Ellivtnom wrote:You should get one of those whole big light, it covers the whole set. If you don't know what I'm talking about, go on FrankFredLego, he's got a tutorial.
NO. A HORRIBLE WAY TO APPROACH IT.
You should have AT LEAST 2 lamps (some people even use 3, but I use 2). One on either side of the set, to even lighting. Each should have a sheet of plain white printer paper taped over the bulb to diffuse the lighting. You can get good Desklamps cheap at Target, I recommend it.
Also, you should film in a completely dark room -- the only lighting being your lamps.
You should wear dark clothes to keep the lighting good.
And always remember that Black LEGO Elements will reflect light, causing light flicker. Light them on an indirect angle, not head on. Same with your camera -- if your camera is head on shooting at a black brick, it will reflect.
"actuallly this involves spiderman too, not batman. but im also taking a new approach, more comedy, less action. i dont see to many movies like that with more comedy than action" --SteveStarfyTV on an Indiana Jones meets Star Wars idea.