Continuous Lighting

Primarily used in video production, although they can also be used in photography, continuous lights come in a range of shapes and power specifications for a wide range of applications.

Daylight-balanced Continuous LED Lighting

Daylight-balanced lights produce a light with a colour temperature of around 5500K which is considered to be a resemble the quality of light at noon on a cloudy day, neither warm nor cool. They are also generally brighter than their bi-colour counterparts.

Bicolour Continuous LED Lighting

Bi-colour lights produce a light with a variable colour temperature range, generally from around 3200K to 7200K, warm to cool. Having a variable range to choose from provides greater flexibility when lighting a scene to either match or contrast your shooting environment.

Full Colour Continuous LED Lighting

Full colour lights can produce the full gamut of colour, from yellow and orange, red, purple, blue and green using the HSI (Hue, Saturation and Intensity) option.

Are you using continuous lighting, strobe or a speedlight?
How do I know which to use?