Filmmaking 101 - Three Point Lighting Tutorial
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- čas přidán 5. 04. 2012
- In this tutorial I walk you through what Three Point Lighting is, what its uses are, and how to achieve it for Cinematography or Still Photography.
Key Light, Fill Light, Hair Light.
Check out my production company: www.rethink-films.com
Instagram: @rethinkfilms
Disclaimer I have used CZcams’s Editor tool to remove a piece of misinformation I mistakenly said at the 4:15 mark. I initially misspoke during filming and said “the light also gets softer as you push it away”. The light actually gets harder, or more accurately, the shadows get harder/sharper the more you push the light away as the light source gets smaller relative to the subject.
why cant every tutorial for everything be this simple?
he explained each light. gave examples and showed what each does. thank you. i fully understand each light now.
J Hernandez+ So true!
Totally agree..
My sentiments exactly!
Did you mean to say "thank you for enlightening me" ?
ya same here. So many youtubers talk but it feels like they dont really know what they're talking about. He actually explained why.
Thank you for not playing any soundtracks!!! Straight to the point, accurate and without any distractions. Big thumbs up.
because the video is made in 2012. youtube was intro-less and direct back then
The thing about not having any music creates the feeling of an interview, which gives more weight to the voice and focuses more on the information , rather than entertaining
Yes, it can be quite distracting with background soundtracks and harder to hear. Good move!
Not joking, this is one of the best if not THE best explanation and example of three point lighting I have seen that wasn't in actual "school". You rock. Thanks so much.
Bumping into this 11 years after it was posted, still by far the most helpful video on three point lighting I've found online. Thank you so much!
That’s great to hear.
This is probably the third time I have watched this and I always laugh at "Don't walk over that little bridge tomorrow."
ahahahah.. I should have read the comments before I watched this. caught me off-guard man. And boy, having a gulp of coffee midway on your throat is not a very pleasing thing.
so awkward! lol
This was great! I've read other articles about 3 point lighting but seeing each light individually and how they combine together was super helpful!
This is VERY informative! I've been modeling over 18 years & can take a GREAT photograph of myself and other things but I have -0- what I'm doing; I just know what looks good. I am getting a huge learning curve doing self tapes for acting. Understanding how to create a solid background with no shadows and to look good, is another ballgame. I definitely need to learn tech now.
This was very well produced and definitely taught a lot. I struggle and honestly don't know too much about 3 point lighting but watching this, I'm certainly going to give it another go.
Absolutely best video I've seen on 3 point lighting! Straight and to the point.
i agree, brilliant video
I agree too
Straight to the point that could have been explained in 2 minutes, not 10.
Found this video in 2022 and so must Say THANK YOU for enriching my lighting game❤️😘
I’m happy this video has had such longevity! Thank you for commenting!
@@DiCasaFilm All thanks to you. 😘😘
2023 SAME!
Excellent video, thank you! I love the wide angle camera because it shows all the sources. When you focused on the individual lights and what they add, it brought the whole ‘picture’ together.
I have been watching (i kid you not) a thousand videos today trying to find the best lighting to get started and I was just about to give up when I saw your video recommended. And this just changed everything for me!!! Now I understand why lighting from different angles is KEY! thank you so much
Thank you for this. I've read and seen others but this is the first one that explains it clearly in a simple way. Now I thank God I have a boomstand. Just need to get the lights.
Thank you SO much for making this video! It's probably the best I've seen on lighting. Very easy to understand for a beginner, which is what I needed!
Beauty Geek want make action movie?
Just about the best tutorial I've seen on anything. I come back to this just to watch it for entertainment. Great stuff. For 2012 this is insane quality for CZcams.
This is arguably one of the best videos on 3 point lighting I have ever watched. There are several reasons. One is the fact that you talk about positioning and distance. You actually have a camera shooting wide so that we can actually see where everything is. Not only that, you actually turn off lights so that we can see what it looks like with and without each light.
I absolutely appreciate that you explained the reasons for each light. THANK YOU!!! I enjoyed this video :)
Dude this was so helpful! Thanks for keeping it simple and practical.
Amazing tutorial! Never knew how much detail and appreciation for lighting goes into ones job. Awsome! Thank you
Hi Steve. I'm a professional teacher, and I found your video outstanding.
It was very well organised, clear, well delivered and I found it very helpful.
When showing the hair light effect alone, I agree it gives a kind of spooky/spiritual look. Your sense of humour is very good. Don't be afraid to relax and let your sense of humour show a bit whenever you feel like it. Thanks for teaching me some basics about lighting. Awesome.
Great tutorial. I was looking for a simple three point lighting tutorial and you delivered!!!
this video was very helpful. well explained. I like how you turned on the lights individually.
