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review: Lumodi beauty dish for speedlights

January 15, 2011 Neil vN 12 Comments

review: Lumodi beauty dish for speedlights

Light from a Beauty Dish has a distinctive look – an interesting combination of soft light with a pronounced fall-off to the edges. With a softbox there is a lot of scattering of the light, making it exactly that soft light source that it is named after.  A softbox is therefore quite forgiving of how you position the light in relation to your subject.  The beauty dish in comparison, used as a single light source, will give light that can be both dramatic and pleasing.  (Not nearly as hard as video light or direct unmodified speedlight.)

With that, I have used a beauty dish on occasion in the last two years since I bought my Profoto AcuteB 600R lighting kit (B&H) and the Profoto beauty dish (B&H). While interesting enough, I most often just reverted to using a softbox when using the Profoto kit. I like the light from a softbox – soft and easy to work with. But still, there’s the interest in trying out the beauty dish for its specific light type. As much as I love the Profoto set-up for on-location lighting, it does become a specific decision … whereas I always have a speedlight or two with me.

The portability and easy of use of speedlights, have made me wonder about using one of the several beauty dishes on the market that are specifically meant for speedlights. What has kept me from that, is the relatively high cost of some of these speedlight beauty dishes in comparison to the “serious” beauty dishes.  So when I noticed the Lumodi speedlight 14″ beauty dish going for a more affordable $69, I was tempted enough to get one.

With such a low level of entry to trying out a beauty dish, I thought that if it didn’t quite work out, then $69 isn’t an unbearable loss. Worth checking out.

The Lumodi 14″ beauty dish is really light-weight.  It is designed to strap onto your speedlight and hang from your speedlight.  No flash support bracket. For this not to strain the speedlight itself, it therefore had to be lightweight in design. The beauty dish is hand-made and constructed with thin plastic and a velcro strap. It is simple in design and light.

[ edit: the maker of the Lumodi beauty dish contacted me to let me know that my original post incorrectly stated that the back of the beauty dish was made of cardboard. The back of the dish is actually made of the same plastic as the rest of the dish. I had mistaken the paper label for the back. ]

This beauty dish isn’t flimsy in itself, but its light-weight construction means it probably won’t be a long-term durable investment. See it as a lower-cost entry to using a beauty dish and seeing if you like the results before moving up. Check the Lumodi website for more details.

For the photo above of Rachael, I had my assistant just hand-hold the speedlight and Lumodi beauty dish at a distance of approximately 3 feet / 1 meter from Rachel. Quite close! This makes the beauty dish large enough in relation to our model to wrap the light around her features, to give a pronounced but soft-edged shadow. The light in the background is the light coming in through the window of the studio, reflecting on the wooden floor.  I specifically shot in this direction to allow that light in the background to give some separation.

I used the beauty dish without the (optional) sock which would’ve given softer light.

Since the direct light from the beauty dish isn’t as soft and scattered as that from a soft-box, I found that skin blemishes show up a lot more than with a softbox. So this portrait had some post-processing and retouching done to it, including a layer at reduced opacity in Photoshop where I tried out some of the DxO Film-Pack options.

Filed Under: equipment review, equipment reviews: lighting gear, flash photography, lighting, Uncategorized Tagged With: beauty dish for speedlights, flash photography, off-camera flash photography


 

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12 Comments, Add Your Own

  1. 1Jan says

    January 16, 2011 at 6:07 am

    Interesting result. Have you used white or silver?

    Since it seem to be quite a lot of photoshop it might be very interesting to see out of the camera picture.

    Reply
  2. 2Neil vN says

    January 16, 2011 at 6:17 am

    Jan .. I used the white beauty dish.

    Neil vN

    Reply
  3. 3Howard Owen says

    January 16, 2011 at 9:25 am

    Looks like the silver dish (for light efficiency and quicker falloff) with the sock (for a softer look when needed) might be the ticket.

    Thanks for the lead!

    Reply
  4. 4Stephen says

    January 16, 2011 at 1:45 pm

    Thanks for doing some reviews of lower-cost accessories. It’s good to hear that there are some accessories that work well without having to pay too much.

    It is weird that the diffusion sock is not included with the white dish, but it is included in the other two dishes.

    Reply
  5. 5bartosz wegrzyn says

    January 17, 2011 at 12:26 pm

    Hello, as always lovely photo and great information.
    Thx for sharing.

    I was wondering if the look you get from the post processing (that little grain) is some kind of your own secret or you are willing to tell us how did you do it?

    Reply
  6. 6Neil vN says

    January 17, 2011 at 7:10 pm

    Bartosz … the linked article explains my post-processing for portraits.

    Neil vN

    Reply
  7. 7Bart says

    January 18, 2011 at 12:33 am

    thx, I though there was more in addition to your regular post processing

    Reply
  8. 8Jason says

    January 20, 2011 at 9:09 pm

    Hey Neil, what were your camera settings and focal length? I have an issue getting blown out images. Unless at 1/500, 2.8, iso 800

    Reply
  9. 9Neil vN says

    January 21, 2011 at 4:56 am

    My camera settings here were: 1/50 @ f4.5 @ 400 ISO

    You’re over-exposing your photo at f2.8 @ 800 ISO
    You’re working too close to your subject, and at settings at which the camera can’t quench the flash output.

    The only reason you’re getting good flash exposure then at 1/500 is because you’re going into HSS mode. (Unless you’re shooting with a Nikon D70?) By going in to HSS mode, you’re losing at least 3 stops of light, and this is what is helping your camera pull the flash output to manageable levels.

    Use a different aperture and ISO combination, and see what the results are like.

    Neil vN

    Reply
  10. 10Jeff Maanum says

    March 10, 2011 at 4:27 pm

    So did you like the dish? Have you used it since taking this picture?

    Reply
  11. 11Neil vN says

    March 11, 2011 at 9:35 am

    Jeff .. I tried it and it works well for what it set out to do … but I don’t need it. So it’s been sold since.

    Neil vN

    Reply
  12. 12Dan says

    February 24, 2017 at 11:31 am

    Interesting where you thought the back was cardboard only learn it was plastic with paper label label. That’s why shyed away from it at first. Thank you for pointing that out. I am looking into buying my first beauty dish. Hopefully the Lumodi are still being made seeing how this is an old post.

    Reply

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