - ‘Understanding Light’ is available now and it covers the fundamentals of reading the light in a studio. Follow the link below and download your copy now. This book is free to anybody who wants to check it out, but all donations to the project are certainly greatly appreciated.

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Tuesday 12.01.20
Posted by Jake Hicks