Thank you!
I agree , he made it real elementary
আল
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I love how passionate you are about your hair light...
Very helpful! I understood the basics but seeing them individually and together really explains the concept. Thank you!
Honestly, this indeed is the first thing you get taught in Film School. Back light is amazing for both videography and photography. Great video!
It's one of the first things I was taught too. :)
Keiden L.
can't wait to go to film school, I'm about to finish 7th grade, then ill go to 8th grade, then off to film school, to start on my dream.
Excellent. THIS was so very useful and informative and finally clarified many things I knew and didn't. THANK YOU!
Great Job dude!!! This is exactly how I was taught, turn everything off and add one light at a time. I really prefer the 22mm 2.0 and 50mm 1.8 on Canon. I really think so many people crank the ISO when I personally think it’s better to shoot as wide open as possible and have the ISO as low as possible.
One of the best tutorials we have ever seen. Great job! Thank you for this!
Thank you for shedding some "light" on this subject :)
Wamp wamp waaaaaaaaaaaaamp.
HAAAAAA best comment ever!
Somewhere a Papyrus is screaming XD
i knew somebody was gonna say it
good
You're such a great teacher! I appreciate this video very much! Thank you!
I absolutely loved this video! Thank you very very much 🙏🏽
6 years later and it’s still very relevant. God bless you!
this is one of the best if not the best lighting vid i have seen. you explained a lot, slowly and throughly. makes me want to watch more of your vids. thank you. cant wait to get myself a better set up.
Thanks dude...........You'll make a great teacher
this is the best video on lighting I have seen. I know its been years but would love your green screen lighting tutorial. Give this a like if you all agree!
THANK YOU! I just got a basic light set up for myself to invest into the quality of my videos & this was SUPER helpful for a begginer like myself!
Nicely done, 'to the point, I'm learning about lighting pretty much from the ground up and basically just started today. For me this was very clear and easy to understand. I've been focusing on improving my sound by using better mics and now I've realized how important lighting is so I'm on the learning curve and this was excellent, THANK YOU!
so helpful. i'd like to learn green screen lighting and more about cinematography. thank you! and subscribed already!
From a portrait photographer: "Hair light" is intended to keep dark hair from going completely black; don't do a hair light on bald men, and you may not need it on blondes. Background separation may be done by "edge-lighting" the subject or lighting the background, but "edge-lighting" is not "hair lighting." Edge lighting should be narrower and shaped along an entire edge of the subject, not just on the head. There may be a cinematic reason for making the top of a man's bald head the most important visual interest point in the scene...but most often, not.
lol I was thinking the same thing all the time!
An image is an image and light is light. If you make a video of a bald corporate executive, don't put a light on the top of his head.
Very nice tutorial DiCasaFilm. Thank you!! I was thinking similarly to Kirk here, just not as a rule. From my school days, three-point-lighting includes key-light, fill-light, and 'back-light'. 'Back-light' is supposed to do a mix of what are mentioned here, 'hair-light' (not as harsh coz of the reasons Kirk mentioned) and 'edge-light' (not as soft coz it's gatta hit the head as well). Again, we're not setting rules here, but 'back-light' definitely makes more sense to me.
I see what you mean, Kirk. His hair light is too hot. If that's a personal preference over edge lighting, then perhaps dial it back a couple notches.
Kirk Darling Please correct me if I’m wrong, but this is similar to the “kicker”, placed on the fill side but off axis? (Fill side because otherwise you’re fighting the key.)
Best film lighting tutorial I have ever seen. Invaluable. Thank you.
Straight into it, Steve is totally the professional educator and so much taught in 10 Info-packed-minutes, Incredible format., Applies equally to still-work :) (No-Intro-No-Steel-band-No-quartet to waste time, just a quality learning opportunity., Thanks Steve :)
Thank you for this! Straight forward, and entirely understandable!
Nobody:
Bald guy: I love the hair light!
Just kidding. Very informative video.
Hahaha.
ه
@@DiCasaFilm I think removing the hair light is better for you, I hate the shine
Your video straight to the point. You really put some heart into it. Thank you very much. Now, I'm really tempted to buy this set. The lighting really helps create some edges around your subject, instead of seeing him/her blurred like if the subject was part of the background itself.
Finally a really instructive video on the creativity of a variety of lighting techniques.
Thank you. You've inspired my imagination.
i am so glad to see his video ,thank you so much , this will help , good wishes from Indore, India .
I've watched a few other lighting tutorials before this, and this is by far the most helpful. Loved the natural humour just before 7:03 as well. Made me lol!
What a great tutorial! Extremely thorough and I love that you included examples! Thank you!
