Posts Tagged ‘workshop’

I wanted to go over my recent inLIGHTin Workshop for today’s Friday Night Lights segment.

I gave an inLIGHTin Workshop to about a dozen photographers over at the iPrintFromHome.com Headquarters over on Niagara Falls Blvd. For those local to Buffalo… did you know that we have an awesome photo lab right in our backyard?

So we started at 6pm and went a little over three hours! This workshop was all about lighting. We talked about everything from free and available light, to continuous light, speedlights (on and off camera) and ended up on studio strobes… There was A LOT of content and could have easily spent an entire day talking about things…

I had a great time and wanted to thank everyone for attending. I hope to see you at other workshops of mine and as always, call or email whenever if you have any questions guys!

Here are some pics from the workshop that my assistant, Martha, shot during the workshop:

Thanks to the George and Sarah over at the iPrintFromHome.com family for letting us use their space.

I recently picked up a Hasselblad H3DII-31 Medium Format Digital SLR.

Here is a YouTube video review of it:

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I will post some sample pics and resolution examples in a bit so check back shortly.

I picked up my Hasselblad over at www.hotwire-digital.com. Be sure to check them out if you are in the market for a Hasselblad and want a support staff to help you out with the camera anytime! They are a great group of people and I would highly recommend them.

ePHOTOzine.com

January 8, 2009

News about my inLIGHTin Workshop’s seem to be taking off! I was approached by someone from a UK online magaine, ePHOTOzine.com, to be featured on their site because of the workshops.

ePHOTOzine TV

So over the past month, I have been providing them with content and articles and some are now available online (with more to follow of course):

Portrait Tips from the Professionals (Part 1): VIEW HERE

Portrait Tips from the Professionals (Part 2): VIEW HERE

My Bio on their site: VIEW HERE

Do I sense a UK workshop in the near future???

I have more articles that will be getting added from time to time so keep checking out their site. I would like to thank Nikita Morris over at ePHOTOzine for just being awesome!

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I am now taking booking for 2009 one-on-one inLIGHTin Workshops. The workshop costs is $300 ($250 for paying inLIGHTin Workshop forum members) and you receive the following:

- A 6 Hour Workshop (schedule for one day or two 3 hour days)

- A custom Designed silibus so you can cater your lesson around the topics that mean the most to you

- Hands on learning. Learn on-site and put your new knowledge to use while building your portfolio!

- Lunch/snacks/beverages

- A Free year membership to the inLIGHTin Workshop forum

- A one hour  post-workshop phone consultation to brush up on any material and to answer any further questions you may have.

Cool huh?

Contact me directly at mike@inlightinworkshop.com to book your workshop now. I may also be reached at (716) 491-8854 if you have any questions or would like to book your workshop in person.

Thanks!

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Now is the best time to join the inLIGHTin Workshop.

The forum is free to join. A paid membership account gets you complete access to the entire inLIGHTin Workshop to give you access to so much more.

6 Month Memberships are now only $10.00 USD for a Year Membership or $150 for a Lifetime Membership.

So go ahead and join The inLIGHTin Workshop’s Forum NOW:

http://www.inlightinworkshop.com/forum

Thanks!

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I have set up a youTube channel to offer tips and tricks and some simple photography lessons.

http://www.youtube.com/michaelalanphoto

Please subscribe, add comments and whatever else. There will be much more content in the upcoming weeks. I plan on doing a mass upload around mid-November.

Thanks!

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I have been to my share of workshops and seminars and realize the time and money that is required to attend.

Everything from the ticket prices to the possible travel, airfare and hotel accommodations definitely adds up. Not to mention all the schedule conflicts that may occur and the time you will have to spend away from your family and your job. I am not too sure how many photographers will want to take a trip to sunny Buffalo (obvious joke here) and make a vacation out of it.

So, given all this I have decided to offer online photography classes to our long distance inLIGHTin’ed members. All paying inLIGHTin Members will obviously get hooked up and receive discounts towards the classes.

Classes can be taken at the comfort of your own home and on YOUR free time! There will be weekly lessons, examples, videos and what class would be complete without some fun homework? All assignments will be graded and critiqued by yours truly and you will even receive a free web consultation to ask any questions and get individual attention.

I will post some more news about when the online classes will start so keep checking back.

In the meantime, join the forum to get the latest information and updates: HERE

DIY Westcott Spiderlite

September 7, 2008

So you want a Westcott Spiderlite TD5? Want to pay $415 and then over $100 for the bulbs?

… I didn’t think so. The cool thing about the Spiderlite is the fact that they provide consistent lighting so you can see the effect your lights are having on your subject and it can essentially be used just like how you would use window light. I wanted to give one of these a try and I saw how simple they are but I really did not want to pay that much!

So I got the idea to make one of my own since they literally just look like 5 light bulb sockets. I jumped on the computer and Googled “DIY Spiderlite” and came across a blog post by Alex Campagna. Why reinvent the wheel if someone else already did it right?

So here are some shots and a detailed description about what I did:

Caution. This will involve some electrical knowledge so don’t try this unless you can do this without getting electrocuted! I take no responsibility if you burn down your house or electrocute yourself or anything like that so do this at your own risk!

