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{{Short description|Template placed in front of a light source to shape the emitted light}}
{{Other uses|Gobo (disambiguation)}}
{{Other uses|Gobo (disambiguation)}}
{{Expert-subject|date=October 2010}}
]
{{refimprove|date=October 2010}}
A '''gobo''' is an object placed inside or in front of a light source to control the shape of the emitted light and its shadow.<ref name=":1">Kelby, Scott (2006). The digital photography book : the step-by-step secrets for how to make your photos look like the pros'! First edition, p.&nbsp;40. Peachpit Press, Berkeley, California.</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=the definition of gobo|url=https://www.dictionary.com/browse/gobo|access-date=2019-02-25|website=www.dictionary.com|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Definition of GOBO|url=https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/gobo|access-date=2019-02-25|website=www.merriam-webster.com|language=en}}</ref><ref name=":0">{{Cite web|title=Gobo definition and meaning {{!}} Collins English Dictionary|url=https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/gobo|access-date=2019-02-25|website=www.collinsdictionary.com|language=en}}</ref><ref name=Oxford>{{Cite web |url=https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/gobo |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190225103247/https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/gobo |url-status=dead |archive-date=February 25, 2019 |title=gobo {{!}} Definition of gobo in English by Oxford Dictionaries|website=Oxford Dictionaries {{!}} English|access-date=2019-02-25}}</ref>


For ] purposes, the term "gobo" has come to refer to any device that casts a shadow, and various pieces of equipment that go in front of a light (such as a gobo arm or gobo head).<ref>Box, Harry C. ''Set lighting technician's handbook'' Third Edition, Focal Press, 2003. p.&nbsp;120.</ref>
]
]. The discolored portion is oxidation of the stainless steel caused by the high temperature of the lamp, but the gobo is still usable.]]
A '''gobo''' (or ''GOBO'') is a physical stencil or template slotted inside, or placed in front of, a lighting source, used to control the shape of emitted light (the acronym "Goes Before Optics" is contested, and lacks a citation here).


In ], however, the term more specifically refers to a device placed in "the gate" or at the "point of ]" between the ], called a lamp, and the ] (or other ]).
In the design of an artificial environment in which ]s are used, it is sometimes desirable to manipulate the shape of the light which is cast over a space or object. To do so, a piece of metal with patterned holes through which light passes is placed in the beam of light to allow only the desired "shape" or pattern through, while blocking the rest of the light, casting a specific shadow/light into the space.


== Derivation ==
Though the term "gobo" has come to generally refer to any device which produces patterns of light and shadow or various pieces of equipment that go before a light (such as a gobo arm or gobo head),<ref>Box, Harry C. "Set lighting technician's handbook" Third Edition, Focal Press, 2003. p. 120.</ref> the specific term itself also defines the device used in ] applications because of the mandated placement of the device in 'the gate' or 'point of focus' between the ] and the ]es (or ]). This placement is important because it allows the focusing of the pattern or shape into a crisp, sharp edge (for logos, fine detail, architecture, etc.) and also the softening the edges (breakup patterns, etc.). Gobos placed in the beam of light post-optics do not have the option of such fine ], and are more precisely called "]" or "]."
The exact derivation of the term ''gobo'' is unclear, although it appears to have originated in cinema studios in the 1930s.<ref name=Oxford/><ref>"Talkie industry developing a vocabulary all of its own", ''The Ventura County Star and the Ventura Daily Post'', Friday, 15 Aug 1930, p.&nbsp;9.</ref> It may be an American slang abbreviation of "go-between",<ref name=":1"/> or "go-before" (just as New York's "]" signifies the area "South of Houston Street").<ref>"A snoot is a tube that concentrates the light of a lamp, and a gobo is a mask&nbsp;... "Daylight made to order", ''Popular Mechanics'', Vol.&nbsp;75, No.&nbsp;3, Mar 1941, p.&nbsp;376.</ref>


