Low Budget Lighting Kit

by Scott Spears
reposted from http://scottspears.net
In my many hours surfing movie making sites on the
web, I’ve seen the question, “I’m poor and need
to know how to light my movie”so many times I’ve lost
count. Being a director of photography who’s shot a number
of no/low/modest budgeted movies I thought it was about time I just
wrote an article on how to light on the cheap.
So you’ve squandered almost all your money on
a cool DV camera, decent microphone, tripod and some tasty food for
your crew (don’t skimp on food because a crew travels on its’stomach),
but now your actors are standing around in the dark because you don’t
have any lights. What do you do? First, you get in a time machine
and go back a few days so you can start gathering your jiffy, on-a-tight-budget
light kit.
I’m a big believer in get the right tools for
the job, but sometimes you just can’t afford the right tools.
Here’s where ingenuity comes into play. First, where do you
find cheap, or if you prefer, inexpensive, lights. Hardware stores,
auto parts, store, Salvation Army stores, Goodwill, garage sales.
camera shops that carry used stuff, local production houses and rental
houses. You have to keep your eyes peeled and be open to possibilities.
WORKLIGHTS
A good key light for cheap is a 500 watt tungsten work
light which can be found at hardware and car parts stores. They come
with their own stands, but I do find the stands a little short.
There’s some power here, but it’s hard
to control, so I recommend that you don’t aim them directly
at your actors. Bounce them off a wall or ceiling to create a nice
soft light. If you want, you can put them outside windows and blast
them through the openings. These lights can get hot, so be careful
moving them around. I’ve found them as cheap as $10 and can
run up to $30. (11/03 I saw an ad for Kragen Auto Parts in LA had
them at $10.) They can be found with two heads that makes 1000 watts
of lights.
HOW ABOUT A SHOWER CURTAIN AS DIFUSSION
One thing you can do is get a frosted shower curtain
and hang it from a stand and then place the shower curtain in front
of one of these babies to create a wall of soft light. Again, don’t
get too close otherwise your melt a hole in your pretty shower curtain.
(I have to give credit for Bruce L.)
CHINA LANTERNS
China Lanterns are great. I’ve seen them on the
sets of movies costing many millions of dollars. They are paper material
which can be expanded into a ball (and now different shapes like
squares, rectangles and ovals). They come with a wire support for
the bulb. You need to get a socket and cable and they are usually
sold in the same place you find the lanterns. I put a regular 200
watt bulb inside and they make a great softlight for close-ups. If
the lantern’s big enough, I’ll put two 200 watt bulbs
in and I can light a small room with them. Be careful with them because
they’re made of paper and can burst into flames. They run between
$3 - $7 depending on size. You can find them at Target, Ikea and
Pier One Imports, to name a few.
If you’re handy, you can pick up a socket and
some zip cord, otherwise known as household extension cord, and make
your own cord for the china lantern.
SEALED BEAM HALOGEN
Then you have small sealed beam halogen lamps which
cost around $4-$10. You put these in a socket and then clamp them
onto a stand, then aim away. It makes a great kicker/backlight and
are great for light special items in the background. They come in
different beam patterns, from narrow to wide. I tend to go for the
medium and narrow. The wide is, well, too wide of a beam.
SCOOPS
The old reliable metal scoop light which comes with
a handy clamp is a great option. Pop a 200 watt bulb or a photo flood
in it to light your set. Supposedly this is what Robert Rodriguez
used to light “El Mariachi”.
DEALS ON PRO LIGHTS
How about putting a light kit together of real, pro
lights. That’s how I did it when I started out. I’d find
a deal on a 1K (1000watt) open face light for $30 and snatch it up.
Camera stores that carry used gear are great for deals. A while back,
I picked up two 1K fresnels (these are lights with a glass lens that
focus the light) and a 2K fresnel (with a roller stand) for $50 a
piece. The stand alone was worth $50. Now they didn’t have
barn doors (metal leaves that allow you to control the light which
attaches to the light), so I had to scrounge some up. I found one
set $10. So for $160 dollars I had 4000 watts of light.
