Reddit Reddit reviews Fotodiox Pro 5-in-1 Reflector With Easy Hold Handles - 42in (100cm) Premium Grade Collapsible Disc (Silver/Gold/Black/White/Diffuser)

We found 4 Reddit comments about Fotodiox Pro 5-in-1 Reflector With Easy Hold Handles - 42in (100cm) Premium Grade Collapsible Disc (Silver/Gold/Black/White/Diffuser). Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Electronics
Camera & Photo
Camera & Photo Lighting
Lighting Reflectors
Lighting Controls & Modifiers
Lighting & Studio
Fotodiox Pro 5-in-1 Reflector With Easy Hold Handles - 42in (100cm) Premium Grade Collapsible Disc (Silver/Gold/Black/White/Diffuser)
Handles On Either Side for Easy Hand Held Use!Sturdy Pro-Grade MaterialsCollapsible for Portability5 Applications In One for All Photo Occasions24-Month Manufacturer Warranty
Check price on Amazon

4 Reddit comments about Fotodiox Pro 5-in-1 Reflector With Easy Hold Handles - 42in (100cm) Premium Grade Collapsible Disc (Silver/Gold/Black/White/Diffuser):

u/akifbayram · 8 pointsr/RoomPorn

Based on the description, there doesn't seem to be any glass (other than the light bulb). The front white panel is a fabric diffuser similar to those used by photographers.

u/kaidumo · 2 pointsr/Filmmakers

http://www.amazon.ca/gp/aw/d/B003Y2KC7W But looks like the price went up for that size. Look at the other stuff by Fotodiox, pretty inexpensive.

u/super_spyder · 2 pointsr/WeAreTheFilmMakers

Hot hands gloves. They are by far the best gloves I have ever worked with when dealing with hot lights. Very durable and comfortable, with little to no heat transfer to your hands. Expensive but worth it.

a couple of cheap 5 way bounces Great to tape in to the corners of small rooms so you can bounce lights off them. also I live off these on no budget or fast moving exteriors

u/PastramiSwissRye · 1 pointr/videography

I've been meaning to write up a guide for this...

If you Google around for cheap light kits, you'll see a lot of "clamp light" builds. I recommend skipping those. Knockoff LED panels have gotten good enough that I think you're better off buying them instead. The clamp lights, to me, are more pieces and trouble to set up, tear down, and travel with than they're worth and they look extremely amateur, which is a problem if you're doing corporate work.

Before you begin, the key to remember is that the smaller the frame, the more cheaply it can be lit. Shoot tight to make your cheap lighting go further and look better.

First, use the sun. Position your subject as if the sun is your key - around to the side a bit so you get some light wrapping. Then bring in your popup light modifier and stand and set it up to diffuse the sun. This almost always looks great and is very cheap and easy to set up.

Next, get a bucket of CN160s and some knockoff Sony NP batteries. Shoot a few of them through your diffusion ring to get a bright enough key, then bounce the rest of them off of white foamcore to get nice fill lights and to fill in the room.

$200 or so will get you pretty well set up - less depending on how many LED panels you want. It's hardly the BEST kit, but it's an excellent, effective, and compact CHEAP kit.