Some lighting professionals believe that it is an acronym for "goes before optics" or, less often, "goes between optics".<ref>{{cite book |title=Real-Time Shadows |first1=Elmar |last1=Eisemann |first2=Michael |last2=Schwarz |first3=Ulf |last3=Assarsson |first4=Michael |last4=Wimmer |page=31 |publisher=CRC Press |date=April 19, 2016 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RhTKSiKSSS4C&q=%22goes+before+optics%22&pg=PA231 |isbn=9780742539136 }}</ref> An alternative abbreviation might be "graphical optical black-out".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.iof.fraunhofer.de/en/competences/measurement-methods-and-characterization/3d-measurement/high-speed-3d-measurement0/high-speed-3d-measurement-with-gobo-projection.html |title=High-speed 3D-measurement system with gobo-projection |website=Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Optics and Precision Engineering IOF |access-date=7 April 2018}}</ref> The treatment of the word as an acronym is recent.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Art of Light on Stage: Lighting in Contemporary Theatre |author=Yaron Abulafia |publisher=Routledge |date=September 16, 2015 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ePIsCgAAQBAJ&q=%22goes+before+optics%22&pg=PT342 |isbn=9781317429708 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Theatre: Its Art and Craft |first1=Stephen M. |last1=Archer |first2=Cynthia M. |last2=Gendrich |first3=Woodrow B. |last3=Hood |page=231 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |date=2010 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RhTKSiKSSS4C&q=%22goes+before+optics%22&pg=PA231 |isbn=9780742539136 }}</ref>
==Use==
]
Gobos may be used, in connection with projectors and simpler light sources, to create lighting scenes in a theatrical application. Simple gobos, incorporated into automated lighting systems, are popular at nightclubs and other musical venues to create moving shapes.<ref>{{cite book|page=516|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=DL73f4vFeEwC&pg=PA516&dq=gobo+projector+disco&client=firefox-a#v=onepage&q=gobo%20projector%20disco&f=false|title=Broadcast engineer's reference book|author=Edwin Paul J. Tozer|year=2004|publisher=Focal Press|ISBN=978-0-240-51908-1}}</ref> Gobos may also be used for ], as well as in interior design, as in projecting a company logo on a wall or other feature.


The term ''gobo'' has been adopted in the recording industry to refer to a screen or sheet of sound-absorbent material that shields a microphone from sounds coming from a particular direction. See ].
===Gobo Materials===


== Use in studio photography ==
Gobos can be made from various materials. Common types include steel, glass and plastic/transparency gobos.


In the photographic industry, a "gobo" describes any opaque, usually black, panel, or "flat",<ref>"A gobo is an upright black panel", The Saturday Evening Post, 1929, volume 202, p.&nbsp;76.</ref> of any dimension, that goes between a light source and photographic subject (such as between sun light and a portrait model) to control the modelling effect of the existing light or, used as a "cutter", to create shadows;<ref>{{Cite book|last=Grey, Christopher.|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/659561927|title=Master lighting guide for portrait photographers|date=2004|publisher=Amherst Media|isbn=978-1-58428-525-0|location=Buffalo, NY|oclc=659561927}}</ref> or even to control reflections;<ref name=":2">{{Citation | author1=Hunter, Fil | author2=Fuqua, Paul | title=Light--science & magic : an introduction to photographic lighting | date=1997 | page=175 | publisher=Focal Press | edition=2nd | isbn=978-0-240-80275-6}}.</ref> or between light source and lens, to cut flare.<ref name=":0" /> Use of gobos augments light-shaping devices attached to the lights themselves, whether continuous or flash, with cones, snoots, honeycomb grids or barn doors being the most common such fittings.<ref>{{Citation |author1=Warren, Bruce |title=Photography |date=1992 | page=416-7 |publisher=Delmar Publishers |edition=2nd |isbn=978-0-7668-1777-7}}.</ref>
'''Steel gobos''' use a metal template from which the image is cut out of. These types of gobos are the most sturdy of the common gobo types but often require modifications to the original design called bridging in order to display correctly. In order to correctly represent the letter "O" for example, small tabs or bridges must be made in order to keep the metal tab in the middle of the letter supported. This effect may be undesirable in more intricate patterns or designs.


