Site icon ProVideo Coalition

Exploring a Few Lighting Setups with the Litepanels Caliber 3-Light Kit

Litepanels’ Caliber LED lights are a great option for shooters who have to light small scenes such as interviews, webcasts or product shots.

What’s to like? Plenty, including:

I had a chance to play with the 3-light Caliber kit, with an eye towards using them for lighting quick, mobile interviews that still need to look good. I found that the kit definitely gave good options for lighting a variety of small scenes in different ways. Let’s take a look at a few scenarios I put together in my basement, using my longtime, trusty sidekick, Gertrude.

 

¼-20 mounting on the bottom and Ball mount lets you position the light in a variety of positions

All packed up, the Caliber kit weighs 13 lbs, and is easy to manage on your shoulder.

 

And one thing to note: I used only the items included in the Caliber kit. The kit includes three small desktop stands for mounting light heads on a table or shelf, and one traditional lightweight stand that reaches 7 feet tall. So I only mounted one of my Calibers high on the traditional stand, and kept the other lights on the ground or a rolling cart. The kit doesn’t include diffusion or bounce devices, so even though I typically use these to soften light, I went without (with pretty good results, actually).

 

OPTION 1 – Key light and Edge Light

I set up my key light a couple feet above Gertrude’s eye line, at a traditional 45 degree angle, dimmed to around 80% and using the barn doors to flag spill light off the black background.
To give some separation from the background, I added an edge light on Gertrude’s shadow side, set up on a rolling cart I had nearby, and then dimmed it down to about 40%.
I had a third light available, and might have turned it into a traditional hair light high behind Gertrude, but didn’t have anywhere to prop the light up in my sparse basement, so I just stuck with two lights.

 

OPTION 2 – Add a Background Light

Next, I decided to use that idle third Caliber for a background light, positioning it directly under the table that was supporting Gertrude, and dimming it down considerably. I also focused the Caliber a bit towards its Spot settings to narrow the light beam a bit.
In this case, the third light is just putting a pool of light on a flat paper background, but the results would have been much more interesting on a real-world background, creating nice highlights and shadows across a 3D surface.

 

OPTION 3 – One Key Light, Two Background Lights

I really enjoy lighting backgrounds, and often use a few lights to do it, along with barn doors to cut each light beam. So I tried the same approach here, demonstrating the flexibility that the Caliber’s fresnel lens and barn doors give you for shaping each light. You can’t cut light like this with open-faced LED lights.

I also moved my keylight position from 45 degrees to right over my camera, to fill in all of Gertrude’s shadows and give more of a high key look. As a direct, undifussed light source, the Caliber looks surprisingly good. Of course, no living subject’s skin is likely to be as smooth and featureless as Gertrude’s, but still, the Caliber can produce a pleasing look, and you can always use diffusion to soften it.

 

OPTION 4 – Light a Green Screen

There’s always a client who wants a green screen shot, and the Calibers can definitely handle this as long as you’re not trying to light too big of a screen.
In this case, I moved my keylight back to its tradition high, 45-degree position, but used my two other lights in flood mode on the green background. I didn’t spend much time trying to perfectly even out the brightness of the screen, because any modern NLE keyer can work with small variations you see here.

 

Overall, the 3-light Caliber kit gives you plenty of flexibility for small-scale shoots. You can get very good results just by sticking with the kit (as I did), but you can always add a few modest upgrades to kick things up a notch or two, such a second tall light stand, a little diffusion to shoot or bounce through, and possibly a 4th Caliber for more elaborate scenes.

Support ProVideo Coalition
Shop with
Exit mobile version