Cinematic Video Lighting
1h 44mIntermediate2016-01-29
Authors

Jem Schofield
Video Producer, Filmmaker, Consultant, and Educator
Course details
There's no reason to fall back on the same old 3-point lighting techniques for every shoot. Cinematic lighting, which takes its cue from film, can add drama and visual interest to any production. Using diffusion, small tweaks in color temp, bounced light, and other cinematic lighting tricks, you can achieve a much richer look and feel.
This series of tutorials, taught by producer, DP, and educator Jem Schofield of theC47, shows you the equipment and time-tested lighting techniques you need to get cinematic results. Filmed on location at a California brewery—a set with a lot of action and a lot of angles—the course takes you through the process of planning, lighting, and shooting video using largely cinematic (low-key) lighting techniques. Jem uses a conversational style of direction that relies on collaboration with the crew and the clients, but the lessons are flexible enough to apply to productions of many different types and sizes, including corporate video and documentaries. By the end, you'll have the skills you need to go out and create professional lighting setups in the real world.
Learning objectives
Choosing the right video lighting equipment
Scouting locations with good light and visual interest
Bouncing light and blocking light
Cutting light
Diffusing light
Recreating natural light
Modifying color temperature with video lighting
Shooting B-roll, inserts, and cutaways
Working outdoors
This series of tutorials, taught by producer, DP, and educator Jem Schofield of theC47, shows you the equipment and time-tested lighting techniques you need to get cinematic results. Filmed on location at a California brewery—a set with a lot of action and a lot of angles—the course takes you through the process of planning, lighting, and shooting video using largely cinematic (low-key) lighting techniques. Jem uses a conversational style of direction that relies on collaboration with the crew and the clients, but the lessons are flexible enough to apply to productions of many different types and sizes, including corporate video and documentaries. By the end, you'll have the skills you need to go out and create professional lighting setups in the real world.
Learning objectives
Choosing the right video lighting equipment
Scouting locations with good light and visual interest
Bouncing light and blocking light
Cutting light
Diffusing light
Recreating natural light
Modifying color temperature with video lighting
Shooting B-roll, inserts, and cutaways
Working outdoors
Skills covered
Video LightingVideoOne-Off
Concepts
0. Introduction
- 01 - Welcome
1. Equipment Choices
- 02 - Choosing a camera
- 03 - Lighting fixtures
- 04 - Light shaping and control tools
2. Scouting Your Locations
- 05 - Gear for scouting
- 06 - Choosing composition and subject eye line
- 07 - Looking for problem areas
- 08 - Finding creative lighting opportunities
3. Lighting and Shooting Interviews
- 09 - Recreating natural light
- 10 - Working with color temperature
- 11 - Creating a different time of day or mood
- 12 - Beauty lighting
- 13 - Great run and gun lighting
4. Shooting B-Roll, Inserts, and Cutaways
- 14 - Gearing up for B-roll shooting
- 15 - Handheld accent lighting
- 16 - FOH coverage
Conclusion
- 17 - Goodbye
- 18 - Bonus - Topa Topa final project