Sources for used stuff are:
Local camera stores
Goodwill & Salvation Army –it’s rare, but sometimes there are
deals to be had
Ebay –get on-line and start searching under movie equipment and video
equipment
Local production companies –sometimes they clear out older gear. Talk
to friend who works local production and see what’s up
Local Rental Houses - occasionally they sell off older gear
www.visualproducts.com –they sell used camera gear, but have lights
www.woodennickellighting.com –hollywood rental house that sells used
gear
There are plenty of other sites. Get on Google and
see what you can find.
SUPPORT
So you’ve found some lights, but how the heck
do you support them. I recommend that all filmmakers get at least
one decent light stand. You can clamp things to them, like the shower
curtain mentioned previously, place lights on them or hang props
off of them. Again these can be found used. I’d plan on spending
$20-50 on a good one or even two.
If you have some extra money laying around (yeah, like
indie filmmakers have any spare cash) get yourself a C-stand. This
is the staple of any pro movie set. It’s a collapsible, three
legged stand which comes with a attachable arm that can be used for
an infinite number of tasks, like light stand and holding up any
number of items. Used, they run as cheap as $75 and up. Brand new
they’re $170.
Get yourself a mafer ($20-40)clamp. It’s a device
which clamps to about anything and has spud for lights. You can use
it clamps lights to set walls, doors, tables or attached to a light
stand so you can have two lights on one stand. Lowel makes a light
weight clamp called a tota clamp($15) which does much of the same
things, but is smaller and cheaper.
GELS AND DIFFUSION
At some point you’ll want to add some color or
soften your lights, so you’ll need something to put in front
of the lights.
Things to remember, gels add color or correct color
temperature and diffusion softens the light.
First, how do you attach these gels to your lights?
C-47 media attachment clips, otherwise known as clothes pens. Get
wooden C-47s, not plastic. The plastic ones will melt. The wooden
C-47s can burn, but won’t catch on fire. Gels are fairly heat
resistant, but you can melt them if you get them to close to the
light, so use caution when attaching them to lights.
Gels come in all kinds of flavors. Number one are color
correction gels. These are used to make your movie lights match daylight.
You’d slap a blue (CTB, color temperature blue) on your light
so it matches the daylight streaming in through a window. (Without
going heavy duty into color temperatures, just remember that daylight
is blue and tungsten light is orange.) If you have a small window,
you may place an orange gel on the window to get daylight to match
your movie lights.
For other colors, sometimes called theatrical or party
gels, you can find about any color under the sun available. Horror
film directors are always asking for red. James Cameron must go through
a ton of blue gels. Green can be used to make everybody sick. It’s
all a matter of taste. A single sheet (3x3) of gel can run around
$6.
You may want to talk to local production houses and
rental houses to see if they have scrap gel laying around they’d
give you. I’ve snagged plenty of gels this way. In LA, when
features wrap, they dump tons of gels.
If you can’t snag some for free, camera stores
and theatrical supply stores carry them. A cool thing is to buy small
packets of gels. Bogen has put together small packets with different
groupings of gels. They offer color correction(lots of blue and orange),
diffusion and multi-color packets. They run around $20 a piece, which
seems a lot for some colored plastic, but if you’re careful,
you can use these gels for a long time. I recommend the color correction
pack and diffusion pack.
REFLECTORS
When you’re without power you can always use
some reflectors to get light on your subject. On a pro set, a shiny
board is the tool, but they cost many hundreds of dollars. He’s
a cheap substitute, Tyvek. Tyvek you ask? It’s household insulating
foam board, but the cool thing is it’s coated with a shiny
foil outside which can reflect a ton of light. If you need to fill
in some actor or pound some light through window onto your set, Tyvek
or some other insulation will do the trick. A cool portable reflector
is those fold up windshield covers that are coated in silver material.
A pro flex fill runs $50 and the windshield covers can run under
$10. Finally, if you’re in a pinch, just coat a hunk of foam
core with aluminum foil, remember to crinkle it up some so it’s
not too sharp with its’reflected light, and you have a great
fill light.
