@LPowell mentioned that for shooting with the GH2, he preferred 5000K color temperature Compact Florescent Light (CFL) bulbs over the more common (in photography) 5500K daylight bulbs. That got me to thinking... Most photographic quality CFL bulbs are expensive because they have more phosphors inside the bulb to decrease the greenish tint generally associated with florescent light. My working theory was that since all bulbs come from China, some at the local store may be the "right stuff." Since the photography market is rather small and 5000K bulbs are relatively more common, it made sense that overage would make it's way to retail. I felt there was at least a chance. After all, they make the things by the millions. I felt I had a better than average chance, however, a talk with an insider made me feel chances were even better, yet. So... I went out and bought a bunch of bulbs. Good news! I'm still testing but may just have a winner...& it's the cheapest one! Any interest?
@MRfanny Until then: I've got one from Lowe's that has to be the Best-bang-for-the-buck! $9.00 for 12. Utilitech 1600 series 23w 1500 lumens Catalog #0345544 (4 pack) $2.98 Note: There are 2 styles of this bulb, one with black writing on the base and one with green writing. The black is better. Also the base shape is more cylindrical than the other. I will eventually post pictures. Distributed by LG Sourcing, Inc. No GRI stated but appears high (& one of the better balanced histograms, so far.) I also compared the color to images taken with my known good 4 ft tubes.
The Politics: The local electric utility is buying down prices to make them this cheap. Also the utility rep. doing this job told me the quality varies because of the different motivations behind the bulk sales to the distributor!
@csync Yep, that's the one. Must be: The Politics: The local electric utility is buying down prices to make them this cheap. Also the utility rep. doing this job told me the quality varies because of the different motivations behind the bulk sales to the distributor!
also: according to rep, seems goods get cheaper as manufacturers have to sell to pay bills
I have never seen anything like the BlueMax 93CRI bulbs at a discount store, but if you or anyone sees any let me know! I would be very interested in buying a tub of them. I'm sure they are custom fabbed elsewhere but even looking on aliexpress I haven't seen anything similar. They are 5500K, 93+ CRI, and the mercury is bound to some sort of glue or substrate so if you drop one you don't send mercury dust all over the room.
@DrDave Get us good physical description of bulb. We can see. Due to loans being hard to get, I understand many companies were funding inventories through loan sharks. That stuff may be what is being liquidated to pay-up.
I would like to see a shootout with a good camera and and bad light, and a bad camera and good light. I wonder how many people buy a $400 lens and a $3 light bulb :) (I include myself in this category)
@DrDave, a reason might be that when you white balance a shitty fluorescent that's green spiking that white balance increases the gain on the other channels to match the green, resulting in additional noise. If you gel to correct the spike, it's a more realistic estimate of the amount of light you have to work with and should reduce noise.
Could anyone verify that this is how white balance works? (Sorry if this should be in another thread)
You can't WB away the green spike, that's why I still minus green if I can. You have to minus green the cheaper HID/HMI lights too as they have tons of green in them as well.
Them are available internationally, extremely bright (150W) and the color temperature 5500K is true. I'm not professional, but with naked eye I'm not able to spot green/blue tint (I know what that is because I also have some cheap LED lights). And the video doesn't flicker either. I attach screenshot from actual video footage, on the left there's yellow kitchen light but at the right light comes from softbox. I used daylight settings for WB.
I'm using this softbox http://www.ebay.com/itm/330632969807 . Ok build quality, everything works, but those bulbs I mentioned are so big that there's room only for 2 of them. Doesn't really matter because light power of 2 is totally enough for me.
I have seen some LED light bulbs, they are called "LED corn lights". Like this http://www.ebay.com/itm/250962969744 I wonder if anyone has tried these?
@bubba CRI measurements don't really provide an accurate comparison of light sources of different color temperatures. The CIE standard illuminant D65 used in the CRI test has a color temperature of 6500K, which means the test is actually measuring how well the lamp simulates a 6500K light source. This is why 5500K lamps tend to score higher CRI's than 5000k lamps. In practice, a CRI over 80 is very good and it is the metameric qualities of the lamp that determine how balanced the light will appear to the camera's image sensor.
When evaluating light sources, do not use your own eyes to view the light directly, as they will automatically color-correct it to appear white. You should instead use your camera to take sample shots of a gray-scale card, preferably at matched levels of exposure. You would then ideally use a color-calibrated monitor to view the results.