Softbox correct distance to subject

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  • čas přidán 14. 07. 2022
  • Softbox correct distance to the subject
    Daniel answers a very common question. How far away should we place our softbox?
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Komentáře • 59

  • @miycalr
    @miycalr Před 2 lety +1

    I like a 48 inch softbox. Finally someone who talks in plain English and you do not feel stupid. Good job here.

  • @mikesmith71
    @mikesmith71 Před 2 lety +6

    Wow, after watching more tutorials than I'd like to admit I've finally found one that explains very clearly how the shape can be important for the result. Thank you for sharing your knowledge 🙂👌

  • @AtlantaTerry
    @AtlantaTerry Před 2 lety +1

    An octabox tends to be more of a parabolic design which throws more light forward.
    A strip box makes a great "kicker". (A light that is positioned behind the body axis.)
    It can help to divide the subject from a dark background by giving an edge highlight.
    Terry Thomas...
    the photographer
    Atlanta, Georgia USA

  • @hawg427
    @hawg427 Před 2 lety +1

    The Daniel Norton school of mathematics ;-) Learned some useful info on the strip boxes. I have noticed that some manufacturers will call a certain light a Parabolic light source then I saw a video by Karl Taylor over in the UK who uses Broncolor lights what a TRUE Parabolic light actually is, I did not know that the light actually moved within the umbrella to have different focus points on the subject. Good video.

  • @michaelhull1813
    @michaelhull1813 Před 2 lety +1

    I found with a stripbox, you can flag it easily, and make it a smaller source.
    ...and it's hard to beat a 3ft octo for general purpose/multi-use.
    Also, I go with the subjects "Arms length" distance for a starting position. I just have them reach out.
    Then comes the feathering, etc...
    Concise as always Daniel.

  • @alun7006
    @alun7006 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for all you do, Daniel!

  • @steveshellenberger-letsmak6283

    I just learned something new about softboxes and their use and that made my day. Thank you for sharing this great information, Daniel. Well done!

  • @AdrianBacon
    @AdrianBacon Před 2 lety +1

    This is great. If I'm in my studio, I usually use a super huge fill and a 12x16 or 18 inch octa for my key and shove it in there as close as I can as I don't care as much about the fall off as I use the fill for legibility in the shadows. If I'm out on location or only have one light, it's 36 inch octa about 3 feet away all day long.

  • @toddlower5546
    @toddlower5546 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for the explanation. That makes things much clearer.

  • @timgreen5235
    @timgreen5235 Před 2 lety

    Many thanks for concisely covering this topic in such a clear and easy to follow manner.

  • @okeefest
    @okeefest Před rokem

    Great presentation. Soft box size is one element of the equation. What about soft box depth? How does that affect the light? Why would you choose a shallow vs regular vs deep?

  • @anoirsx
    @anoirsx Před 2 lety

    Thank you! Your videos are always helpful!

  • @BTcycle
    @BTcycle Před 2 lety +1

    Very informative and great tips with the softbox sizes. Now I know how to use them correctly.

  • @richardwintle1020
    @richardwintle1020 Před rokem +1

    I bought a cheap 3x3 ft square box with a grid as my first one.... and kind of wish I'd gotten a 2x3. The big square one is a bit unwieldy at times. But as you point out so nicely, moving it around still allows for lots of options.

  • @brokenoutline
    @brokenoutline Před rokem

    Truly enjoy the channel thanks for all the work and knowledge you are putting out there. So helpful Daniel.

  • @Vawn222
    @Vawn222 Před rokem

    Your videos are great, thank you Daniel

  • @dougmclaughlin5051
    @dougmclaughlin5051 Před rokem

    Good info I have seen in other lighting tip videos. Thanks!!!

  • @yungbio
    @yungbio Před 2 lety

    Great video Daniel. Thanks for sharing.

  • @250GTOAJ
    @250GTOAJ Před 2 lety

    Handy to know information about placement of them, I have a 2x3 Chimera and two smaller ones.Thanks Daniel and Kaydence 😎👍🇨🇦

  • @josephchan4198
    @josephchan4198 Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome instruction. Good refresher course. Thanks.

