Moving Images; The Photography Of Lois Greenfield Page 2

Backdrop Lighting Plays A Key Role
Greenfield's studio today is equipped with a custom-made, off-white muslin backdrop suspended from a pole that stretches 20-ft wide. The muslin extends a little way in toward the camera so that it forms a short sweep without ending abruptly in a vertical drop at the wooden floor.

For her backgrounds, Greenfield will employ one pair of lights at different levels (one high, the other low), aimed into the backdrop from a glancing angle. When she wants the gradation to go from top to bottom, she positions a pair of lights on each side of the backdrop. When necessary, she lets the lower lights spill over onto the floor.

Greenfield continues: "The key lights, the fill lights, the background lights--everything works together with the way I choose to light the backdrop or not light the backdrop. So if we let the backdrop go gray, which I often do, we either have the light sweep across the backdrop from left to right, resulting in a light to dark gradation, or we have a very low setting on the upper lights hitting the backdrop and gradate it from dark to light, from top to bottom. And then we sometimes enhance that later digitally, darkening the backdrop even further." On the other hand, in order to achieve a clean white backdrop, she will light the background at between 3/4 to a full stop over the key light.

In this portrait of Eileen Jaworowicz (Amy Marshall Dance Company), an assistant held the fabric until the dancer was prompted into action. A Broncolor Satellite Soft from the left provided the key illumination. The effect of the light on the dancer varies with the distance between the strobe and the performer. Lois Greenfield's keen eye knows when to strike a balance.

Short And Sweet--Flash Duration, That Is
Greenfield has long been a proponent of Broncolor strobe lighting for the ultra-short flash durations required to truly freeze the moment (she may set the power packs as high as 1/2000 sec, but not less than 1/1000 sec). She also favors these lights because they do not produce a shift in color balance when the power output variator (which controls flash duration and recycling) is employed. Normally with most strobe lighting systems, using the variator results in some color shift.

And while she's widely known for employing umbrella lighting, Greenfield's latest work centers around a special lighting accessory, the Broncolor Satellite Soft, and the quality of light it produces. "The Broncolor Satellite Soft is one of my favorite lights these days," Greenfield observes. "I like it for the creamy skin tones it delivers and that combination of soft yet directional lighting." Broncolor describes this reflector as a 35" white-coated parabolic dish with a Plexiglas baffle, designed so the head shoots through the reflector instead of into it. It is compatible with various Broncolor flash lamp heads and monolights.

To deliver the awesome amount of light needed for her key light Greenfield uses a special type of head known as a bitube, which actually gets its power by being connected to two power packs simultaneously. That lets Greenfield reduce output on each pack, which in turn lets the packs deliver the short 1/2000 sec flash duration her pictures often require.

Plexiglas

More Information...
Widely exhibited here and abroad, Lois Greenfield also teaches photography nationwide and around the world. While her studio is located in New York City, Greenfield also travels around the country to photograph performing dance troupes and shoot commercial jobs. You can see more of Greenfield's work online, read about her workshops and monographs, and even treat yourself to a portfolio of her images in a custom-designed screensaver (for Mac/Windows) at www.loisgreenfield.com.

For Broncolor lighting (available from Sinar Bron Imaging), go to www.sinarbron.com.

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