Apple Boxes
Apple boxes are found in every film studio and lot in the world. These can be utilized in myriads of various ways. When you are working with filming a person, they may be employed to effectively raise up a shorter individual. With several of them, you are able to boost the height of a table or a desk. Since they come in different heights, you may employ several arrangements of boxes in order to precisely reach the desired height.
C-Stands and C-Stand Accessories
This stands for Century C Stands. Their capability of being put together literally right next to each other is maybe their greatest benefit that they offer over competing forms of light stands. The height of every leg is different, permitting a photographer to align the stands next to each other by putting the leg of one stand beneath the leg of the next one.
The C-stands' arms are ideal for keeping differing C-stand accessories, such as light controls in the air including scrims, flags, reflectors, clamps, mirrors, etc. You are even able to arrange lights on these light stands. Such C-stands are available in varying sizes with differing features offered.
Light Meters
These have mostly become obsolete with the advance to digital filmmaking. But in the so-called golden days of filming, when films were shot using real film that was expensive to buy and to develop, light meters were essential. They saved the photographer both money and time. The majority of photographers would employ them to take light meter readings in order to know what the lighting exposure would look like when the film was developed. This avoided under or over-exposed filming of movies. But in today's technologically advanced age, all that you have to do when using the digital technology cameras is to press the button and you have instantaneous, free, test shots (you do not even require a Polaroid camera for test shooting anymore.). If your exposure turns out to be off, then you just take another picture. It your light is too little or too much, you simply adjust it. Very few professional photographers utilize light meters any longer.
Strobe Light Sources
The majority of photographers at some point utilize electronic strobe lighting equipment, also known as photographic electronic flash. Numerous competing brands and kinds of flash and strobe lighting equipment are available.
These include bare bulbs, which are strobe heads that do not contain a reflector; small reflectors, which offer wide or narrow sprays of lighting; large reflectors, useful for bouncing light off of ceilings or into walls; grid spots, which are used to keep light from spreading out; light boxes, which are used to precisely focus where a light source will shine; Freznells, which are very large and heavy lights that double as adjustable types of spot lights; optical spots, which are more or less a slide projector and a flash tube lying behind it; and ring lights, which are flash heads formed much like a donut that permit you to shoot film through the hole to achieve a nearly perfect light fill.