=== Subtractive ===
'''Glass gobos''' are made from transparent glass with a partial mirror coating to block the light and produce "black" areas in the projected image. This eliminates any need for bridging, since the glass itself is the support, and allows more intricate images to be produced. Glass gobos can also include colored areas (much like ] windows), whether by multiple layers of ] glass (one for each color) glued on an aluminium or chrome coated black and white gobo, or by newer technologies that allow the thickness of the dichroic coating (and therefore the color) to be varied in a controlled way on a single piece of glass, making it possible to turn a color photo into a glass gobo. Glass gobos generally offer the highest image fidelity but are the most fragile.
The use of the gobo is "subtractive", as opposed to using a "reflector" to bounce added light into a shadow (thus "additive" lighting). Use of a gobo subtracts light from a portion of an overall shaded subject and creates a contrast between one side of the subject and the other.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Home Studio Photography Tips: What is a 'Gobo'?|url=https://www.adventurelumiere.com/blog/2019/9/1/home-studio-photography-tips-what-is-a-gobo|access-date=2020-11-05|website=Adventure Lumiere|language=en-US}}{{Dead link|date=June 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>


==== Equipment ====
'''Plastic gobos''' or '''Transparency gobos''' can be used in LED ]. These "LED Only" plastic gobos can be full color (like a glass gobo), but without the delicate nature. These plastic "LED Only" gobos are new to the market, as are the lights they go in, so there is much about the durability and effectiveness that will vary from brand to brand. <ref>{{cite web|last=King|first=Brian|title=What is a Gobo? What types of Gobos are there?|url=http://www.goboprojectorrental.com/2013/05/what-is-a-gobo-what-types-of-gobos-are-there/|publisher=Superlative Events|accessdate=4 October 2013}}</ref>
For long shoots on complex sets in the studio more convenient and precise are free-standing boards,<ref>{{Citation | author1=David Prakel | title=The visual dictionary of photography | date=2010 | publisher=Lausanne AVA Academia | isbn=978-2-940411-04-7}}</ref> often configured as self-supporting hinged door-height panels (usually called "flats"), or if smaller, as a "flag", or a "dot" (a round flag), or a "finger" (larger and rectangular in form) attached to stands, or extending from arms or clamps attached to the tabletop for still-life and product shots. Photographers most often use panels of black ] or thick cards. All are devised, or improvised, in different shapes, but are always opaque. The closer the gobo is to the subject, the sharper the shadow.<ref>{{Citation | author1=Fancher, Nick | title=Chroma : a photographer's guide to lighting with color | date=2018 | publisher=Rocky Nook | edition=1st | isbn=978-1-68198-312-7}}</ref> Patent arms with "elbows" that can be oriented in all planes and that can be locked in position are commercially available.<ref>{{Citation |author1=McKenzie, Joy |title=Artificial lighting for photography |date=2010 |edition=1st |publisher=Cengage Learning |isbn=978-1-4283-1804-5 |author2=Overturf, Daniel}}.</ref><ref>"GOBO : A light – deflecting fin used to direct illumination in the studio and to protect the camera lens from glare", ''Motion Picture Herald'', 1939, volume 135, issue 6.</ref>


=== Blocking/reducing light ===
In the past plastic gobos had been generally custom made—for when a pattern is needed in color and glass does not suffice. However, in a "traditional" (tungston/halogen) light fixture, the focus point where a gobo must be placed is usually extremely hot, so these thin plastic films generally need to be used with special cooling elements to prevent melting them. A lapse in the cooling apparatus, even for just a few seconds, can cause plastic gobos in a traditional lighting instrument to be ruined.
The term is also used for panels or screens used to block light from the lens that would otherwise cause flare or degrade contrast. Such screens as used on films sets may be {{Cvt|3|m}} tall.<ref>{{Citation | author1=Spottiswoode, Raymond | title=Film and its techniques | date=1968 | publisher=Berkeley University of California Press | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/10550641 | access-date=4 November 2020}}.</ref> The photographer on location might use their ], hand or ] for such purpose, but with multiple light sources in the studio a range of separate operable gobos provides tailored solutions.


A gobo may be used even in the case of broad-source light (a ], for example) where the problem is to control reflection in a metallic or glass surface, by placing it in front of the diffuser for a hard-edged dark reflection, or behind, to produce a soft outline.<ref name=":2"/>
===Patterns===


== Use in designing an event ==
A number of simple and complex stock patterns are manufactured and sold by various theatrical and photographic supply companies, or custom gobos from customer-created images can be manufactured for an additional fee. Generally the ] chooses a pattern from a catalogue or small swatch book provided by the manufacturer. Because of the large number of gobos available, they are generally referred to by number, not name. For example, most manufacturers offer a gobo of a window, but they are all slightly different. So instead of calling it ''window'', it would be identified as ''gobo xxxxx''


