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Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

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Page 1: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

Lighting For Television

The art of control and effect

Page 2: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

The Principles of Light

• Light is part of the electromagnetic energy spectrum.

X-ray and Gamma rays

Audio 20 Hz – 20 KHz

Radio and Communications freq.

The Electromagnetic Spectrum

Violet

Indigo

Blue

Green

Yellow

Orange

Red

Page 3: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

Lighting Terminology

• Color Temperature: The relative reddishness or bluishness of light. Measured in degrees Kelvin.

• Primary Colors: For light the primary colors are Red, Blue, & Green

• Photographic principle: Lighting design utilizing 3 lights to light a subject.

• Gel: A colored filter that allows only certain light to pass through the filter.

• Fresnel: A hard light that is a common type of light fixture for a TV Studio.

Page 4: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

Fresnel Light

Page 5: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

Lighting Terminology (cont.)

• Hard light: A directional light sources that produces sharp falloff (shadows have edges)

• Soft light: Diffused light that produces few shadows.

• EFP Floodlight: Used for portable lighting situations. Usually consists of a bright halogen bulb – Very hot to touch.

• Ellipsoidal Spotlight: An adjustable lighting fixture that allows the lighting director to focus light where he/she would want it.

Page 6: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

EFP Floodlight

Page 7: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

Ellipsoidal Spotlight

Page 8: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

Lighting Terminology (cont.)

• Flag: Cloth or material that will block light from an area of a set.

• Scoop: A light fixture that has no lens and produces soft light.

• Kelvin Scale: the scale used to measure the relative reddishness or bluishness of light.

• Light Plot: A detailed diagram that shows the placement of lights on the light grid.

• Grid: A support system that lights are hung from

Page 9: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

Light Plot

Page 10: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

Grid

Page 11: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

Lighting Terminology (cont.)

• Raceway: The electrical grid that supplies electricity to the grid. Usually it is a complex array of wires.

• Light board: A control panel that allows an operator to control light intensity to each circuit.

• Gaffer: An assistant lighting director.• Falloff: The intensity of the shadow’s edge

produced by a light fixture

Page 12: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

Light board

Page 13: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

Lighting Terminology (cont.)

• Background light: The purpose of the background light is to establish a "base level of overall lighting" on the set, and to illuminate the set pieces.

• Barndoors: The flaps attached to the front of the instrument, they are manipulated to prevent light from striking unwanted areas.

• Diffusion: Diffusion scatters light, creating soft, somewhat blurred shadow edges, and less severe modeling.

Page 14: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

Lighting Terminology (cont.)

• Scrims: A wire screen used to cut down the amount of light emulating from an instrument. It is inserted between the lens and the barndoors.

• Side light: Side light is sometimes used as an alternative to the standard three point lighting setup.

Page 15: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

The Photographic Principle

• Most common type of lighting design

• Or 3 point lighting– Key light– Back light– Fill light

Fill Light

Soft lightBack Light

(hard or spot light)

Key Light (hard or spot light)

Page 16: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

The Kelvin Scale• Measures the relative

Reddishness or bluishness of light

Candle light

Incandescent Light fixtureFluorescent lighting fixture

Studio lighting (Quartz/Halogen light fixtures)

Outdoor light on a beautiful sunny day (Approx)

Kelvin Scale

Outdoor light on a cloudy Day

Outdoor light on a stormy day20,000 K

15,000 K

5600 K

3200 K

2800 K

2200 K

1200 K

Page 17: Lighting For Television The art of control and effect

Light Plot Plan