Selfie
Lighting
for
Talking Heads
on
Lockdown Sets
by
Jamie Jobb
Channel-surfers
everywhere now see cable-tv talking heads yacking at home in
oddly-lit Lockdown
situations. Some are reporters, some are pundits, some are
senatorial souls. Some may be retired, but all are full of opinions.
And since Covid-19 suddenly arrived on its live-feeds, broadcast
television has shown itself to be totally unprepared for stay-at-home
studios.
Obviously,
most talking heads put more effort into dressing their dens and
living rooms than considering how to properly light these “sets”.
Further muddling the picture is the fact home video “broadcast
quality” ranges from HD 1080p all the way down to fuzzy VHS. Who
knew that to put on a “shelter-in-place” news show, networks
would have to rely on their individual correspondents’ varied
broadband connections?
This
same smorgasbord of high and low quality “mug shots” may also
describe the status of many Zoom chats and FaceTime gatherings.
Setting up home studio lights may take a little time and effort but
the payoff is a sharper image. And it doesn’t take more than three
or four-steps to master home video lighting.
What
follows is a quick break-down of a home studio setup for illuminating
subjects seen by a laptop, smart phone, smart pad or other recording
device. It’s based on illumination theories practiced by studios
large and small. Of course a DIY set up would use a household’s
most available lights, but Home Depot sells a handy little “portable
luminaire, mini spotlight” by Intertek which is quite useful as
it has a rheostat for controlling light levels.
The
main point to remember: the effect of a particular lighting approach
can be immediately evaluated by looking at the video and adjusting
things in the moments of setup until the tone of the lighting is
correct.
CNN studio (left) vs. home-studio misplaced lighting
(Maggie Haberman should move her light to one side)
* * *
The Five Lights:
Location, Location, Location
1.
Key Light – Just as the name implies, the key light is the
main light. Normally this is the first light that gets set for any
subject sitting as The Talent. It’s the primary source of light on
the portrait. Outdoors, and often indoors, the sun is the obvious
key light. So, the location of the key is key! A “high key”
usually befits an upbeat airy tone, while a “low key” can create
sinister shadowing, like a crystal ball below your chin!
Carole
Lombard in “Low-Key” illumination
2.
Fill Light – Also as the name implies, a fill light is the
light that fills in shadows cast by the key. Fine studio lighting is
often distinguished by subtle fill light. Sometimes outdoor
photographers will use reflective devices to bounce sunlight as fill
light into shadowed areas. Of course, the fill must be of lower
luminosity than the key light.
3. “Kicker” or Rim Light produces the halo-effect produced by lights positioned aside the subject to outline and distinguish it from any background. Classic Hollywood films were very very well lit, particularly because of the exquisite kicker effects on women’s hats and hairdos.
Lombard
again with “kicker” hair
Lombard in full-figure “rim light”
4.
Background – The light on the background of the set.
Sometimes an absence of light may be best, as black or blank-toned
backgrounds may work with existing ambient light, so in some lighting
setups a strong background overrides any need for rim lighting a
subject.
Then,
there’s always what some photographers consider The First Resort:
5.
“Natural” Light, which of course, is sunlight captured
wherever it falls, indoors or out. Natural light can also be
“bounced”, “masked” or “filtered” to create effects of
key, fill, rim or back lighting. But natural light is ever-shifting,
particularly on partly cloudy days. And
direct sunlight may be four times hotter than fixtured lights, so the
sun can “burn out” a video image if a photographer is not
careful. Shooting in natural light
requires a certain fleetness afoot for cast and crew. That’s why
studios were built – to avoid that ever-shifting key light, the
sun.
CAUTION: The sun and other hot “key” lights – including the bright light basking faces straight out of computer screens – create problems for video self-portraiture, blowing out the exposure (see Fat Joe photo above). If the subject is sitting at a computer, it’s best to have a hotter key light to the side, so the computer light acts as fill. This is something that’s easy to see in the necessary time it takes to set up a home studio for proper “chat” lighting. Also burnt-out portions of a frame can be cured by moving the too-hot light source further from the subject.
CAUTION: The sun and other hot “key” lights – including the bright light basking faces straight out of computer screens – create problems for video self-portraiture, blowing out the exposure (see Fat Joe photo above). If the subject is sitting at a computer, it’s best to have a hotter key light to the side, so the computer light acts as fill. This is something that’s easy to see in the necessary time it takes to set up a home studio for proper “chat” lighting. Also burnt-out portions of a frame can be cured by moving the too-hot light source further from the subject.