  • @MikeJamesMedia
    @MikeJamesMedia Před 2 lety

    Thanks, Daniel and Keydence!

  • @BrasicOne
    @BrasicOne Před 2 lety

    Thanks Daniel. As usual top video.

  • @jeffereyjimenez6439
    @jeffereyjimenez6439 Před rokem

    Very informative and succinct presentation of softbox differences. This is one of your best.

  • @gregoryroth5527
    @gregoryroth5527 Před rokem

    Never had this explained this way, and it should be (with distances)! Thanks!

  • @fathampeak
    @fathampeak Před rokem +1

    Thank you! Very helpful, concise information and now I'm interested in what size strobe/speedlight to use in each different softbox, thank you!

  • @jaycoronado3441
    @jaycoronado3441 Před 2 lety

    Such a great explanation.

  • @kennethnielsen3864
    @kennethnielsen3864 Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks for sharing.

  • @canucklehead28
    @canucklehead28 Před 2 lety

    Great video Daniel!

  • @JohanSchmidt
    @JohanSchmidt Před 2 lety

    Very interesting metric and rule of thumb - easy to remember 👍🏻

  • @daletaylor406
    @daletaylor406 Před 2 lety

    Hi Daniel, Good job. Strip boxes also give you the opportunity to have a softer light in one direction and a bit harder in the other, so you can effectively mix lighting types with one light. Same, B-T-W, with wands like the Ice Light, although the effect is more pronounced. A nice rule of thumb for optimizing falloff issues is: if you want less than 1 f stop fall off side-to-side, put your light at least 6 times as far as the subject is wide.

  • @georgs5870
    @georgs5870 Před rokem

    Great advice as usual - thanks for sharing your knowledge with the rest of the world.
    My favorite softbox is a small Chimera Maxi (1720, 16x22) - I've shot a ton of images on location with it (fast newspaper-stuff).
    Most of the time with a Nikon SB800 in it, controlled by a SU800 transmitter.

  • @erickking6729
    @erickking6729 Před 2 lety

    Always having fun over there

  • @gewglesux
    @gewglesux Před 2 lety

    gREAT work you two!!!
    tHANKS!!

  • @michaelcarnes2087
    @michaelcarnes2087 Před 2 lety

    I like using an octobox for key and a small strip for "hair" light to give some separation from background

  • @darkroom8317
    @darkroom8317 Před 2 lety +1

    I don’t own a soft box yet... but I am thinking of the Chimera XXs box along with a 1x3 with an egg create.

  • @mhc2b
    @mhc2b Před 2 lety +3

    Agree. Someone else on You Tube suggested that you can get the same quality of light from any size soft box, "if" you place the given soft box the distance from the subject equal to its longest side. Appreciate you corroborating this advice in your video.

  • @mauriziofranzini8418
    @mauriziofranzini8418 Před 2 lety

    Grazie, Maestro! Sintetico però esaustivo e completo.

  • @theopats2660
    @theopats2660 Před rokem

    Very helpful video. I would like a detailed video for softbox shapes

  • @davidkiang3891
    @davidkiang3891 Před 2 lety

    Great video / demo; always interesting to see other shooter’s capture stations. What is the white tower on the desk, GPU tower?

  • @grabtharandhishammer8251

    Nice video Daniel.

  • @simongentry
    @simongentry Před rokem

    Daniel - as usual great video. as much as you've gone into ttl with profoto, i was wondering which metering you're using while in manual... and do the lights retain there settings when you switch to manual from ttl? cheers mate.

  • @TimothyJohnLukeSmithPSA
    @TimothyJohnLukeSmithPSA Před 2 lety +3

    Hi Daniel, it is such an honor to learn from a master. Thank you for posting this.

  • @robnew7481
    @robnew7481 Před rokem

    Would love to see more with strip boxes.

  • @dougtunison
    @dougtunison Před 6 měsíci

    Do you have any suggestions to eliminate hotspots on foreheads? I'm using a 2x3 soft box on a 400Ws studio strobe. If I move the box closer than about 2' from the subject, I often have hotspots on the forehead or the tip of the nose.

