I am looking into doing some light painting and at the moment I only have an LED torch to work with at the moment, I am looking into getting a couple of different small key ring torches, what sort of milliwatt and colours would give the best results? And further, is it better to trace what I am trying to show by shining the light on the object or pointing it at the camera?
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Hi Sheathey, you'll need to edit this question to demonstrate what you mean and what effects your after, anything that emits light can be used for light painting with any number of different effects. Without known some details we can't really assist. Thanks! – NULLZ Aug 07 '13 at 01:18
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2Why not just try some tonight and see how it works? – Paul Cezanne Aug 07 '13 at 10:34
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A keyring light sounds like a very small point of light. Run a test with the point source and compare it with another that you paint using your mobile phone display. The area of light means a lot for the result. – Esa Paulasto Aug 07 '13 at 12:45
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Don't use a laser if you are pointing at your camera. It can potentially damage your sensor. – Michael C Sep 03 '15 at 23:07
1 Answers
You'll get more light by pointing the light source directly at the camera, but it will look different. Likewise, different colors will look... different. I think the only answer here is to get some things and experiment with the look you want and like. And, more variety will give you more options!
You may want to consider buying a high-quality white LED flashlight and using colored gels for your color options. But that doesn't sound like the route you're interested in.
As for power: you won't really be able to tell which is brighter by the wattage. There are a lot of other factors, with the focus/reflector system being the most important of those — but also, the ratings on cheap lights won't be accurate anyway. Generally, brighter is better (although too bright might mean that it's hard to be subtle, I don't think that will be a problem with keyring lights).
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