Tiki Central / Other Crafts / Tiki-On-A-Budget
Post #583461 by woofmutt on Tue, Apr 5, 2011 8:28 AM
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Tue, Apr 5, 2011 8:28 AM
*In the thread It's a glass yes, but is it a mug or a bowl? Finally a definitive answer.in the Collecting Tiki forum bigbrotiki posted some really great lighting tips and examples. Below is bigbrotiki's post.* As a lighting cameraman my philosophy is always that the actors and objects should look like they are glowing from the INSIDE, not like light is being thrown on them. The same goes for Tiki Lounge lighting in my mind: Everything should GLOW softly! Like the Beachcomber lamps on the ceiling. I started with my SMALL, CLEAR Disneyworld goblet, by using a red, frosted X-mas light bulb: Conventional lighting wisdom tells you that to get a glow, softer (frosted) light sources are better, but when I used a CLEAR amber bulb in the same clear glass: ...the harder light was refracting in the edges and corners of the molded glass much more effectively, giving me a better rendition of the outlines of the mask! The same proved to be true for the BIG, FROSTED Disneyworld goblet. Here's a frosted, purple bulb: ...and here an amber clear bulb:
You should be able to still get some colored TUNGSTEN light bulbs at your local hardware store.
For all other mugs, I like using X-mas light strings for my collection -but not like this!:
The cords have to be hidden, and the bulbs should work like foot lights on a stage: My favorite X-mas string bulbs have these PEARL bulbs: When not lit, they look like South Sea pearls lying around! :D Originally posted by bigbrotiki in the thread It's a glass yes, but is it a mug or a bowl? Finally a definitive answer. |