It is becoming more and more popular for designers and decorators to use gobo for their event design. It can relate to the theme, colours or decor of the event. It is also very effective way to get rid of the old traditional way using poster to display some logo or focus point. It is certainly an amazing way to fill in the dance floor or walls with a pattern.
Gobos are often used in weddings and corporate events to add a personal touch to the look of an event. Company logos, the happy couple's names, or just about any artwork can be turned into a projected image. Some companies can turn a custom gobo out in as little as a week. Common locations that custom gobos are projected in corporate/wedding situations are: the wall behind the head table, the center of the dance floor, on the floor in front of the main entrance, and the most dominant wall. "Stock" gobo patterns are also widely used for these events, often stars or water projected onto the ceiling to set a mood in the whole room.


== Use in theatre ==
==Mechanics/optics==
]. The discolored portion is oxidation of the stainless steel caused by the high temperature of the lamp, but the gobo is still usable.]]
{| align="right" class="wikitable" style="margin:10px;"
]
|width="105px" | ] || width="105px" | ]
]
|-
Gobos are used with projectors and simpler light sources to create lighting scenes in theatrical applications. Simple gobos, incorporated into automated lighting systems, are popular at nightclubs and other musical venues to create moving shapes.<ref>{{cite book |page=516 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DL73f4vFeEwC&q=gobo+projector+disco&pg=PA516 |title=Broadcast engineer's reference book |author=Edwin Paul J. Tozer |year=2004 |publisher=Focal Press |isbn=978-0-240-51908-1}}</ref> Gobos may also be used for ], as well as in interior design, as in projecting a company logo on a wall.
| colspan="2" align="center"| A gobo with the design on the left, with a red ] would project a pattern like the one shown to the right.
|}


Placement in "the gate" or at the "point of ]" is important because it produces a crisp, sharp-edged pattern or design (of logos, fine detail, architecture, etc.). Lighting designers typically use them with ]s to manipulate the shape of the light cast over a space or object—for example, to produce a pattern of leaves on a stage floor. Gobos placed after the optics do not produce a finely focused image, and are more precisely called "]" or "]" ("cookies").
The gobo is placed in the ] of the ] (generally an ]). The gobo is inserted upside-down and back-to-front. The desired pattern is then projected by the lantern onto whatever surface it is pointed at such as a wall or dance floor.


===Materials===
Gobos can provide everything from abstract dappled light effects to complex night-time cityscapes. They are commonly used in ], television, and film production to create texture, mood, or set a scene. Specialized attachments are available to rotate multiple gobos in different directions and rates to create an ] of motion, such as that of light reflected off of moving water.
Gobos are made of various materials. Common types include steel, glass, and plastic.


''Steel gobos'' or ''metal gobos'' use a metal template from which the image is cut out. These are the most sturdy, but often require modifications to the original design—called ''bridging''—to display correctly. To correctly represent the letter "O", for example, requires small tabs or bridges to support the opaque center of the letter. These can be visible in the projected image, which might be undesirable in some applications.
This effect allows the ] to produce effects to help portray the scene. For example, a gobo with a cloud pattern may be used to suggest a scene is outdoors.


''Glass gobos'' are made from clear glass with a partial mirror coating to block the light and produce "black" areas in the projected image. This eliminates any need for bridging and accommodates more intricate images. Glass gobos can also include colored areas (much like ] windows), whether by multiple layers of ] glass (one for each color) glued on an aluminium or chrome-coated monochrome gobo, or by newer technologies that vary the thickness of the dichroic coating (and therefore the color) in a controlled way on a single piece of glass—which makes it possible to turn a color photo into a glass gobo. Glass gobos generally offer the highest image fidelity, but are the most fragile. Glass gobos are typically created with laser ablation or photo etching.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gsKWBH7rjT4C|title=Automated Lighting: The Art and Science of Moving Light in Theatre, Live Performance and Entertainment|last=Cadena|first=Richard|date=2013-05-20|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=9781136085260|language=en}}</ref>
== Common Gobo Sizes ==

''Plastic gobos'' or ''transparency gobos'' can be used in ] ]. These "LED-only" plastic gobos can be full-color (like a glass gobo), but are far less delicate. They are new to the market, as are LED lights, and their durability and effectiveness vary between brands.

In the past, plastic gobos were generally custom-made for when a pattern requires color and glass does not suffice. However, in a "traditional" (tungsten-halogen) light fixture, the focus point position of a gobo is extremely hot, so these thin plastic films require special cooling elements to prevent melting. A lapse in the cooling apparatus, even for seconds, can ruin a plastic gobo in a tungsten-halogen lighting instrument.

===Patterns===

Theatrical and photographic supply companies manufacture many simple and complex stock patterns. They also can produce custom gobos from customer artwork. Generally, a ] chooses a pattern from a manufacturer's catalog. Because of the large number of gobos available, they are generally referred to by number, not name. Lighting technicians can also hand-cut custom gobos out of sheet metal stock, or even aluminum pie pans.

Gobos are often used in weddings and corporate events. They can project company logos, the couple's names, or just about any artwork. Some companies can turn a custom gobo out in as little as a week. Designers also use "stock" gobo patterns for these events—for example, for projecting stars or leaves onto the ceiling.

==Mechanics/optics==
{{multiple image|width=100
|image1=gobo1.jpg|image2=gobo-image.jpg
|footer=A gobo with the ] design on the left projects with a red ] a pattern like the one on the right.
}}

The gobo is placed in the ] of the ] (generally an ] or a ]). The gobo is inserted upside-down and back-to-front. The lighting instrument inverts the projected image.

== Common sizes ==


{|align="centre" class="wikitable" {|align="centre" class="wikitable"
! Letter Size !! O.D. (mm) !! I.A. (mm)!! Notes ! Letter size !! {{abbr|O.D.|outside diameter}} (mm) !! {{abbr|I.A.|image area}} (mm){{clarify|reason=area must be in mm²; it this actually image diameter?|date=December 2022}} !! Notes
|- |-
| C size ||150 ||120|| | C Size ||150 ||120||
|- |-
|A Size ||100||75|| |A Size ||100||75|| (ADB Europe 1000/1200&nbsp;W)
|- |-
|B Size ||86 ||64.5 ||Standard Size for Ellipsoidal lights (Source 4, Source 4 Zoom) |B Size ||86 ||64.5 ||Standard size for ellipsoidal lights (Source 4, Source 4 Zoom)
|- |-
|BG Size ||79 ||64.5 || |BG Size ||79 ||64.5 ||
Line 64: Line 85:
|- |-
|D Size ||53.3 ||38 || (Martin PR-1, EcoSpot 40) |D Size ||53.3 ||38 || (Martin PR-1, EcoSpot 40)
|-
|Golive
|52.8
|48
|Golive 400
|- |-
|Cyberlight ||44.25 ||38|| |Cyberlight ||44.25 ||38||
|- |-
|E Size ||37.5 ||28 || (EcoSpot 25, EcoSpot 30) |E Size ||37.5 ||28 || Martin Mac Viper, Mac 2000
Clay Paky Alpha Profile/Spot 1200/1500

Robe Colourspot 1200/2500AT

Vari Lite VL3000 Spot, VL3500

EcoSpot 25, EcoSpot 30
|- |-
|Studio Spot 575 ||36.3 ||31 ||For HES Studio Spot 575. |Studio Spot 575 ||36.3 ||31 ||For HES Studio Spot 575.
|- |-
|Mac 500/918 ||27.5 ||22 || |Mac 500/918 ||27.9 ||22 ||
|-
|Robe Color spot
|26.8
|22
|
|- |-
|V Size ||25.5 ||22 ||For HES Intellibeam 700hx |V Size ||25.5 ||22 ||For HES Intellibeam 700hx
Line 79: Line 117:
|518 Size ||20 ||13 || |518 Size ||20 ||13 ||
|- |-
|All RazLights||29 ||50 || For all RazTech lighting fixtures
| colspan="4" align="center"|O.D = Outside Diameter; I.A. = Image Area
|} |}

==Other meanings==
The derivation "Go-between" is from motion picture production, where '''gobo''' is an antiquated term for a what is now called a "flag". Flags are manufactured in a variety of sizes and shapes, are most commonly made of opaque black fabric stretched over a steel frame, but flags can also be made of sheet steel or wood for specialized use. Shaped flags are placed in the beam of a light source in order to create shadows, this type of flag is commonly known as a Gobo.

From the Merriam Webster online dictionary <ref>http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/gobo</ref> as well as the 1979 printed version <ref>(Merriam Webster New Collegiate Dictionary. G & C Merriam Company, Springfield Mass 1979 ISBN 0-87779-358-1)</ref>:Gobo pl. gobos, also goboes 1: a darkstrip (as of wallboard) to shield a motion-picture or television camera from light. 2: A device to shield a microphone from sound.


]

The support system used to position and hold these flags in the light beam has, as its core component a fully rotatable, adjustable clamp called a "gobo head".<ref></ref> Gobo heads are mounted at the top of ]s and on the ends of 30" long aluminum bars, called "Gobo arms" or "Grip arms".


==See also== ==See also==
{{Portal|Film|Theatre}}

* ]
* ] * ]


== References == ==References==
{{reflist}} {{Reflist}}
{{Wiktionary|gobo}}

== External links ==
* at worldwidewords.org.



{{Photography}} {{Photography}}
Line 109: Line 133:


{{DEFAULTSORT:Gobo (Lighting)}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Gobo (Lighting)}}
]
]
]
] ]
]

Latest revision as of 13:07, 9 June 2024

Template placed in front of a light source to shape the emitted light For other uses, see Gobo (disambiguation).
A decorative lighting device that projects a gobo. Components from right to left are the lamp house, the gobo itself (in this case a grid made of wires), and the focusing lens. In a theatrical unit, all three would be in an enclosure to prevent light spillage. The insert at lower right shows the pattern this device projects. The spacing of the gobo and the lens can be varied to alter the size and focus of the image.

A gobo is an object placed inside or in front of a light source to control the shape of the emitted light and its shadow.

For studio photography purposes, the term "gobo" has come to refer to any device that casts a shadow, and various pieces of equipment that go in front of a light (such as a gobo arm or gobo head).

In theatrical lighting, however, the term more specifically refers to a device placed in "the gate" or at the "point of focus" between the light source, called a lamp, and the lenses (or other optics).

Derivation

The exact derivation of the term gobo is unclear, although it appears to have originated in cinema studios in the 1930s. It may be an American slang abbreviation of "go-between", or "go-before" (just as New York's "SoHo" signifies the area "South of Houston Street").

Some lighting professionals believe that it is an acronym for "goes before optics" or, less often, "goes between optics". An alternative abbreviation might be "graphical optical black-out". The treatment of the word as an acronym is recent.

The term gobo has been adopted in the recording industry to refer to a screen or sheet of sound-absorbent material that shields a microphone from sounds coming from a particular direction. See Gobo (recording).

Use in studio photography

In the photographic industry, a "gobo" describes any opaque, usually black, panel, or "flat", of any dimension, that goes between a light source and photographic subject (such as between sun light and a portrait model) to control the modelling effect of the existing light or, used as a "cutter", to create shadows; or even to control reflections; or between light source and lens, to cut flare. Use of gobos augments light-shaping devices attached to the lights themselves, whether continuous or flash, with cones, snoots, honeycomb grids or barn doors being the most common such fittings.

Subtractive

The use of the gobo is "subtractive", as opposed to using a "reflector" to bounce added light into a shadow (thus "additive" lighting). Use of a gobo subtracts light from a portion of an overall shaded subject and creates a contrast between one side of the subject and the other.

Equipment

For long shoots on complex sets in the studio more convenient and precise are free-standing boards, often configured as self-supporting hinged door-height panels (usually called "flats"), or if smaller, as a "flag", or a "dot" (a round flag), or a "finger" (larger and rectangular in form) attached to stands, or extending from arms or clamps attached to the tabletop for still-life and product shots. Photographers most often use panels of black foamcore or thick cards. All are devised, or improvised, in different shapes, but are always opaque. The closer the gobo is to the subject, the sharper the shadow. Patent arms with "elbows" that can be oriented in all planes and that can be locked in position are commercially available.

Blocking/reducing light

The term is also used for panels or screens used to block light from the lens that would otherwise cause flare or degrade contrast. Such screens as used on films sets may be 3 m (9.8 ft) tall. The photographer on location might use their lens hood, hand or dark slide for such purpose, but with multiple light sources in the studio a range of separate operable gobos provides tailored solutions.

A gobo may be used even in the case of broad-source light (a softbox, for example) where the problem is to control reflection in a metallic or glass surface, by placing it in front of the diffuser for a hard-edged dark reflection, or behind, to produce a soft outline.