This is really great. I love how you demonstrated by turning the lights on and off. I also loved the part about the dead ancestors. Thanks for the great content!
Thank You Steve. Excellent. I am getting big into Green Screen. I would for sure like to see that from you. I get you.
Excellent tutorial, thank you!
I just miss tips on how to do this myself with a cheap budget.
Hahaha. I hear you. I should do more budget friendly videos. Problem is doing filmmaking friggin expensive. :-\
led bulb is so cheap now in 2021, just do the diy
I have found this tutorial as a best and easiest one about lighting 101. Thanks mate for your all effort. Great job.
Thanks for that easy to understand explanation. This answers all my questions as a beginner CZcamsr. Great video. I can’t wait to see more on your channel.
This so much better than other channels such as "Full Time Filmmaker", even though it's over 10 years old. No paid promotions and asks for feedback at the end. Kudos!
Great job!
Thankyou! I've seen lots of videos about lighting, but yours is the most concise!
This is the best 3 point lighting tutorial I have seen in years - Thank you for taking the time to do this :)
Hey Steve, I love your tutorials. You've helped me every step of the way. I have to do a homeowner testimonial coming up. Looking at this I think I will only need two lights as hair light is probably going to be overkill and make it look like my talent is in a movie studio not relaxing in their home. What would be your take on this? Thanks!
The best tutorial I've seen so far. I have a question: do I need to set up like this if I have a big natural light window in front of me?
I don't think so....that should naturally be your key light, then you'll just need to add the fill and hair light to compliment it
I know its 3 year late :) but you don´t need a second light or more you can just use a white board made of either cardboard or what we call flamingo/polystyrene board to lighten the dark side of your face, you can learn a ton from photography books about to use different light and light settings from natural light to advanced light setting with several types of lights
Make sure your the color temperature of your light matches the ambient (outdoor light coming through your window) fuuuuuck is generally around 5600 degrees Kelvin. Most practical lights in lamps and light fixtures are sound 3200 Kelvin. I know this is 4 years late...
Val Santos Great question. A big window with natural light is great to have. If your camera can sit in the window to shoot you straight on, you’re probably set. If you have to position yourself to the side of the window you might want to have a reflector to bounce some light back to your fill side to even it out. One downside to filming this way is that you’re restricted to filming only during the day when it’s relatively nice out, but if that’s not a problem I say use it!
dude, you are an excellent instructor !!! you explain very well by turning off the other lights and making comparisons. thanks.
Thanks Steve.Great info for a beginner like me. Helping a friend on a shoot tomorrow and now feel a little more confident knowing the basics of Three Point Lighting.
Light doesn't get softer as you push it away. This is a common mistake, it gets less intense (less bright due to more falloff), but it actually gets harder (creates more defined shadows). the farther the light gets the "smaller" the light source appears to the subject's perspective, making it create harder shadows. Good tutorial none-the-less.
Spencer Selover + Nice one - thank you.
That "ancestor" scene for hair lighting!!! 😂😂😂😂 Love it man, thanks for sharing the knowledge!
Hi Steve-just wanted to say thanks for this awesome video. ABSOLUTE BEST one I’ve seen!
This is one of the clearest and best tutorials I have ever seen. I’m new to lighting and this was exceptional. Thanks
Thanks, Jack! Hey, I wanted to let you know that I’m starting a live show that will stream every Monday and Wednesday right here on my channel! It starts June 8th. Come hang out if you can. The trailer to the show is my most recent video post. Hope to see you there! Consider subscribing to be notified when I go live. Thanks so much!
great job man! thanks a lot!
My HS Broadcasting students and I really liked this tutorial and we'd be thrilled to see one done one green screen lighting. Any chance you'd be willing to make one for us?
Great Job Steve. I'm a newbie to video shooting, and am about to shoot a bunch of short spots for our medical clinic and want to be sure that what I do shoot looks professional. Your speech pattern is nice and even, not rushed like many of the folks out there today. It is easy to listen to you, and I try to apply the KISS principle in all facets of my life, so I was glad to hear you advise that here for cinematography as well. Keep up the good work, and this video has inspired me to check out other stuff you have done or are doing.....Thank You.
Awesome video. You kept it straight to the point. Turning on / off the lights individually was so helpful. Thank you!
Awesome, thanks! Very informative. I'm wondering how much I can rig with no budget, but at least now I have some concepts to work from.
So is the hair light basically the same as a back light or rim light?
It's amazing all the different moods you can get with just 3 lights!
thank you very much. i actually went to a cinematography school to learn this, and trust me, i have gained more understanding than before!
ancestor: "dont walk over that bridge tomorrow"
pewds : "sorry ancestor"
6:50
"Don't walk over that little bridge tomorrow.."
