5 Cinematic Lighting Tips
Chris Knight
Lessons
Class Introduction
04:29 2What is Cinematic Lighting?
06:42 3Motivated & Practical Lighting
07:41 45 Cinematic Lighting Tips
04:53 5Low-Key & Upstage Lighting
06:26 6Control Your Fill Lighting
05:18 7Show Depth In Your Image
13:24 8Pre-Production for Cinematic Lighting
22:42Grip Tools: Clamps
08:41 10Grip Tools: Apple Boxes, C-Stands & Grip Heads
10:53 11Grip Tools: Pins & Portable Gear
04:50 12Grip Tools: Scrims, Silks, Flags & Tape
13:52 13Grip Tools: Wind and Haze Machines
04:07 14Grip Tools: Unusual Tools
04:47 15Grip Tools: Filters
11:05 16Grip Tools: Q&A
15:04 17Theater Shoot: Concept
08:03 18Theater Shoot: Pre-Production Considerations
08:48 19Theater Shoot: Lighting Gear
04:27 20Theater Shoot: Motivated Lighting Considerations
26:47 21Theater Shoot: Lighting Walkthrough
20:45 22Theater Shoot: Capturing The 1st Shot
27:37 23Theater Shoot: Hero Shot
21:47 24Theater Shoot: Capturing In The Seats
21:48 25Airstrip Shoot: Concept
05:49 26Airstrip Shoot: Pre-Production Considerations
19:31 27The Haircut: Location Specifics and Motivated Lighting
13:17 28Working With Scrims On Location
06:34 29The Haircut: Getting the Shot
24:28 30The Haircut: Shooting Plates
08:21 31Staggered Planes: Location Specifics and Motivated Lighting
08:10 32Staggered Planes: Getting The Shot
08:23 33Capturing Plates With Talent In Background
16:26 34Airstrip: Environmental Portraits
07:01 35Airstrip: Location Shooting Q&A
22:05 36Using Plates to Create a Pano in Lightroom®
16:08 37Transform Tool
04:50 38Post-Processing 1st Theater Shot
09:48 39Retouching Details in Photoshop®
13:09 40Color Grading in Alien Skin Exposure X3
06:27 41Post-Processing Theater Hero Shot in Photoshop®
08:11 42Creating a Spotlight in Photoshop®
05:31 43Adjusting Color for Cinematic Lighting
12:28 44Post-Processing: The Haircut
12:08 45Coloring the Sky and Removing Modern Building
05:10 46Creating a Pano Using Plates in Photoshop®
17:12 47Developing Cinematic Portraits in Lightroom®
07:29 48Retouching Cinematic Portraits in Photoshop®
08:57 49Color Grading Cinematic Portraits in Alien Skin
13:20Lesson Info
5 Cinematic Lighting Tips
As I mentioned a minute ago, I said, "I'm a big believer in making sure concept feeds execution, "not the other way around." Concept is the important thing, the story is the important thing. What the shot is about, what's the purpose of the photograph? And then how do you fulfill that purpose with the techniques that you are using? Kubrick was obviously an extreme perfectionist, but it's his techniques. They were motivated by what he was trying to create. He figured out the idea, then he figured out how to execute it. This class is not about formulas. It is not about saying, "Here's how I did something, I want you to go out and do the exact same thing." That is not what this is about. This is going to be really different from a lot of other lighting classes. This is about me showing you how to address a scene, how to create lighting, think critically for what is happening in an environment. What is the shot about? How do you critically think about it? How do you creatively think about ...