Use in designing an event

It is becoming more and more popular for designers and decorators to use gobo for their event design. It can relate to the theme, colours or decor of the event. It is also very effective way to get rid of the old traditional way using poster to display some logo or focus point. It is certainly an amazing way to fill in the dance floor or walls with a pattern.

Use in theatre

A gobo in a gobo holder, which goes in a stage lighting instrument. The discolored portion is oxidation of the stainless steel caused by the high temperature of the lamp, but the gobo is still usable.
A glass gobo of the Earth, projected using a halogen projector
A gobo being projected with beams of smoke

Gobos are used with projectors and simpler light sources to create lighting scenes in theatrical applications. Simple gobos, incorporated into automated lighting systems, are popular at nightclubs and other musical venues to create moving shapes. Gobos may also be used for architectural lighting, as well as in interior design, as in projecting a company logo on a wall.

Placement in "the gate" or at the "point of focus" is important because it produces a crisp, sharp-edged pattern or design (of logos, fine detail, architecture, etc.). Lighting designers typically use them with stage lighting instruments to manipulate the shape of the light cast over a space or object—for example, to produce a pattern of leaves on a stage floor. Gobos placed after the optics do not produce a finely focused image, and are more precisely called "flags" or "cucoloris" ("cookies").

Materials

Gobos are made of various materials. Common types include steel, glass, and plastic.

Steel gobos or metal gobos use a metal template from which the image is cut out. These are the most sturdy, but often require modifications to the original design—called bridging—to display correctly. To correctly represent the letter "O", for example, requires small tabs or bridges to support the opaque center of the letter. These can be visible in the projected image, which might be undesirable in some applications.

Glass gobos are made from clear glass with a partial mirror coating to block the light and produce "black" areas in the projected image. This eliminates any need for bridging and accommodates more intricate images. Glass gobos can also include colored areas (much like stained glass windows), whether by multiple layers of dichroic glass (one for each color) glued on an aluminium or chrome-coated monochrome gobo, or by newer technologies that vary the thickness of the dichroic coating (and therefore the color) in a controlled way on a single piece of glass—which makes it possible to turn a color photo into a glass gobo. Glass gobos generally offer the highest image fidelity, but are the most fragile. Glass gobos are typically created with laser ablation or photo etching.

Plastic gobos or transparency gobos can be used in LED ellipsoidal spotlights. These "LED-only" plastic gobos can be full-color (like a glass gobo), but are far less delicate. They are new to the market, as are LED lights, and their durability and effectiveness vary between brands.

In the past, plastic gobos were generally custom-made for when a pattern requires color and glass does not suffice. However, in a "traditional" (tungsten-halogen) light fixture, the focus point position of a gobo is extremely hot, so these thin plastic films require special cooling elements to prevent melting. A lapse in the cooling apparatus, even for seconds, can ruin a plastic gobo in a tungsten-halogen lighting instrument.

Patterns

Theatrical and photographic supply companies manufacture many simple and complex stock patterns. They also can produce custom gobos from customer artwork. Generally, a lighting designer chooses a pattern from a manufacturer's catalog. Because of the large number of gobos available, they are generally referred to by number, not name. Lighting technicians can also hand-cut custom gobos out of sheet metal stock, or even aluminum pie pans.

Gobos are often used in weddings and corporate events. They can project company logos, the couple's names, or just about any artwork. Some companies can turn a custom gobo out in as little as a week. Designers also use "stock" gobo patterns for these events—for example, for projecting stars or leaves onto the ceiling.

Mechanics/optics

A gobo with the fleurs-de-lis design on the left projects with a red gel a pattern like the one on the right.

The gobo is placed in the focal plane of the lantern (generally an ellipsoidal reflector spotlight or a moving head). The gobo is inserted upside-down and back-to-front. The lighting instrument inverts the projected image.

