By Christine Bunish
New lighting fixtures
continually come on the market offering shooters and lighting designers
new creative options and greater efficiencies. But adding these
revolutionary or evolutionary new products to their lighting kits
doesn't mean discounting the instruments they've come to depend on job
after job. A noted tabletop director, a leading advocate of HDSLR video,
a distinguished underwater cinematographer and an in-demand lighting
designer share the contents of their lighting kits today.
For tabletop commercial director Tom Ryan, with Dallas-based Directorz (www.directorz.net),
there are no formulas for lighting food spots. "It's all about appetite
appeal," he says. "I try to give every client I work with their own
look."
Ryan primarily shoots film, although he has switched to the Phantom camera for high-speed photography,
and uses a tight-grain slow film stock that demands "a certain amount
of wattage" from his lighting package. He typically uses Mole-Richardson
tungsten 20K, 10K and 5K fixtures for interiors and HMIs for exteriors
supplemented with focusable spot sources, lekos and dedo kits.
Ryan has experimented
a bit with LEDs "but for the amount of light we use, they're not
always practical," he points out. "The beauty of LEDs is that they don't
take a lot of power, they don't put out a lot of heat and they're
great on location."Ryan's tried-and-true lighting approach with
conventional fixtures gives him a lot of latitude to create the
different looks and moods his spot clients require.
In Taco Bell's
"Cantina Tacos" with lime commercial, "conceptually the lime was a
character and we wanted it to really pop," he explains. Ryan shot the
tacos bursting with filling, their shiny aluminum foil and a drop of
juice clinging to a luscious lime wedge, with a pair of ARRI 35mm
cameras. The exterior patio was lit with HMIs; for "ultra-macro" shots
of the food he blacked out daylight and went back to tungsten sources.
Ryan's stylish "Whole
Meals" spot for Whole Foods was "influenced by old-school Irving Penn
photos with clean white backgrounds," he notes. "The challenge was not
to let the background overpower what I was shooting" — simple, fresh
ingredients, white table linens, butcher paper and brown bags. "It would
have been easy to wash out what the focal point of the pictures should
be, and if you went too much the other way things would have become
muddy and gray. So it was pretty critical to keep the balances
consistent." Ryan took light-meter readings of the backgrounds and
foregrounds and aimed for 2.5 stops difference; once that was
established he kept the balance consistent across the board with his
usual complement of tungsten fixtures.
He even kept the
white-on-white place settings "in the same range as if they were
ingredients" making "some creative decisions" as he went along about how
much fill to add to separate the tone on tone.
Taco Cabana's
evocative spot showing Lenore Segura in her kitchen assembling the
ingredients for a brisket taco features "Rembrandt-style" lighting that
"lets the shadows go and the highlights be simple and single source,"
says Ryan. "Where there were shadows on her we let them go dark, but we
softly illuminated the walls behind her so the highlights separate the
shadow." Ryan initially lit the spot with overhead Kino Flo sources then
"backed away and decided it needed a more painterly feel," and turned
instead to his trusty tungstens.
Slow
liquid pours are part of a tabletop director's repertoire and Ryan's
"Once a Day" spot for the Florida Department of Citrus showcases the
appeal of a simple glass of orange juice against white limbo. Ryan shot
the entire spot with a Phantom using a lighting scheme similar to what
he would have used with a Photosonics high-speed film camera.
"It took a
lot of light — 20Ks with dimmers," he recalls. "With the white
background we needed twice as much light on the background as on the
juice. When I'm shooting video I'd rather shoot it a bit wider aperture
so you get a bit of fall off for a more filmic look." A broad source
gave shape and highlights to the slow pours that wash up against the
glass like waves in extreme close ups. Delicious!
http://www.markeemag.com/article/detail.php?RecordID=160
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar