I thought emulate sounded so much better than 'copy' although isn't imitation the sincerest form of flattery...anyway I digress (surprisingly )
I have purchased some inexpensive items that Colin uses/told us about in the 'school of portraiture' classes.
these being shown as above - I have put them to use here with my wee Baby friend
the flash and brolley on bracket were just on a shelf as the VAL ( mum) got called away on the phone
from the image you can see
- babies move quick the catchlight in 1 eye is a bit soft - either he moved or I shook or both - but also it is too low
so when wanting to use this technique outside and/or with bigger people I want to attach the bracket to something so it can be held higher than their face .....
1 light bracket can be supported by a piece of hardwood dowling through the bottom hole and screwed on...seems to stay fairly secure.
pop a piece of this the right size in the bottom of the bracket and off you go....
Only then you get as far as thinking....but what if I want 2 lights! and the length of dowl is not telescopic, so a bit tricky to carry around..
So then you think ...what if I had a piece of aluminium that went through the cross holes - of 2 brackets, both could hold a strobe and 1 could hold an umbrella...
then (obviously having room on either side of the screw for a bracket ) you could then theoretically screw this whole sche-bang onto a painters pole.....
Or so I thought
But the standard style of painters pole that we had in the shed have the screw thread on the outside for attaching rollers etc
we tried to use a plasterboard plug which expanded and then and screw on the inside....but it was pretty wobbly even without any weight on it...
So my choices are use 1 light/ 1 stand with the piece of dowl.....or
get this wee gizmo from B&H
which whilst it looks the right thing a) I was wanting to build something and have the satisfaction of solving the problem without resorting to the credit card with stuff from the shed..
But I still want it to be safe when I get 2 lights on it - so this is probably the best bet...
But finally I get to my question....the bit 'greyed out' in the bottom of the picture...is that 'another bracket attachment' required to fix the setup to the 'pole'
And I'm guessing these guys don't intend us to use painters poles - Colin do you use a monopod or a light stand and just not fold the legs out... ?
We know I will be really embarrassed when the obvious simple answer is revealed...but hopefully now that I've braved my silly question in public, others will be inspired to put a similar set up to use.
The aim is to use this instead of relying on the sun to be where you want it and using a reflector....this is the 'bring the sun along and put it where you want it tool'.
Thanks Colin and anyone else who has experience in these areas for your 'secrets revealed'.