Common sizes

Letter size O.D. (mm) I.A. (mm) Notes
C Size 150 120
A Size 100 75 (ADB Europe 1000/1200 W)
B Size 86 64.5 Standard size for ellipsoidal lights (Source 4, Source 4 Zoom)
BG Size 79 64.5
M Size 66 48 (Source 4 Jr.)
G Size 65.5 48 For Clay Paky Goldenscans.
D Size 53.3 38 (Martin PR-1, EcoSpot 40)
Golive 52.8 48 Golive 400
Cyberlight 44.25 38
E Size 37.5 28 Martin Mac Viper, Mac 2000

Clay Paky Alpha Profile/Spot 1200/1500

Robe Colourspot 1200/2500AT

Vari Lite VL3000 Spot, VL3500

EcoSpot 25, EcoSpot 30

Studio Spot 575 36.3 31 For HES Studio Spot 575.
Mac 500/918 27.9 22
Robe Color spot 26.8 22
V Size 25.5 22 For HES Intellibeam 700hx
Mac 250 22.5 17
518 Size 20 13
All RazLights 29 50 For all RazTech lighting fixtures

See also

References

  1. ^ Kelby, Scott (2006). The digital photography book : the step-by-step secrets for how to make your photos look like the pros'! First edition, p. 40. Peachpit Press, Berkeley, California.
  2. "the definition of gobo". www.dictionary.com. Retrieved 2019-02-25.
  3. "Definition of GOBO". www.merriam-webster.com. Retrieved 2019-02-25.
  4. ^ "Gobo definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary". www.collinsdictionary.com. Retrieved 2019-02-25.
  5. ^ "gobo | Definition of gobo in English by Oxford Dictionaries". Oxford Dictionaries | English. Archived from the original on February 25, 2019. Retrieved 2019-02-25.
  6. Box, Harry C. Set lighting technician's handbook Third Edition, Focal Press, 2003. p. 120.
  7. "Talkie industry developing a vocabulary all of its own", The Ventura County Star and the Ventura Daily Post, Friday, 15 Aug 1930, p. 9.
  8. "A snoot is a tube that concentrates the light of a lamp, and a gobo is a mask ... "Daylight made to order", Popular Mechanics, Vol. 75, No. 3, Mar 1941, p. 376.
  9. Eisemann, Elmar; Schwarz, Michael; Assarsson, Ulf; Wimmer, Michael (April 19, 2016). Real-Time Shadows. CRC Press. p. 31. ISBN 9780742539136.
  10. "High-speed 3D-measurement system with gobo-projection". Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Optics and Precision Engineering IOF. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  11. Yaron Abulafia (September 16, 2015). The Art of Light on Stage: Lighting in Contemporary Theatre. Routledge. ISBN 9781317429708.
  12. Archer, Stephen M.; Gendrich, Cynthia M.; Hood, Woodrow B. (2010). Theatre: Its Art and Craft. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 231. ISBN 9780742539136.
  13. "A gobo is an upright black panel", The Saturday Evening Post, 1929, volume 202, p. 76.
  14. Grey, Christopher. (2004). Master lighting guide for portrait photographers. Buffalo, NY: Amherst Media. ISBN 978-1-58428-525-0. OCLC 659561927.
  15. ^ Hunter, Fil; Fuqua, Paul (1997), Light--science & magic : an introduction to photographic lighting (2nd ed.), Focal Press, p. 175, ISBN 978-0-240-80275-6.
  16. Warren, Bruce (1992), Photography (2nd ed.), Delmar Publishers, p. 416-7, ISBN 978-0-7668-1777-7.
  17. "Home Studio Photography Tips: What is a 'Gobo'?". Adventure Lumiere. Retrieved 2020-11-05.
  18. David Prakel (2010), The visual dictionary of photography, Lausanne AVA Academia, ISBN 978-2-940411-04-7
  19. Fancher, Nick (2018), Chroma : a photographer's guide to lighting with color (1st ed.), Rocky Nook, ISBN 978-1-68198-312-7
  20. McKenzie, Joy; Overturf, Daniel (2010), Artificial lighting for photography (1st ed.), Cengage Learning, ISBN 978-1-4283-1804-5.
  21. "GOBO : A light – deflecting fin used to direct illumination in the studio and to protect the camera lens from glare", Motion Picture Herald, 1939, volume 135, issue 6.
  22. Spottiswoode, Raymond (1968), Film and its techniques, Berkeley University of California Press, retrieved 4 November 2020.
  23. Edwin Paul J. Tozer (2004). Broadcast engineer's reference book. Focal Press. p. 516. ISBN 978-0-240-51908-1.
  24. Cadena, Richard (2013-05-20). Automated Lighting: The Art and Science of Moving Light in Theatre, Live Performance and Entertainment. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781136085260.
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