freeamfva | |
freeamfvaのブログ | |
年代 | 30代前半 |
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性別 | 女性 |
TITLE. The Best Ring Lights and Video LED Panels for 2022 |
DATE. 2023年03月27日 18:50:33 |
THEME. 未分類 |
The Best Ring Lights and Video LED Panels for 2022 You've probably seen it as you scroll through Tiktok or admire someone's incredible Instagram selfie: a tell-tale ring of light in the subject's pupils. That halo in the eye is a reflection from a ring light. It's the illumination option of choice, as it lets you centrally locate a recording device, usually a smartphone, right in the middle of a light that diffuses over your face or whatever you're photographing or recording. It zaps away the shadows with uniform light.Get more news about Best Cold Light Line,you can vist our website!
Light rings come in several sizes, from 10 to 22 inches in diameter. Most have hundreds of small surface-mounted LEDs that can be manipulated for brightness, as well as something arguably more important: color temperature. That's what gives light the appearance of a warm orange at the low end (1,000 Kelvin) all the way up to a blinding, bright blue at 10,000 K. Most ring lights keep the range between a warm white at 3,200 K and a cool white at 6,500 K. They're (usually) easily adjusted, either digitally or with a dial, to find the most flattering color temperature. If you search online for ring lights, you'll find hundreds of models, many from Chinese companies you've never heard of before such as Ubeesize, Aptoyu, and Mactrem. We narrowed the selection down to names like Neewer, Yesker, and Lume Cube that had some good reviews, and we even found devices from Razer, the company behind some of PCMag's favorite laptops. We purchased five models to try in 12-, 14-, and 18-inch versions, all priced between $60 to $120. None of the light rings, not even the Razer, bowled us over, which is the trade-off for keeping the price down. But some were quite effective, and many could have the right combination of features and performance for your budget.
Another category of illumination might better suit some people, especially work-from-home types: LED panels (aka light panels). These are fill lights for a camera, trained on you for meetings or while streaming, and engineered for use on or around the desk where you work or perform. They come in many shapes and sizes, and some have hefty price tags. But depending on your video presence, a light panel may be the better fit. Razer's 12-inch offering is a standard, low-end unit with few bells and whistles. It sells for $80 direct ($20 less on Amazon). It comes in the usual great Razer packaging, however, so you feel like you're getting a treat even if the contents are pretty standard. Inside is the light, a tripod that can adjust for desk or floor use, a flex bracket to hold a phone, and a ball-joint bracket for other cameras (such as the Razer Kiyo webcam) that have a threaded tripod mount. The button controls for the light are all found on the power cable, which plugs into a USB-A port on a PC, outlet, or power block (but a 5V 2A power block is not included). You don't get a range of color temps, only three pre-sets of 3,000 K (warm white), 4,500 K (balanced), and 6,500 K (cool white). Brightness is pre-set to 50% to start, but you can go down to 10% or up to 100% (500 lumens). The light has a threaded tripod hole, so you can mount the light ring on other tripods or holders; the included tripod goes up to 53.2-inches high. I found the flex mount for the phone a little hard to work with. But once things are in place, this is an effective light to get your influencer career started. It can work behind the monitor as a decent fill light for meetings if you have the desk space. It's not perfect for either job, though the price is. |
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