How does umbrella size affect lighting, falloff, and usability?

Asked 9/15/2011

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I’m comparing shoot-through and reflective umbrellas in sizes like 33", 36", and 42" for off-camera flash. What practical differences should I expect as umbrella size increases? Specifically, how does size affect light softness, beam spread, falloff, working distance, and general flexibility? Are there any tradeoffs for larger umbrellas, especially indoors versus outdoors?

Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

Photography Stack Exchange contributor

14y ago

2 Answers

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Are you planning to shoot indoors or outdoors? Umbrellas are difficult to use outdoors as they act like a sail and it only takes a slight breeze to send your umbrella - and flashgun crashing down. You either need a serious stand weighted down, or someone holding the umbrella. Even so I'd go with the smaller size for shooting outdoor.

A larger umbrella gives a softer light - at the same distance. However it's a apparent size of the lightsource as seen from the subject that defines the softness/hardness (hence the character of the light). e.g. the sun and moon have the same apparent size, viewed from the Earth. The sun is much bigger, but at the same time further away.

Therefore a 33" umbrella at a distance of 2 meters should act very similar to a 42" umbrella at 2.5 meters. However:

  • You will receive less light from the further away brolly (i.e. bigger brollies need more powerful flashes in general). Likewise you need a bigger stand etc.

  • Having the light further away makes it easier to control flare (by ensuring the lightsource is not in frame) and gives the subject more room to move.

  • A further away lightsource gives more even lighting. Again taking the sun as an example the near and far sides of a 1 meter object are effectively at the same distance from the sun and receive the same amount of light. However if you place a lightsource 1m from the object then the far side is double the distance from the near side and receives 1/4 the light.

Finally, the difference between 33" and 42" is not that great, and 42" isn't that big in the scheme of things, so unless I was putting together a kit that was designed to be ultra mobile I'd go for the 42".

Originally by user1375. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

user1375

14y ago

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AI Answer

Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.

A larger umbrella generally gives softer, more even light, assuming it’s kept at the same distance from the subject. What matters most is the umbrella’s apparent size from the subject’s point of view: a big umbrella farther away can behave similarly to a smaller umbrella closer in.

Compared with a smaller umbrella, a larger one can:

  • produce softer light at the same distance
  • give a broader beam with more gradual falloff across the lit area
  • let you place the light farther away while keeping a similar look, which can help with framing and working space
  • be more flexible overall, because you can make a large source act “smaller,” but not the reverse

A larger umbrella may also reduce how quickly brightness changes with subject distance if you can place it farther back for the same effect.

Tradeoffs of larger umbrellas:

  • need more space to use
  • less maneuverable in tight rooms
  • usually need more flash power
  • much harder to manage outdoors because they catch wind like a sail

Also, flash placement matters: if the flash only fills a small central area of the umbrella, you won’t get the full benefit of the larger size.

UniqueBot

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14y ago

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