  • @keithandrew1798
    @keithandrew1798 Před 2 lety

    Would this hold true with round umbrella type as well using the diameter?

  • @mrlouisleon
    @mrlouisleon Před 3 měsíci

    Both the small and medium softbox, when close, illuminated the eyes, showing the color as bright. The medium soft box when 3 feet away did not show this effect, even though, if I followed your logic, it would light the face ( and the eyes? ) similarly. Lighting the eyes is important to be. Is the difference attributed to TTL/exposure settings?

  • @smalltalk.productions9977

    daniel-thank you for the effort and the sharing. distance from subject = the long side of the softbox. fantastic! how about 48" octoboxes or 42" umbrellas, 48" and 42" away, respectively? i am an appreciative subscriber. BIG thumbs up.

  • @thatboyneedstherapy
    @thatboyneedstherapy Před 2 lety

    What about oddball-sized softboxes, like the Octabox?

  • @b991228
    @b991228 Před 2 lety

    Add fill for a small box?

  • @gilbertsanchez4348
    @gilbertsanchez4348 Před 2 lety

    Daniel, do you use VR on your camera or lenses or not?

  • @janlasalle8845
    @janlasalle8845 Před 2 lety

    Thanks...I watch your video s to fill in the gaps,,,excellent tips! I mostly use the strip box for edge lighting but want to play more to see what kind of key lighting I can get Thinking about how much coverage the narrow side of the box covers makes sense...overall I am not the smartest tech person....I cook the same way...I get the overall essence of a recipe but never follow it exactly. I would give up photography if I had to use the Ansel Adams zone system...squeezing out the juice out of the moment,,,just sayin'!

  • @mohdnorazmil
    @mohdnorazmil Před 2 lety

    What about beauty dish?

  • @thefaeryman
    @thefaeryman Před rokem

    I use a 30" soft box with my Canon 680 flash, I put it way up against the ceiling about 7 feet tipping down like afternoon sun. Then I have my first soft box an 18" octagon with same flash down as far as the light stand will go pointed straight out at subject. Using both this way fill in the background and softly lights the subjct ans if I am doing a head to toe shot, the light coverage is rather nice
    It took me a bit to figur4 out that those older flashes require a line of sight from the trigger on camera to the front sensor of flash. fotunately those heads can be turned and tilted to see me and fit into the back of softbox.
    question if I was goinge to buy one paper roll background what color would you suggest to start with? presently using a cloth light grey background that works except the wrinkles are impossible to work out.
    sorry I haven't been able to keep up with your videos.
    John

  • @p.burley4533
    @p.burley4533 Před 2 lety

    What a game-changing tip! Thank you. Now I can finally place them right. However, what about flash types, like 200, 400, or 600 ws,…even a speedlight? Wouldn't those choices affect the distance factor?

    • @Sydney_Jones
      @Sydney_Jones Před 2 lety

      Considering light's quick travel speed, I don't think that distance would make as much of a difference as the shutter speed would.

    • @OwenLloyd
      @OwenLloyd Před 2 lety +2

      The maximum output of the light (600J, 400J or around 70J for a speedlight etc ) in the back of the softbox won't make any difference to how soft the light is, or to the fall-off. A speedlight may not light the inside of the box as evenly but that's another problem tbh. Of course if you want to place your softbox far away (to get a slower fall-off across the subject) , then you'll need more light to get the same exposure so a more powerful flash might be needed.

    • @OwenLloyd
      @OwenLloyd Před 2 lety +1

      @@Sydney_Jones We don't really use the shutter for much when using studio flash - we just use it to remove all the ambient light in the scene.

  • @johnwesgreen1853
    @johnwesgreen1853 Před rokem

    Wow! Fantastic explanation of softbox sizes and the light implications of each! Thank you for taking the time to pull this together!

  • @PaulAnthony2009
    @PaulAnthony2009 Před 2 lety

    Every day is a school day 👍👍