Step 4 – Husky Daylight Work Lights ($50 each at Home Depot) But, with the wood tile floors we had a simple solution, we simply ran the cables behind the tiles along the edge of the wall then pushed the wood flooring against the cables to pinch and conceal it against the wall. But, for future videos I knew that we would. Luckily, in this video we didn’t shoot wide enough to see the flooring. Step 3 – Wiring the Set ($50 in wires and strips at Home Depot)Ĭoncealing cables on a set is always a challenge, especially when you are shooting wide. So, I pop in J.C., our lighting dummy, to give me a nice example of how the lighting is changing as I add and modify each light. It isn’t reasonable to have a person stand in for 60 minutes as I sit there and mold and shape our light. Whenever I am doing scene setups, I place a lighting dummy where my subject is going to be in order to shape my light. To the attach them to the wall, we simply used 4 pieces of double sided tape per tile. So, yeah, that is where the majority of our budget went as it cost $860. For some reason, these cardboard molded wall flats cost $86 per box and it took 10 boxes to cover both walls. So we purchased 100 square feet of wood flooring tiles from Home Depot (which cost around $200) along with 200 square feet of Seesaw Wall Flat tiles to cover both walls. But, we figured that we would be using this set in future videos, so it wouldn’t be a one time cost. Interestingly enough, this was actually where the majority of our budget was spent. The first step was setting up the flooring and the wall tiles. Step 1 – Flooring and Wall Tiles ($1065 Total cost) Samples from the final set of stills – Shot sRAW on 5D Mark II w/ 50mm F/4
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