Thanks! The garden hose analogy is an excellent way to quickly & simply explain light diffusion.
@PurposedLensPhotoMedia3 ай бұрын
I tried to think of ways to describe it as best as I could! Thanks for the feedback confirming that it was helpful! Thanks for taking the time to watch and leave positive feedback! 👍🏾
@filletphillips1503 ай бұрын
Yes! I also enjoyed the garden hose and the full sun illustration! Yes, I could see myself purchasing this light! Thank you. Very informative!
@PurposedLensPhotoMedia3 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching.
@adriennegee10213 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this information with us. This is just what I needed 😌
@PurposedLensPhotoMedia3 ай бұрын
I am glad that video was beneficial to you! Thanks for taking the time to watch and leave feedback!👍🏾
@Adventures_With_Indie3 ай бұрын
Great in depth video, cheers.
@PurposedLensPhotoMedia3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the feedback and thanks for taking the time to watch! 👍🏾
@Lar.Real.Diecast3 ай бұрын
Great Videos Man, on a different subject... i saw your take at 20:07 I barely see any noise, and it does look dark in there...How do you do that?
@PurposedLensPhotoMedia3 ай бұрын
First of all thanks for taking the time to watch and thanks for the positive feedback! In order to get a little noise as possible, I use a technique called "exposing for the highlights". This is how it works. In the shot you saw, I first set my camera to the setting I wanted. Let's say the shutter speed was 1/48, ISO was 800 and the aperture was at F2.8 and White balance at 5600K. I then turned my light on and adjusted the brightness until the light wasn't "clipping" in my wave form monitor. When I looked at my waveform monitor, I made sure that it stayed just under 100 IRE. Light has noise and there's also noise in the camera's sensor already! What typically makes noise more noticeable, is when we turn up the ISO so much that we are amplifying the noise that's already in the signal. The goal is to fill the sensor with as much light as possible WITHOUT amplifying the noise. This is known as your signal to noise ratio and it's done by adding light. By exposing for the LIGHT, we allow the dark parts of the picture to just be black and we keep a balanced signal to noise ratio in our picture. What most people get wrong is that they try to make everything in the scene (that they can see with their eyes) be visible on camera as well! I hope this helps! Would you be interested in seeing a video on this topic? Thanks for watching! 👍🏾
@Lar.Real.Diecast3 ай бұрын
Yes please i cant find any youtuber that can explain step by step how to make noiseless scene like that that starting from ungraded flat footage. Thanks so much
@regi1033 ай бұрын
how many of you pause the video at 4:05 for a quick laugh 🤣🤣🤣
@PurposedLensPhotoMedia3 ай бұрын
My face looks like a dry catchers mitt in one of the frames! 😮 😂 😂 I didn’t even know my face could do that! 😂 Thanks for watching!👍🏾