First off, all parts were purchased at Home Depot. The total bill ran me around $130 and that is with the light bulbs!

diy spiderlite

1.) First off, I bought a 2′x4′ of MDF board. I chose the 1/2″ wide one. This ran me like $6 and change. With this 2×4 board, I cut it up into 7″x7″ squares. I think I got about 15+ squares out of the board. Next, I glued 3 of them together to give me a 1.5″ thick in width.

Here, I am keeping them clamped down so they will take better.

diy spiderlite

2.) Next, I drilled 5 holes. One at each corner and one in the center. I got a nice CAD drawing by trolling around the blog referenced above. I will post it if I can find it again. I used a 1.5″ drill bit for the holes.

diy spiderlite

Here are the holes all drilled out. Do yourself a favor and do this outside! It is messy. The MDF board flakes like no other.

diy spiderlite

3.) Now, I bought 5 of these rubber outdoor light sockets that are already wired up for you. These were around $2.60 each.

They fit the 1.5″ hole snugly.

diy spiderlite

Here they are all in:

diy spiderlite

4.) Next, I took the sockets out for a moment and used aluminum foil and spray on adhesive to attach it to the front of the wood. This will bounce light off it and make the light reflect forward more.

diy spiderlite

5.) Next, construction adhesive was used to secure the sockets to the MDF board. I used “Power Grab” All Purpose Construction Adhesive. This was like $7 max

diy spiderlite

6.) Next, I bought a 4×4 conjunction box at around $4 and secured a wire secure thingy… I bought a 25′ Extension cord ($8.88 for 25′ !!!) and ripped off the female end. This is how I will get my power to the lights!
Here is the wire secure thingy:

diy spiderlite

7.) Next, I popped out all 5 of the inner circle thingys and drew the socket wires through them. This was pretty ghetto and the wires didn’t fall into place perfectly. So the wires are bent and then go under the base of the conjunction box. I would have liked it if the bulbs were in the same spot as the circles on the conjunction box but whatever. I used the wire nuts to secure the wires together. They are like $5 a pack.

diy spiderlite

I don’t have it pictured but I also bought 2 on/off toggle switches that turn the lights on and off. They ran about $6 each. One toggle switch controls three of the lights and the other one controls the other two lights. You need special light bulbs for a dimmer switch to work so this takes care of me being able to dim down the outpt of the lights by disabling two or three of them…

The easiest way to wire this is to do the following:
The extension cord has three wires: black, white and green (ground). I believe that in house wiring, black is the power ad white is common. So, I wire nutted ALL the whites together along with the green ground wire. The gauge of wire was too heavy for me to put all of them together in one so I had to daisy chain a wire between two of them to make them all fit while maintaining a connection. So the white and green wires from the extension cord paired up with a couple of the white wires from the sockets and then I had a stray white wire link the rest of the white wires to this one.

Now, the black wire completes the connection so you need to put the toggle switch in between these. The toggle switch connects or disconnects this wire so power can or cannot go through to the lights. I took the black wire from the extension cord and put two stray black wires off of that. These 2 stray wires will hook up to one of the toggle switch connections. I then took another 2 stray black wires and put them off of the other connector on the toggle switch. One stray wires then went to three of the black wires off the light sockets (you choose which ones you want that to affect) and then the other stray wire went to the remain 2 light sockets.

So the toggle switch makes or breaks a connection of power to the lights. One enables/disables three lights while the other affects the remaining two. Got it? Hopefully that isn’t confusing at all. Just remember that the toggle switches need to be in between the entension cord and the light sockets and then you will be all good!

Here are the bulbs that I got. I think they were like $8 a piece and you need 5 of them. These take up a bulk of the price!

diy spiderlite

This was all I could find at the Depot that had the juice while being daylight balanced!

These are 100watts but are good on your wallet because they only draw 27watts. I think that is what that means. Note. They break easily so buy spares!

And here is the final shot of the lights in action:

diy spiderlite

Lastly, HOW DO WE GET THIS ON A LIGHTSTAND?
Unfortunately, this is where a big bulk of the money used on the project is dropped. I bought a dual sided screw. The one end was 1/4″ and the other one is bigger and goes into wood. I think it was 3″ long.
You screw the big boy into the bottom of the wood and then get yourself a $30 Bogen/Manfrotto Swivel Umbrella Adapter and that comes with a brass piece that takes 1/4″ thread!

Then mount it all to a light stand and it’s up!

Lastly, you will need light modifiers. I recommend using that umbrella adapter for all it’s worth. Get yourself umbrellas and mount them on the umbrella adapter or get yourself the softboxes that collapse like an umbrella like this one made by Westcott. This one runs about $150 but it is the 28″ Westcott Apollo Softbox. This can double for your off camera flash stuff so it can have dual purposes!

I just got done making it so I will have to post the FINISHED, finished pics and sample shots using it ASAP!

Thanks for checking it out and please be safe if you try this out ok? You are working with electricity here and electricity can hurt! I take no responsibility if you decide to play Frankenstein on yourself.

Check out what you’ve been missing over at The inLIGHTin Forum and check out a real easy (and affordable) way to essentially make a Westcott Spiderlite TD5 studio light. The Spiderlites go for over $400 (that’s without bulbs) while the DIY version comes fully furnished for under $150!