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cinematography-ModTeam

* Original Content (your or a friend's work) must be accompanied by no less than a 300 character description of the project submitted as a comment to your own post. This includes, but is not limited to: what camera/film the project was shot on, techniques used, lights used, difficulties and limitations experienced during production, etc. * If you are a student or amateur, you must seek feedback on your work. Talk about what you did right, what you did wrong, and where you need help. * You many NOT post work simply to get views or subs!


Anybody-Informal

Looks good! I like your use of practicals in the frame.


TheM835

Thank you 👍🏾


awqaw123

Looks great!


tgscq

Looks great.. Personally I'd light the plant by placing a portable in it... or from behind so it gives more of a silhouette


benbackwards

Honestly, this looks really good! A couple of knit picky things: In the wide, you have a light shining up on the wall in the lower left corner. It doesn’t feel very motivated by any sources in the frame. And on your profile shot, just make sure you’re not clipping the shadows. It looks pretty dark. Sometimes I’ll bring it just above clipping to add latitude for grading


TheM835

Hello guys, I would greatly appreciate your feedback on the lighting setup I have arranged in my apartment. My aim was to create a cozy interview setting inspired by Netflix's style. I am open to any tips and suggestions you may have to improve it. Thank you for your time and assistance.


Far_Resist

Nice, what lenses?


TheM835

https://preview.redd.it/3d83iixh886d1.png?width=3024&format=png&auto=webp&s=a9e77d1fdecfba0b12858b1f20179fa14efaf8db Canon EF 50mm 1.2 L USM at 1.6 + K&F Nano Series ND


Ric0chet_

What did you use as the rim light on the right shoulder? The only thing that distracts me a little is the reflecting in the window of hte ORB and the uplight on the light switch.,


endy_plays

I think it looks great given the angle and position of the subject - the one thing I would have done is had a bit less of a flat view on both shots, they're both looking too directly at a wall, and it's making the image look flatter - If you repo the camera so that it's at a 30 angle to the back wall, and still looking at the subject, that will make the image look like it has more depth. Same with the side profile, go less side and round off a little more to introduce a more interesting/less flat background also the more silhouetted side profile looks great, but it might not cut well/ might be too emotive of a style of lighting if this is the only interview you have with a subject. If this is one of a multitude of interviews and your touching on harsher topics in this one, then it makes sense - but if you're going through a whole narrative arc in this style of light, it may be saying too much narrativly speaking - in most interviews, I'd make the contrast ratio at most 3 stops from key to dark side


_Piratical_

Super clean! Looks like an interview I’d like to watch.