Exactly! But you know what you CAN do tomorrow?? You can come hang out in my Live Stream show that’s launching its first episode tomorrow at 6pm est! Haha, great segue right? Hope to see you there! Subscribe to be notified. :)
😆😆I feel you
Bro, this was a great video. You were articulate, easy to understand, and watchable. Jolly good carry-on!
thanks for the tips man. Just started making some cooking videos and this tutorial gave me some ideas. Its hard to find concise raw information that is delivered in a concise way but you did an awesome job . Bravo!
what is the price of video studio setup ?
5000
"You need to take that job" hahaha \
Your conversation with your ancestor is great dude
Thank you for this tutorial. I own a studio and work with portrait photographers and videographers. The lighting patterns are the same, but neeeds dictate how they are modified, as you poited out. This is very straight forward and simple to follow. I have to explain these things to those who are new to studio lighting and your tutorial is very helpful!
Thanks for watching and subscribing! I'm glad it helps. :)
About half way through, he said if you want to soften the light push the light back a bit. I thought the closer the light, the softer the light, ergo the further away the harder the light. Have I got this backwards?
yes you do. Backing it away allows the light to diffuse more in the space. The closer it is the harsher/brighter it will be.
Think, inverse square law
No you are correct Dale, I'm not sure why Alex and Mema have told you otherwise. Closer and larger sources are softer. Intensity will decrease though as you get further away, which is different than the softness of light.
Shawn Jensen I'm speaking from experience.
mema tron So you're saying the sun is not a harsh light?
Very nice tutorial! But at 4:15 you said something wrong. If you push away a light it will not get softer but harsher. That is why the sun makes a harsh light when it's not cloudy.
That's wrong. Sunlight is harsher when there are not clouds in the sky because clouds act as a diffuser.
Light Yagami We are saying the same thing! But beside the width of a diffuser, it is also important the distance of a light!
@@NerdRapper yall have now confused me. so for a soft pretty light i should put it closer?
@@ukuleleangela6153 Yes, or keep it at the same distance and hang a thin bed sheet or something in front of it to spread the light out more.
Splendid tutorial. I agree with Kirk Darling in that, "Hair Light" (back light) is meant for separating the subject from the background. For example with black hair, a black jacket or shirt in front of a blacked out background the edges a hair light produces prevents the subject from becoming a floating head. Just try not to burn your edges. Start with three point lighting then make adjustments until you have reached the desired effect. Always test record. Cheers.
this video was very helpful,
I like the way this man explained the whole lighting
"softer further away?" if the size of the light stays the same then the light gets harder the further away it gets. thats why a 22" beauty dish is so soft when its in a very close proximity for a portrait for instance but if you move it back 6' its just another light that is small and you will have severe shadows vs close like 3'.
Not sure about other people, but I think the hair light kinda emphasized his baldness.
I'm gonna start calling it a bald light.
DiCasaFilm The proper name for it is called Rim light
who care what it is call, this is great information.
Very observant. Coming from a photography background, it is something we are very much aware of. The intensity of a hair/rim light has to be varied based on the subject. A subject with blonde hair doesn't need as much hair light as a subject with dark hair. And a person who is balding on top needs even less. Unless your goal is to bring attention to the fact that they are bald. Plus, under hot lights, they would have a tendency to perspire and reflect even more light.
@@DiCasaFilm + Don't listen to the jokers - you're cool.
this video just brought so much clarity!!!
One of the best videos I have seen about lighting, thank you.
cooool man u wer auwsume
I love tutorials about lighting that, themselves, have good lighting... if you're teaching me how to light a scene and your video has shit lighting I just can't watch... great job DiCasaFilm
Very good Steve! Helpful and practical. Turning on and off the lights you were explaining was a great help. I will subscribe now for more of your training!
You are a good teacher. Calm and informative.
"Cinematography is simple". LMAO
Of course cinematography is simple. GOOD cinematography is hard.
Nice vid. “Hair” light way too bright 🤣
You are the best human being man thank you so much for taking your time out and showing this.
Thanks so much Steve. Your teachings were very helpful to me, we were looking for exactly this level of improvement in our filming. Success to you my friend !!!!
Actually the first thing they teach you is how to open a C-stand.
I didnt mess with a C-stand until after I had my hands on a camera. Just my experience though.
A hair light when there's no hair.
I can dream.
DiCasaFilm Hey, you can always fix that in the post!
A.K.A. Rim light on both sides. Don't need hair.
LOL!!
lol , lmao :)
Great video man! Going through self taught film school for my youtube channel and going through all l the video to watch. Thanks for this.
Very Good job DiCasa. Simple and clear instructions. Will look for the green screen video. Thanks.