What is the best LED studio lightings for RGB control?

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Steven
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I'm thinking of getting a couple of studio RGB lights for photography and very very rarely video.
I'd be shooting still life, pet/people portraits and macro.

I've been looking at the Godox LA300R or the SL300R.

Does anyone use constant RGB lighting in the studio that could recommend lights?
 
Your question reminds me of something published many years ago, in "Punch" I believe.

Question: What is your advice for gentlemen contemplating matrimony?

Answer: Don't.

What's is your advice for people thinking of buying continuous lighting for still photography?

Answer: Don't.

Please see https://www.talkphotography.co.uk/tutorials/led-lights-or-flash.152/
 
Your question reminds me of something published many years ago, in "Punch" I believe.

Question: What is your advice for gentlemen contemplating matrimony?

Answer: Don't.

What's is your advice for people thinking of buying continuous lighting for still photography?

Answer: Don't.

Please see https://www.talkphotography.co.uk/tutorials/led-lights-or-flash.152/
It was out of laziness, that I was looking at them.
I currently use the original AD600 and gelling them isn't easy, changing is also a pain in the arse.
I'll maybe I'll pick up a few AD300Pro's as they look easier to gel.
 
It was out of laziness, that I was looking at them.
I currently use the original AD600 and gelling them isn't easy, changing is also a pain in the arse.
I'll maybe I'll pick up a few AD300Pro's as they look easier to gel.
:) There's nothing wrong with being lazy, and I have a lifetime of experience of laziness.

What's difficult about gelling any flash head?
 
The bulb sticks out into the softbox, getting a gel fixed inside the softbox and covering the light output by the bulb. Then un-doing all that to change, especially if up high or ceiling mounted.
I liked the idea of changing the background colour very easily with a RGB LED too.
 
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The bulb sticks out into the softbox, getting a gel fixed inside the softbox and covering the light output by the bulb. Then un-doing all that to change, especially if up high or ceiling mounted.
I liked the idea of changing the background colour very easily with a RGB LED too.
OK, that makes sense. My standard gel attachment method on softboxes is to stick it over the front with masking tape, which doesn't leave any messy residue, and as long as it's big enough that's all that's needed. I've only ever bought gels in the full-sheet size, 21 x 48 inches (53cm x 122cm), or rolls, and I never cut them so they last literally for ever. Colour changes shouldn't be needed too often, after all there are only 3 primary colours, and the depth of colour is adjusted via power, not by changing to a pastel shade - e.g. if you want a pastel pink one then use a red one and turn the power up, and of course turn the power down if you want a really intense red, and if you want a non-primary colour then you combine 2 gels - for some reason the sellers never seem to mention that only 3 are ever needed:(
 
The bulb sticks out into the softbox, getting a gel fixed inside the softbox and covering the light output by the bulb. Then un-doing all that to change, especially if up high or ceiling mounted.
I liked the idea of changing the background colour very easily with a RGB LED too.
Make hats.

Cut a rectangle of gel out (see the template in the Insta post below) and form a cylinder around the glass dome. Seal it with Sellotape. Fold the end over and tape down. You can then pull the hat off the dome and push it back on at any time. Make hats for all the colours you need. You can then attach any modifier - and swap the hats out with a soft box still attached - just using the flaps around the flash head.

View: https://www.instagram.com/p/CsRc8FWs5yR/?img_index=2
 
Yes, that's an effective and ingenious method for cc gels:)
But you do, from memory, like complicated solutions . . . I remember a shoot where you used hand-modified clothes pegs to fix gels, I'll stick to sticky tape. Like me, it's simple :exit:
 
Yes, that's an effective and ingenious method for cc gels:)
But you do, from memory, like complicated solutions . . . I remember a shoot where you used hand-modified clothes pegs to fix gels, I'll stick to sticky tape. Like me, it's simple :exit:
Yeah - I just use the hats these days - gel at the source and then it doesn't matter what modifier you put on it :) I make bigger hats for the 600SFs too. I use the C74's* to hold the scatter gels to barn doors on Fresnel spots - but that's about it tbh.

C74 - reversed C47 - Hollywood term for a clothes peg. Some ill-informed people say they are called C47's because they come in packs of 47. This is clearly nonsense - clothes pegs come in packs of 50. The C47 (or DC3) was a general purpose aircraft, and I think they are named after that.
 
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Make hats.

Cut a rectangle of gel out (see the template in the Insta post below) and form a cylinder around the glass dome. Seal it with Sellotape. Fold the end over and tape down. You can then pull the hat off the dome and push it back on at any time. Make hats for all the colours you need. You can then attach any modifier - and swap the hats out with a soft box still attached - just using the flaps around the flash head.

View: https://www.instagram.com/p/CsRc8FWs5yR/?img_index=2
I take it the holes being covered don't have an adverse effect? Also does the Sellotape hold up with full power pops, it doesn't burn/melt?
 
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