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Thread: Anyone have experience with Lume Cube for night long Exp lighting?

  1. #1
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    Anyone have experience with Lume Cube for night long Exp lighting?

    Hi, I'm considering picking up a Lume Cube and using it with a small Arca Swiss plate on top of my macro tripod for lighting subjects during moonlit long exposure landscape shots. Anyone have any experience using these at night and my main question is with the color temp. Have you found it too cold? (It'd 6000k)

    Thanks,

    slclick

  2. #2
    Senior Member Jonathan Huyer's Avatar
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    I hadn't heard of these things before so I looked them up on B&H. There are some detailed reviews there which should help with some of your questions. I'm not entirely sure what you are looking to accomplish with the illumination... are the subjects near, or far away? For my own night photography, I haven't had to use a very bright light to accomplish any illumination needs. Usually you are operating at a fairly high ISO, and a quick bit of 'painting' with a regular headlamp can often do the trick. As an example, in my photo below I used a very low-power headlamp equipped with a red filter. I shone the red light on the tree stump for a few seconds, then quickly lifted the filter and shone the white light on the trees in the background for the rest of the exposure.

    The exposure is 15 seconds at f/4, ISO 3200. Normally I shoot with a wider aperture, but I wanted more depth of field here so I opted for f/4. A more 'normal' exposure would be f/2.8 and ISO 1600. But that's with a moonless night. Adding moonlight to the scene would of course change things a lot.


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    Jonathan,

    Thanks for your reply and example. That is very similar to what I am thinking and my post should have read 'starlit' , not moon as I am considering it for new moon times. The fact that the lumen output is variable was a plus for me. I thought your shot was pretty amazing for f/4, I would have guessed at least 8.

  4. #4
    Senior Member Jonathan Huyer's Avatar
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    Thanks --- I made several attempts and adjusted the focus carefully so that I'd get both the stump and mountains reasonably sharp. You will probably find good success with a regular headlamp, I'm thinking. I don't know if the colour temperature will meet your liking, but you could also experiment with gel filters for some variety. Your exposures are going to need to be 15-30 seconds maximum to avoid star streaks, so that means using an ISO of 1600 typically. At that level of sensitivity, you don't need a very bright light to paint foreground objects. Here's another example, which was moderately successful. A 5 second exposure at f/2.0, ISO 1600. My wife and I were illuminated by a regular flashlight for less than 2 seconds in this shot:


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    Thats amazing! I love the area you live in, I have a good friend in Banff and I should visit her and shoot! I do already have a headlamp with a white or red lamp, I'll give that a go before shelling out.

  6. #6
    Senior Member Jonathan Huyer's Avatar
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    Your home of Utah is quite spectacular too! I've been wanting to spend time there myself. The aurora shot was taken up north in Yellowknife, where nights like this are pretty typical. If you're coming to Banff, let me know and I'll give you tips on where to go.

  7. #7
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    Wonderful pictures, Jonathan.

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