ODDS AND ENDS
Extension cords, or as they’re called in Hollywood,
stingers, are a must have item. Get lots of them. I’d have
at least one 50 foot and a couple 25 foot stingers handy. I like
the ones with multi-plugs on the end. Some come with a LED in the
end so you know it’s plugged in. Get black cords if possible
because you can hide them easier in shots than the bright orange
ones which seem to overrun hardware stores. I’ve had to run
cords through shots and found if I run them along baseboards or natural
lines in the set most of the time you can never seen them, if you’re
careful. Plan on spending about $40 for the above allotment.
Power strips are a great little item. Make sure they
can handle 15 or more amps. $4-$8
Cube taps. There are handy little boxes you plug into
an outlet which triples the amount of plugs. $4
3 Prong adapter –in older houses you run into
2 prong outlets. (2 for $2)
Screw in socket to plug adapter –these are handy
little things to have. They screw into a light socket and turn it
into a 2 prong , so have a 3 prong adapter handy, into a plug. I
shouldn’t admit to this, but a couple of time I’ve been
shooting outside a building and had no place to plug in my lights.
Well, the outside of the building had a light, so I unscrewed the
light bulb and screwed in my adapter, thus making it into an outlet
allowing me to “borrow”some power for my lights. ($3)
Spring clamps –get a couple decent sized ones.
(2 for $10)
Gaf tape. Get some 2 inch black. It runs around $12-15
per roll, but is worth it. Duct tape is cheap, but leaves residue
everywhere you stick and can pull paint off the walls. Gaf tape leave
very little residue. I’ve built props out of gaf tape, like
a bandanna for an actor and numbers for a door.
A cheapie circuit tester. Usually around $2. You can
use these when you’re location scounting to test if plugs you
thing you want to use are working or not. Nothing is more a pain
in the butt than setting up all your lights and finding out that
the outlets you’re using are non-functioning.
Hand dimmer: You can find these for household lamps
and they will handle around 300 watts. You can run 500 watts, but
not for long or you will burn it out. These are great for china lanterns.
$10 You can build your own which will handle more wattage.
Gloves: Get a decent pair of leather gloves because
these lights get very friggin’hot. You’ll learn after
frying you hands a couple of time that gloves are a must item. $6
Black Wrap/Cine Foil/just plain old aluminum foil –black
wrap is heavy duty foil painted black and is great to attach to scoop
lights and the 500 watt work lights which will allow to shape the
light coming out. You can use regular aluminum foil, but the reflections
off it can cause problems and it’s not as durable as black
wrap.
Plastic tub for all these goodies. ($6)
WRAP UP
This doesn’t cover everything in lighting on
the cheap by a long shot, but I hope it gives you some ideas that
you can use on your sets. Just a little lighting can go a long way
to making you movies look better. Get some lights and play around
a little bit.
PRICE BREAKDOWN
500 watt work light $20
China Lantern(complete w/cord) $22
Halogen light (complete w/cord) $20
One light stand (used) $40
Gels (packet if no freebies) $20
Diffusion (packet if no freebies) $20
Stingers $40
Cube tap $4
Power strip $5
Gloves $6
Gaf tape $15
C-47 (bag) $6
Spring clamps (2) $12
Tota Clamp $12
Circuit tester $2
3 Prong adaptor (2) $2
Screw in plug adapter $3
Hand dimmer $10
Plastic tub for this stuff $6
TOTAL $265
(Wow, that added up to a big figure, but you can build
it over time. Again, deals can be had. If you find a cheapie used
stand for $20 and freebie gels, then you cut $60 off this total.
Also, remember instead of asking for DVDs for Christmas or your birthday,
ask for gift certificates at Lowes or Home Depot.)
Scott Spears is an Emmy Award winning Director of Photography with
14 features under his belt. He’s also written several feature
screenplays, some of which have been made into movies. You can learn
more about him at www.scottspears.net
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