Shawn McCalip
May 13th, 2008, 06:48 PM
Does anyone know about how lighting is set up for shows like "Cities of the Underworld" on the History Channel?
My initial guess would be that the camera operator has a light mounted directly to his camera that is powered by a battery belt or something similar. However, there are a few shots that I would assume have to be lit by multiple lights. For instance, the episodes showing ancient underground structures in Europe and Russia. Is this something that's set up by a single camera-person before the shooting begins, or is there a crew of 2 or more people walking behind the videographer? If there are multiple lights, what kinds of lights would be best suited for such tasks? My concerns would be dealing with moisture or flowing water, and also with battery life and efficiency.
I'm doing some research for (hopefully) eventually getting to shoot for a documentary inside some old, abandoned gold mines up here, so I'm curious as to how I'd be able to pull something like that off...
Thanks!
My initial guess would be that the camera operator has a light mounted directly to his camera that is powered by a battery belt or something similar. However, there are a few shots that I would assume have to be lit by multiple lights. For instance, the episodes showing ancient underground structures in Europe and Russia. Is this something that's set up by a single camera-person before the shooting begins, or is there a crew of 2 or more people walking behind the videographer? If there are multiple lights, what kinds of lights would be best suited for such tasks? My concerns would be dealing with moisture or flowing water, and also with battery life and efficiency.
I'm doing some research for (hopefully) eventually getting to shoot for a documentary inside some old, abandoned gold mines up here, so I'm curious as to how I'd be able to pull something like that off...
Thanks!