Ryan Sloan Share Posted March 25 Hey everyone, I’m shootings a film that has a ton of night sequences on city streets with little light. I saw Black Swan bts where their gaffer was using what looked like a handheld battery powered China ball. Could someone offer any advice on where to buy one of these and/or how to build one? thanks! best, ryan Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Phil Rhodes Sustaining Member Share Posted March 25 Aputure have one that'll fit on a Bowens-mount light, which is a nice off-the-shelf solution. On an extreme budget, get a collapsible laundry bin and put a light of some sort in it. P 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Montell Taraschewski Share Posted March 31 Recommend getting a battery powered litemat, Aladdin Bi-Flex or any other foldable bi-colored light and putting it into a paper chinaball. Don’t forget about putting some sort of diffusion onto the open end of the ball. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Christopher Santucci Share Posted April 8 I seem to recall powering a single 85watt CFL in a 3' chinaball with a portable battery pack/inverter a while back. Worked great. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Alex Sprenger Share Posted April 8 I have been using the Aputure Lanterns (both sizes) with their b7c e27 lamps for handheld walk and talk kind of situations at night. Because both are so cheap, I recommend putting a e27 splitter with 3 or 5 bulbs in there. That way, the batteries last longer and if you need it (which in those classical night ext 800 iso, t2.8 situations you wont) the output is still there. If you want to run them of a v mount, I recommend using a Tether Tools d-tap to edison adapter in a backpack and wiring the lantern up to that. Of course, if you are using said adapter, you could also use Astera Nyx at that point, whatever is easier and more accessible to you. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Jim Perry Share Posted Monday at 01:48 AM I'll second the aperture lantern which comes with a black skirt with velcro which is very handy. I couples it with a Genaray portabright led that has a battery and an xlr power connection for 12v. Put it on a good boom pole and you're set. It's basic Wes Anderson lighting which Bob Yeoman explains in Team Deakins podcast #92. I tried it on a recent walk and talk piece and it was great. So easy or you can mount the boom pole on a stand and hang a sandbag off the end to balance the light. Here's a good behind the scenes where you can see it in action. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.