it? And how do you make light that is for what you are working on? The entire idea here is not to say, "Hey, here's a couple of cool shots, "go out and do the same thing." It's to show you how to think about lighting in a much broader way. Both the shoots that we have done, I have not shot anything exactly like it. But my approach to the scenes is how I would approach anything. What does the environment look like, how do I make the environment look like how I want to make it look, and then what does that shot look like? How am I communicating my ideas most effectively, right? I want you to be able to look at any environment, or any situation, and go, "How can I apply these principles, these guiding principles of light, to what it is I am doing?" And we're gonna start pretty broad with that. We're eventually gonna work ourselves to a much more specific way about it. But I'm gonna give you some of those generalizations I mentioned a little bit ago. These are my like simple tips for creating cinematic lighting. And these are not absolutes by any stretch of the imagination, they're just things that I find to be helpful when thinking about cinematic, cinematic lighting. And so the first thing is, dark and low key. I understand that there are all different kinds of movies, and some are bright, and some are happy. But when we think about cinematic lighting in regards to photography, usually one of the, its one of the main things is just dark. It's a little bit darker, there's lots of shadow. THat's how we think about things that are cinematic, and so we just make it darker, and we use a little bit more of a low key image. Building upon that, remember that shadows are your friend. You're not necessarily gonna wanna think about lighting things really straight on to the front, or really broad and really soft. Again, not that there's not a place for that, but you know, if for our purposes, we're over-generalizing and we're gonna embrace those shadows. But it's not about the absolutes of the shadows. We still have to control the fill. So you start darker, utilize the shadows, but then you have to utilize and control how dark those shadows are. Or how bright they are. And again, this depends upon the mood you're trying to create. Separate the subject from the background. In a very dark environment, you don't want to lose track of your subject. You want to make sure you are able to clearly express who the subject is. And so we separate the subject from the background. And there's a lot of different ways you can do that. You can do that with depth of field, you can do it with rim lights, hair lights, environmental factors, so framing them up in a doorway, or creating figure-ground relationships. Basic compositional things. And then lastly, show depth. I mentioned this a little bit ago, but film like photography, film-making like photography, it is trying to create depth. Three dimensions on a two-dimensional plane. How do you do that? And again, we can use perspective, we can use depth of field, we can use lighting, highlights, shadow. We can stagger lighting. A lot of different ways we can do that. And so this is my like quick tips and tricks for things to remember when it comes to cinematic lighting. I'm gonna show you what that looks like in practice now, when I approach a scene.
Class Materials
Ratings and Reviews
Bruce Walker
This course is simply terrific, and I highly recommend it. Firstly it arrived at the perfect time for me as I am soon to do a studio shoot very much in keeping with a cinematic or theatrical aesthetic. Secondly it's taught by Chris Knight who I swear is like a long-lost twin brother. :-) There are so many parallels in the way he thinks and works to my own style. So I avidly watched this as soon as it was available for anytime streaming. This is the first time I have made extensive use of the CL iPhone app, btw, and I love how it pretty much enabled me to seamlessly switch back and forth from desktop viewing to my iPad that I carry around the house during the day. I was able to make coffee and still carry on taking in the course, uninterrupted. The content is fantastic, delivered succinctly yet entertainingly. Some material and ideas are already in my repertoire and were reinforced and validated by Chris' demonstrations. But he also introduced a lot of ideas and methods new to me and very welcome. I was particularly glad to see how practical it is to stitch a series of tripod shots into a wide pano. I have been afraid to try that but I will now be using that in my next shoot, for sure. As alway, his post production practices revealed all kinds of tips about Lightroom and Photoshop I didn't know. Negatives. The volume level mastering is iffy. It started out at a decent level then midway through one of the early lessons dropped so much I had to turn up my sound system to compensate. And as I write this one lesson (34) is missing and in its place was a duplicate of the next lesson (35). I expect CL will have that fixed shortly though (I sent support a note).
Jeph DeLorme
One of the best classes I have viewed at Creative Live. Definitely worth the investment of time and money. The pace of the class allows you to learn extra tips and tricks throughout the process. Great instructor, highly recommend this class to anyone looking to step up their creative game.
a Creativelive Student
excellent class in all regards. outstanding instructor with experience in complicated cinematic shoots but who also is willing to thoroughly cover the basic nuts and bolts. i wish all creative live classes were of this quality.