Illuminate more than just your subject with Digitek's DS 40 WTP Torch Projector Snoot. Light is more than visibility, it's a tool for storytelling. With the DS 40 WTP, you're not simply lighting a scene; you're shaping the mood, creating moments, and stirring emotions.

Offer Price: Rs. 15,999.00
Shop Now: https://zurl.co/9sd5S

#DigitekLighting #TorchProjector #CreativeLighting #ProductPhotography #PortraitLighting #GoboLighting #LightWithEmotion

All you need is Digitek's DS 40 WTP Torch Projector Snoot to Shoot and Set the Mood. Because light isn’t just for visibility. It’s for storytelling.
With the Digitek DS 40 WTP, you’re not just lighting a subject, you’re projecting a mood, a moment, an emotion.

Offer Price: Rs. 15,999.00
Shop Now: https://zurl.co/vuMAA

#DigitekLighting #TorchProjector #CreativeLighting #ProductPhotography #PortraitLighting #GoboLighting #LightWithEmotion #CinematicShoots #ContentCreatorTools #LightingGear

Beam What You Feel.
Because light isn’t just for visibility. It’s for storytelling.
With the Digitek DS 40 WTP, you’re not just lighting a subject, you’re projecting a mood, a moment, an emotion.

Key Feature:
Professional Imaging Lens

Offer Price: Rs. 15,999.00
Shop Now: https://zurl.co/1ZISM

#DigitekLighting #TorchProjector #CreativeLighting #ProductPhotography #PortraitLighting #GoboLighting #LightWithEmotion #CinematicShoots
#ContentCreatorTools #LightingGear

Profoto Fresnel Small Promises Nostalgic, Cinematic Portrait Light

For photographers looking for a nostalgic lighting style.

PetaPixel
New Profoto Softboxes Create Soft and Controllable Light in Seconds

Get shooting in seconds.

PetaPixel
Artur Kayukov Makes Amazing Portraits Without Any Photoshop

Is it possible to make a stunning portrait without Photoshop? Artur Kayukov definitely thinks so and outlines his reasons here.

The Phoblographer
Lighting setup: Textured fashion lighting with coloured gels

I spent many, many years working in a busy studio that focused on quantity over quality. As photographers working there, we did our best to push back against this where we could, but sometimes you only had 20-30 minutes with a client to achieve a handful of different looks and sadly this invariably led to […]

DIY Photography

How to Light Headshots: Five Tips from Peter Hurley

When it comes to headshots, there is perhaps no better source of information and guidance than the man who has made an empire out of the practice. In this five minute video on the, Peter Hurley quickly breaks down his favorite tips to light the perfect headshot.

Tip 1: Peters's most important tip comes from a quote by American Poet Walt Whitman who once said, "Keep your face always toward the sunshine, and shadows will fall behind you." Hurley took this to heart since this is a huge deal for photographers when they want to avoid side lighting to ensure subjects' faces are properly lit and allow the camera to see the color in their eyes.

Tip 2: Never underestimate the power of natural light. While having all the latest and greatest lights and modifiers is great, photographers can capture incredible images using nothing but the light available from the sun.

Peter explains this in a previous video, but above he explains how he shot with nothing but window light for the first four years of his professional career. Even today with limitless gear at his fingertips, he will often still make use of natural light for his images. He believes that if photographers can become proficient at shooting with natural light, they will be better able to emulate it in the studio.

Tip 3: Use continuous light so you can see exactly what's going on with your subject and how the shadows are falling. This will help photographers avoid strobes disrupting the conversations and banter with their subjects and will help reduce the pupil size to show off much more color in the subject's eyes.

Tip 4: Learn the Inverse Square Law. Put simply, the main idea is to get the lights as close as possible to the subject for a softer, and much more beautiful, light.

Tip 5: Hurley's final tip is to try his signature "triangle" style setup. He says that photographers can use this setup with any lighting equipment available regardless of it being natural light, strobes, or continuous. He recommends placing lights into strip boxes or flag them into the right shapes in order to create a triangle enclosure for the model because, in Hurley's opinion, he hasn't seen anything better than that setup that can reliably produce excellent headshots.

Be sure to watch the full video to see these tips in action or visit the Peter Hurley YouTube channel for additional videos.

#educational #tips #headshots #heatshotlighting #howto #lighting #peterhurley #photography #portraitlighting #portraits #portraiture #studio #studiolighting

How to Light Headshots: Five Tips from Peter Hurley

Become a better headshot photographer

Use this simple two-light setup for gorgeous and consistent portrait lighting - DIY Photography

When shooting portraits in a studio with artificial lighting, the possibilities are endless. But if you’re looking for something simple, beginner-friendly, yet very effective, look no further. In this video, Manny Ortiz shows you one of his favorite beauty lighting setups. It uses two lights, a single light stand, and gives you beautiful and consistent […]

Ring light: You’re using it wrong - DIY Photography

At some point during the history of the influencer, the ring light became an accessory de rigueur, fueled by the availability of cheap Chinese-made devices. The original ring light was invented for dentistry by Lester A. Dine in 1952 because of its ability to cast an even light with diffuse shadows in a confined space. An […]