Thank you! Great video! But what about glare? I have a lot of windows and love them but am struggling with the constantly changing light, so I'm looking for studio lighting. What I see in your video is that the easel lamp appears to be creating glare. Maybe that's just the angle of the camera? So far everything I've tried has created a glare problem that makes it difficult to understand what I'm seeing on the canvas.
I do understand your question as I also have a studio with large windows too. What I have found with this lamp is it is easy for me to limit the glare on my painting by adjusting the arms on this lamp and the light intensity. With each arm having 4 levels of light , I can turn the light down on one or the other arm or on both. I also have one window where the sun , being lower on the horizon, directly shines in during the fall to winter months. I tape tracing paper over that window which creates filtered light and that really helps. I have had this lamp for a few years now and use it every time I paint at my easel. I am still really happy with it. I hope this helps! And yes, my filming has a learning curve…lol. Thank you for your question! 😊
@@janetferraroartstudio4234 Thank you for your helpful answer! I'm considering purchasing this lamp, and your information is useful to my thinking process. :) And the tracing paper for filtered light is a great idea.
@shawneefleenor2182 i am so glad you found this helpful! Adding the tracing paper to the window really does create wonderful filtered light. Thank you for asking and I wish you the very best! 💕
Great idea. I paint with very low dropped ceilings and can't get a lamp behind me that doesnt cause my head to cast a shadow on the canvas. Do you find that this lamp over lights the canvas , maki g you paint too dark? Also, do you know how many kelvin it is? Thank you for any help you can provide! I'm really struggling to light my low ceiling studio. I've tried every lanp and bulb and positioning I imaginable, but I've read that easel clip on lamps can cause over lighting and hot spot issues.
Hi, thank you for your question! The versatility of this lamp allows you to adjust its position and light brightness. Both arms work independent of each other. Each has 4 light brightness settings and can move in so many positions. I think it may be the answer you are looking for. Since you can purchase it on Amazon and return it if it’s not ideal for you, maybe test it out and let me know how it works for you.
@@janetferraroartstudio4234 Thank you so much! I purchased the lamp on Amazon, and I can't begin to express how much your recommendation has helped! Previously, i had tried all types of lamps, some on stands behind me or one on either side of me and slightly behind, but because the ceiling is so low, it cast my shadow on the canvas. I also tried various lights attached to my easel, but they didn't have the width, arm length, brightness adjustment, etc. that worked. I was ready to give up. Finally, your video provided a solution that works in my low ceiling basement studio.Thank you, thank you, thank you!
Nice light but I can't stop looking at that amazing painting!!! So real! You are so talented!!!
Thank you so much!! 💕
Thank you! Great video! But what about glare? I have a lot of windows and love them but am struggling with the constantly changing light, so I'm looking for studio lighting. What I see in your video is that the easel lamp appears to be creating glare. Maybe that's just the angle of the camera? So far everything I've tried has created a glare problem that makes it difficult to understand what I'm seeing on the canvas.
I do understand your question as I also have a studio with large windows too. What I have found with this lamp is it is easy for me to limit the glare on my painting by adjusting the arms on this lamp and the light intensity. With each arm having 4 levels of light , I can turn the light down on one or the other arm or on both. I also have one window where the sun , being lower on the horizon, directly shines in during the fall to winter months. I tape tracing paper over that window which creates filtered light and that really helps. I have had this lamp for a few years now and use it every time I paint at my easel. I am still really happy with it. I hope this helps! And yes, my filming has a learning curve…lol. Thank you for your question! 😊
@@janetferraroartstudio4234 Thank you for your helpful answer! I'm considering purchasing this lamp, and your information is useful to my thinking process. :) And the tracing paper for filtered light is a great idea.
@shawneefleenor2182 i am so glad you found this helpful! Adding the tracing paper to the window really does create wonderful filtered light. Thank you for asking and I wish you the very best! 💕
Very ,,,, cool grawing😃
Thank you! So nice of you!
Love this!
Thank you!
Great idea. I paint with very low dropped ceilings and can't get a lamp behind me that doesnt cause my head to cast a shadow on the canvas. Do you find that this lamp over lights the canvas , maki g you paint too dark? Also, do you know how many kelvin it is? Thank you for any help you can provide! I'm really struggling to light my low ceiling studio. I've tried every lanp and bulb and positioning I imaginable, but I've read that easel clip on lamps can cause over lighting and hot spot issues.
Hi, thank you for your question! The versatility of this lamp allows you to adjust its position and light brightness. Both arms work independent of each other. Each has 4 light brightness settings and can move in so many positions. I think it may be the answer you are looking for. Since you can purchase it on Amazon and return it if it’s not ideal for you, maybe test it out and let me know how it works for you.
@@janetferraroartstudio4234 Thank you so much! I purchased the lamp on Amazon, and I can't begin to express how much your recommendation has helped! Previously, i had tried all types of lamps, some on stands behind me or one on either side of me and slightly behind, but because the ceiling is so low, it cast my shadow on the canvas. I also tried various lights attached to my easel, but they didn't have the width, arm length, brightness adjustment, etc. that worked. I was ready to give up. Finally, your video provided a solution that works in my low ceiling basement studio.Thank you, thank you, thank you!
Hi Janet the link didn’t work. Searched Amazon and could not find it. Do you have the name of the lamp?
I just tried the link from the description area below the video and it worked . Can you try the link again?