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Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 13 de marzo de 2025
- Good fit and fish especially when yo consider the under $40 price point- Lights work great, well diffused and not harsh, dimmer helps adjust lighting- Tripods and joints are a bit flimsy and the articulating joint is a it wobbly.- Good product when you remember its under $40, don't expect $500 quality
Chef Ive Adorno
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 15 de abril de 2025
Excelente. De gran ayuda
patrick
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 5 de abril de 2025
Everything is as advertised. Works great.
Linda Haggey
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 1 de abril de 2025
Lights work well but are smaller than I had hoped, saw the 12” in title but didn’t take the time to notice it was a diagonal measurement. The tripods work but a bit flimsy. The tripod for the phone is only for small phones, making it worthless to me. The lights very quickly drain battery packs, so have extra charged and ready if you need the lights for an extended period and don’t plug them into a conventional outlet.Overall, the lights and tripods are worth the sale price (not so much original price), work for smaller projects. If you are planning to use them for a larger setting, you will more than likely need to combine them with other (more) lights.
Fred
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 25 de diciembre de 2024
For less than $50 this kit provides a portable studio for video conferencing or ad hoc video production, such as an interview. etc.There are two tripod stands for the lights that have four separate height adjustment clamps. The light bracket swivels to cast illumination in just about any desired direction, such as bouncing it off a wall for soft lighting or using the second light to fill in shadows, either eliminating them or filling them in as much or as little as desired. The tripod stands collapse down to a size that fits into a zippered case for the entire kit for transporting them to gigs.There are phone holders for each tripod that can hold your phone in a portrait or landscape orientation. The snap collar that is used for the phone holders was a little weird at first, but I think I have that figured out. The directions are a bit sketchy, I guess they assume anyone needing this kit must already know how to make it all work -- not!The LED lights themselves are pretty large at 12" and a square form factor with light beads across the whole surface, far superior to the round lights with your phone in the center of a circular string of LED beads. The color is tunable from 2800K to 4800K or 6500K, and brightness can be adjusted to ten different levels (10% to 100%).The lights draw 15W so can be powered from your phone, an asset for locations without power -- you can create a video or make a video call from anywhere there is a cellular or Wi-Fi signal. To facilitate that they included two USB-A (female) to USB-C (male) adaptors. For use with AC supply you may either need an extension cord to get your power charger close or a USB extension to reach an outlet.There is also a table-top tripod that can be handy is some scenarios. Be careful to pull the legs radially instead axially to deploy them. A bit counter-intuitive, so be careful until you get familiar with them. The instructions were not that clear and you do not want to break off a plastic leg.As for the construction, I was a little concerned at first to see so much plastic. But consider the price -- plastic is much cheaper to fabricate, and the design is clever, and the plastic appears quite robust, so my initial fears subsided as I thought about it. I just try to be as careful as possible setting up the gear and that gets easier after doing it several times.I used to have a slap-dash, homemade, ad hoc collection of pieces to support a video call from my phone. We had books raising a tabletop stand and some goofy altered photography tripods and depended on adjusting room and table lights that never really achieved our desired lighting conditions! That stuff is no longer needed now that I have this kit that all stows in a surprisingly small, zippered case that is smaller than a violin case.My only remaining concern is that the case is a little flimsy, however, again consider that price; they are not going to put this into a $75-$1500 hardened Anvil case, nor should you. If you have a lot of money, you can buy professional lights kit with a ruggedized case. But you ain't never going to find as good a kit as this one for less than $50!
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