Randall
Nott in his last role “I Am My Own Wife”
I
Am My Own Light
Two
years ago I was pressed into service in the booth of our local
community theater, although I had no experience ever sitting in that
hot seat. I was to work with a sound man and handle only light cues
for the play, which ran in numbered sequence through a notebook copy
of the script we followed there at the boards. It was all
chronological.
The
man who’d normally be sitting there, handling both sound and light,
was now on stage acting out 34 roles in an incredible one-man play by
Doug Wright, “I
Am My Own Wife”. The actor was my friend Randall Nott, whose
obituary
is published elsewhere on these pages.
Randy
was a most loyal local theater cohort – a brave actor I often used
in my own plays and whose “Random Exits” I directed at the San
Francisco Fringe Festival. When the local theater honored Randy with
a memorial service last year, I told this story:
It
was Randy’s second “Own Wife” performance, and he was not yet
fully “off book”. So he was getting lost in the early pages of
the text. So much so that he failed to deliver a pair of key lines
in the proper sequence – The Actual Cues! – which meant our
lights were suddenly out of sync. We’d lost our place on the page.
I
frantically scanned the notebook to guess where we were in the script
vs. where Randy’s words were landing on stage. And it didn’t
matter much until I hit one cue which plunged the whole set into
darkness. The End-of-Act-One cue!
Ever
the trouper, Randy continued to run lines of his one-person dialogue,
but knew the cues were so off at that point that he stopped and
shouted “Twenty Two!” That made little sense to the audience as
it was a message meant only for the booth – a direct statement of
the number of the current light cue. And Randy was such a pro, I’m
certain nobody in the audience understood the stage magic that just
happened!
Lighting
Links
As
Lekos, parcans and fresnel spots get replaced by automated 21st
Century upgrades, performance lighting has undergone a radical
transformation in recent years. However older lights may be
reconfigured with more energy efficient bulbs and that has prolonged
the life of many fixtures. Here are some textbooks which may be
helpful:
“Motion
Picture and Video Lighting” by Blain Brown. London: Focal Press,
2008. Thorough handbook full of deep details for controlled studio
lighting.
“Stage
Lighting In The Boondocks” by James Hull Miller. Colorado Springs:
Meriwether Publishing, 1995. Tailored to the needs of folks working
in civic and community theaters, schools and other local venues,
with an eye on DIY budget solutions of those performance situations.
The book was written at the end of the 20th Century so it
does not include low cost LED fixtures which are now used.
“Create
Your Own Stage Lighting” by Tim Streader and John A. Williams.
Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1985. Another DIY manual but for
more complex theater performances.
“The
Stage Lighting Handbook” by Francis Reid. New York: Routledge,
2001. Includes solid technical details as well as more aesthetic
design approaches. Breaks down lighting specifics of various styles
– dance, plays, musicals, operas, thrust stage lighting. A very
thorough and handy book.
Awesome read Jamie! Thanks for this useful info! Cheers.
ReplyDeleteMy friend and civic hero Harriett Burt sent this note:
ReplyDelete"Well put, Jamie! I have spent more time looking at the rooms and speculating how much neater and organized their dens, living rooms, family rooms, kitchens, etc are now than they probably usually are. But while I'd noticed the poor lighting in some, I hadn't thought about the fact that it wasn't being dealt with. I have also wondered if any of the many books in most of them had actually lived in on their sides or backwards or tipping to the right or fighting for space with various kinds of paper information jammed between the books and the upper shelf until this happened."
The virtual home tour vlog craze has spread like a virus. It proves one thing --
ReplyDeleteThere's No Place Like Home, particularly when you're sequestered-in-place there ... on a canal! See: https://youtu.be/sosJ28jz_bM
Here's a really good YouTube on the topic of key lights:
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/i9MxIqmSqjk
(nine minutes)
My cousin Cinda reports from outside Columbus Ohio:
ReplyDeleteWe have a local handsome 60’s something sportscaster who televises from his kitchen island. Evidently a recessed light is exactly above his head. He looks much older and heavier. With us being in the electrical contracting business over 45 years you can imagine the lighting changes we have seen.
And, of course, this had to happen in the Land of Zoom:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nFVHaus_pjI
The “Washington bookshelf” is almost a phenomenon in itself, whether in a hotel library, at a think tank office or on the walls behind the cocktail bar at a Georgetown house. And, as with nearly any other demand of busy people and organizations, it can be conjured up wholesale, for a fee.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2020/12/26/books-by-the-foot-washington-dc-covid-books-440347