#diagram ☺️Hello everyone, so here's the diagram for my previous post. Fairly simple in nature, a key light a rim light and another light bouncing off of the white floor. Now, I have to point out a very important element of this photo. ☝️🤓The key light is not a regular fresnel light like both the key and bounce light which are an arri 300 and 1k respectively. Instead This light is more of a "novelty" light, one that creates different shapes by focusing the light within a very narrow beam. This is how I achieved the streak of light cutting through her face , arm and background. Which brings us to another key element , balancing😌. This can also be called ratios, I'll be the first one to confess that lighting ratios are very confusing to me. This is why I use a light meter every chance I get. The idea was to expose for every light without having one over power the other. 🤔 This can be done by controlling the output, the distance, implementing modifiers, etc. in this case I had no control over the outputs and no modifiers beside barn doors on both arris. So I opted for strategically placing the light at different distances or more complexly known as "inverse square law". The color on this photo is achieved rather easily, as you all know fresnels are typically tungsten light sources with a color temperature of 3200k. 😊Setting the white balance I your camera to a colder K value you can get some pretty neat colors out of your lights. ( when shooting raw this isn't as important, still interesting tho) 😂 pretty lengthy hope you guys enjoy. Comment #right if you made it this far. Equipment: ""#arri 300 & 1k. #canon6d #70to200 that other light which name I don't remember. If you know the name please leave it in the comments✌️😄