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Hospital/clinic


Joe Riggs

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Along the lines of Adrian's recommendations, keep the windows hot and let the foreground go dark for a more contrasty look. You could play with toppy fluoros above the hospital beds but keep them skirted off the walls. Or hard "sunlight" bounced off the floor for a soft uplight. See if you can fit some practicals into the frame. Use some haze or a smoke filter. Mix colors.

 

One trick I saw a gaffer use on a recent shoot was to take a single 4' kino tube heavily taped up with 2" matte black and placed on the side of the bed for a very subtle key on the child actor sitting by the bed.

 

"A History of Violence" has some wonderfully lit night interior hospital room scenes.

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Agree with Adrin.

Every thing depend upon what you are doing and which camera you are using.

Just a hospital wars or Doctors room.

 

Well in most of the situations, I feel Kinoflo works very well.

 

My experience, I just shot a film On SONY HDCAM HDW F-900, I mostly use avilable light with Kino to fillin wherevr I was require more light or Fill light.

 

Hope this will work. :D

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