Next up, a series of blogs about my favorite gear, just in time for the holidays. Basically, everything under discussion in these next few blogs goes with me every time I go in the field.
The below shot on Bourbon St., New Orleans, with the
Nikon Z7 camera, and a pre-production
S series 50mm f/1.8 lens, at f/1.8. A new favorite camera/lens combo, but more on the Z in an upcoming blog. This one, concentrating on light shaping, in this instance, out on the street.
This is, of course, self-interested, as my name is on the bag this gizmo comes in. It’s actually called the
Joe McNally Ezybox Speed-Lite 2 Plus. I helped
Lastolite design it, and they were their usual, typically creative selves in terms of making it happen. The couple good things I insisted on have turned out to be very good things indeed. I asked that even though this is a “junior brother,” stuff-it-in-your-bag kind of light shaper, it has advantages generally associated with far bigger, more expensive shapers. The front diffusion panel is adorned with a very deep edge baffle that controls the light. Correspondingly, the other diffuser front available for it has a deep baffle and a wonderfully
crafted fabric egg crate (grid) that really, seriously and pleasantly limits the spread of light. I say pleasantly, as it doesn’t make the light sharper, harder or meaner. It just limits where it wanders off to.
We have all seen the solutions. Turn a salad bowl into a beauty dish! Wrap a pair of your old boxer shorts around the lamp head of a Speedlight, and by God does it soften the light!
Fine. But there are considerations, not only in terms of the result, but appearance. These little boxes snap to quite easily, and you can plug-in an unadorned Speedlight, sans dome diffuser, or pop it in there, and then reach around the front and easily affix the dome, which gives it an extra measure of diffusion. Use two of them in an over and under fashion, such as the pic above of the lady with the hat, and the results are downright big-time. As in, it looks like a bigger set of lights that you might need stands, sandbags, assistants, a boom crane and a generator truck for. Kidding, but just a little. It’s a great way to work, light and fast.
And, of course, use one of them, off to the side, and you can get beautiful character and dimension, as seen in the portrait below of Amber. In this shot, we ran the Speed-Lite 2 through a hand-held
Tri-Grip diffuser, and the results are kinda dreamy.
Or, you can use it in edgy fashion, and produce a bit of drama and intensity, such as with Nik, below.
Small, portable, fast, lovely quality of light, affordable. And, you don’t have to buy any new Tupperware. What’s not to like?
More tk…..