Sports Arena Lighting
Workshop at the Ranch
February, 2003 Edition
First, let me thank all of you who
e-mailed me with wonderful comments and great questions. The most
asked question was easy to answer, "Where do I buy me equipment?"
The answer is also easy, Roberts in Indianapolis, and in particular,
from Jody Grober. To contact Jody, call 800-726-5544 or log onto
www.robertsimaging.com
Last month we talked about the "slowest"
form of lighting, Light Painting. This month I want to introduce
you to the "fastest" form of lighting, Sport arena lighting
with STROBES.
This is a vast subject and involves
some equipment you might not have, but first let's learn why we
need strobes anyway. Most arenas, even great ones where the NBA
and NHL play have enough available light to shoot at ISO 800 or
1600 at maybe 1/500 sec shutter speed. Sports action is difficult
to freeze at 1/500 sec and high ISO's produce grain in film and
some noise in digital. We can increase our image quality and freeze
the action perfectly by lighting the court or ice arena with strobes
(large flash units). The strobe contains a flash tube (or tubes)
that must have a "flash duration" of 1/1200 sec. or
faster. It is this fast "flash duration" that freezes
the action and the amount of light that allows you to shoot at
a low ISO setting.
A normal flash unit sits on your camera. These
strobe units are much larger and are located in the catwalk of
the arena. (If there are no catwalks, there are other ways to
use strobes effectively - we will discuss this later)
Strobes, catwalks, flash duration.......TOO MUCH!
Stop right there! Those of you that are leaving
in fear, this is well within your grasp, so stay with me, take
a breath...... Ok, let's move on.
We will begin with one strobe. There are plenty
of great pictures made with one, two, or three strobes. While
four strobes located above the corners of a basketball court are
the most common you can make great pictures with one or two.
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There a several manufacturers of strobe units. Elinchrom,
Dyna-Lite, Speedotron, and Profoto. I use the Elinchroms.
A mono-unit with the strobe head (houses the flash tube)
and the power pack (source of power) all encased in one
unit. Light, powerful, portable, and affordable. I have
the Elinchrom 1000R units and the 500 units. The number
represents the watts per second of light output the unit
produces. 500 = 500 watts/second. 500 to 650 watts/sec.
is a great starting point. For example, two 500 watts/sec
strobes with a "flash duration of 1/1200 second or
faster will easily light one half of the average college
basketball court.
Note: Jody at Roberts has these units and accessories
in ready to go packages called "Arena Lighting Corner
Kits" at 800-726-5544
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What I will
use:
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Strobe and accessories:
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Elinchrom 1000R with Sport Reflector of 50°.
Bogen Super Clamp, and safety cable will hold the strobe safely
in place. A Pocket Wizard MAX (this is the remote trigger
wireless unit that transmits a radio signal from the camera
to the strobe and fires the strobe) |
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Camera:
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Nikon D1-X |
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Settings:
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ISO 125, shutter (sync setting) of 1/500
sec., aperture of f8 (note: the flash duration will freeze
the action) |
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Lens:
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A variety of Nikkor lenses, depending on
subject matter |
Now let's make
an image using one strobe
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Using one strobe located in the catwalk above
the corner of the ice rink. You can see from the shadows the
location of the strobe, and that from above you will create
long shadows. |
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Using one strobe and positioning it to shoot
between two flags (hanging from the ceiling) created a shaft
of light across the court. |
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Using one strobe located directly above the
free throw line, a dramatic effect is given to the game. |
Some examples of photographs
using two strobes:
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Using two strobes I cross lighted the swimming
pool, thus creating a shaft of front light, and a shaft of
back light, and letting the background fade to black. |
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Using two strobes I can light one half of
the court and let the back half fall into darkness and achieve
a clean Big Arena feel in a small arena. |
Using four or more strobes:
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Using four strobes located on a lower catwalk
are so as to extend the shadows completely out of the picture
when the athlete reaches the peak of his jump serve. |
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Using six strobes, I placed four in the catwalks
over the corners of the boxing ring, and two with a red gel
over the front of each to enhance what became a bloody battle. |
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Using four strobes clamped to railings on
a lower balcony. I aimed the strobes at the white ceiling
and bounced the light off the ceiling. There were no catwalks
in this arena, but it is still possible to effectively light
a rather large area with strobes located away from the ceiling
and bounced onto the scene. The available light was ISO 1600
at 1/125 sec., f2.8, but by bouncing the light off the ceiling,
I achieved ISO 400 at f4. Far better than the available light. |
We have covered a lot in this session and there
are many options we did not address, like using hard wire flash
sync cords instead of remote triggers, grids and gels, and creative
angles and lighting design. E-mail
me with your questions and comments regarding this material and
other issues.
I hope you enjoyed this edition of Workshop at
the Ranch.
Adios!
| Each month I will be teaching techniques and sharing
information about photography. I hope to address not only
how images are made, but also aspects of business and the
industry. I hope you find the time to log on each month here
at "Workshop at the Ranch" If you have a question
or comment about an area of photography not covered yet in
Workshop at the Ranch, contact me
to suggest a topic for a future issue. |
*For additional examples of photographs using
various lighting techniques see the Sports
Scene
For another truly unique lighting style with
instructions on it's implementation, check out LightPainting Techniques
in the January edition of
Workshop at the Ranch