Mark Utley
July 29th, 2008, 11:59 PM
I've been lighting interviews for the past year and a half and have a good grasp of colour temperatures and light sources and a basic understanding of gels.
I'm currently out of town with a 6-bulb Barger Baglite (6 x 650w), a roll of half-blue gel and two Lowel kits (2 x 500w omnis, 1 750w tota, 2 full-blue gels, 2 diffusion and 2 ND in both kits). I plan on trying some new things (new to me, that is) with mixing colour temperatures and will likely white balance to 5600k in a windowed room. Playing around with different full- and half-blue gel combinations has shown me that what I thought I knew about gels isn't necessarily so.
What I know for sure is this...
A Barger or Lowel light is 3200k
A Barger with half-blue is ~5000k
A Lowel with full-blue is ~5600
This seems to suggest that a half-blue cools the light by ~1800k and a full-blue cools by ~2400k.
If I were to combine a half- and full-blue on one 3200k light, it seems logical (to me!) that the 1800k and 2400k would combine to make 4200k and the resulting light would be ~7400k. I tried this, white balanced and the camera told me 12,600k (9400k cooler than without gel, 5200k cooler than I expected).
Am I right in now thinking that stacking gels multiplies their cooling or warming effect, rather than adding? Why is this and is there a way to calculate it or is all just trial and error?
Any insight would be appreciated. Thanks!
I'm currently out of town with a 6-bulb Barger Baglite (6 x 650w), a roll of half-blue gel and two Lowel kits (2 x 500w omnis, 1 750w tota, 2 full-blue gels, 2 diffusion and 2 ND in both kits). I plan on trying some new things (new to me, that is) with mixing colour temperatures and will likely white balance to 5600k in a windowed room. Playing around with different full- and half-blue gel combinations has shown me that what I thought I knew about gels isn't necessarily so.
What I know for sure is this...
A Barger or Lowel light is 3200k
A Barger with half-blue is ~5000k
A Lowel with full-blue is ~5600
This seems to suggest that a half-blue cools the light by ~1800k and a full-blue cools by ~2400k.
If I were to combine a half- and full-blue on one 3200k light, it seems logical (to me!) that the 1800k and 2400k would combine to make 4200k and the resulting light would be ~7400k. I tried this, white balanced and the camera told me 12,600k (9400k cooler than without gel, 5200k cooler than I expected).
Am I right in now thinking that stacking gels multiplies their cooling or warming effect, rather than adding? Why is this and is there a way to calculate it or is all just trial and error?
Any insight would be appreciated. Thanks!