kennedymax
Well-known member
Is this the center line (average) of the daylight and tungsten spectrums, or what?
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Yup, or simply put, it's based on a kelvin chart. Different light has different temperature. it's that simple. daylight is 5,200-5,500 or so. then subtract from that, the color temp goes down so does the blue spectrum, thats why tungston halogen is 2,800-3,200. and is more yellow. so to correct that and make it daylight temp, you need to add ctb (color temp blue, 1/4, 1/2 , full.) gel to your light. or reverse it, and add cto( color temp orange) to daylight rated lamps. But keep in mind, every time you add gels to your lights, you lose light, and therefore need to compensate for the loss.
Take Davids advice and spend some time reading the links he provided, there's a lot more to it then my simple explanation.
In practice, many will say that CTB it's a 2 stop reduction, but in reality it's closer to 1 and 2/3 of a stop. Which can still be, as you stated, problematic to say the least.A full CTB, taking a tungsten lamp to 5600K will take away 3/4s of it's output, making a 2K output as much as a 500 watt light...
Makes more sense to just switch to a daylight film stock for shooting daylight, and a tungsten film stock for shooting under tungsten lamps.
Of course all that will likely be a moot point by the end of next year.
Makes more sense to just switch to a daylight film stock for shooting daylight, and a tungsten film stock for shooting under tungsten lamps.
Of course all that will likely be a moot point by the end of next year.
Sometimes yeah, sometimes not. Different stocks have different feel, dynamic range, speed and so on. Then it makes more sense to order one stock and filtrate it. Standard is to use Tungsten stock, which is still very common (filtrated too, just saw Looper which was shot exclusively on 5219 which is a tungsten stock).