The biggest improvement to the lighting I could suggest would be two coats (after a mist coat) of white emulsion on the plasterboard ceiling. This would give a much more even light in the whole workshop. Maybe the walls that are in bare board too. Nice if we could leave the stone work natural though.
Adding cheap led lights to the ceiling was a game changer in terms of volume of light flooding the workspace. But I always use a worklight on the bench to distinguish knife lines and pencil marks.
I see so many UA-camrs come a cropper when "upgrading to LEDs" in either their working or filming space becuse they can cause flashing or strobing in the resulting video(s) that are unwatchable. The common point of failers are cheap LED lights from Amazon even when they say they are filming-friendly with the next tier up in pricing. If you need any help my dad is an electroengineer and worked on films as well as being an electrician
The biggest improvement to the lighting I could suggest would be two coats (after a mist coat) of white emulsion on the plasterboard ceiling. This would give a much more even light in the whole workshop. Maybe the walls that are in bare board too.
Nice if we could leave the stone work natural though.
Adding cheap led lights to the ceiling was a game changer in terms of volume of light flooding the workspace. But I always use a worklight on the bench to distinguish knife lines and pencil marks.
Just an idea? It may sound stupid, but why don't you have two separate circuits? One for your work shop and one for your UA-cam stuff?
Good plan
OMG...your beard is so purple!!
Told ya
I see so many UA-camrs come a cropper when "upgrading to LEDs" in either their working or filming space becuse they can cause flashing or strobing in the resulting video(s) that are unwatchable.
The common point of failers are cheap LED lights from Amazon even when they say they are filming-friendly with the next tier up in pricing.
If you need any help my dad is an electroengineer and worked on films as well as being an electrician
Cheers buddy, I find you have to keep the shutter speed low generally no higher than twice the frame rate
You’ve got _way_ too much UV light in that room!
Yep 😬🤠