Why the Amaran 80c Shines in Living Rooms

  • Flexible color engine: RGBWW output with HSI, CCT (2,500K–7,500K) and gel presets means you can instantly match daylight through bay windows, match a practical lamp, or sneak in stylized cross-light without swapping tubes.
  • Compact form factor: The 80c slips into corners that a 300c or Nova wouldn’t. With a softbox or lantern the footprint still fits between sofas, end tables, and boom stands.
  • Sidus Link control: One tech can sit at video village, shift both fixtures’ intensity and color, and keep continuity across takes.

Baseline Setup

  1. Camera + blocking: Two actors seated on a sofa, facing each other. Camera sits on a slider or sticks just beyond the coffee table, slightly off-axis so you can ping-pong coverage.
  2. Key light: Position the first 80c camera-left, 45° off the eyeline, slightly high. Add the Light Dome 40 or a 2’x3’ softbox for a large wrap and softer eyelights.
  3. Bounce fill: Place a 4’x4’ white bead board on the opposite wall. Aim a second 80c into it to create a floating fill that’s easy to dial up/down without adding another stand in frame.
  4. Practical motivation: Keep a dimmable table lamp in frame. Match its 3200K warmth by nudging both 80c units to 3400–3600K with a slight minus green (about -5 on the tint wheel) so the LED source blends seamlessly.

Overhead diagram showing two actors on a sofa with an Aputure 80c key light and bounce fill
Diagram 1 – Soft key left, bounce fill right. Keep stands tight to the couch so nothing creeps into frame.

Cross-Key Variation

If you want more sculpted contrast between each actor, cross-key them. Aim the “A” 80c at Actor B and vice versa. Use 1/8-minus-green gel (or the tint control) to neutralize skin tones, then add negative fill (a 4’x4’ black solid) on the camera side to keep the wrap from flattening the faces.

Top-down cinematic lighting plan showing two actors facing each other on a couch with cross-keyed Aputure 80c panels
Diagram 2 – Cross-key for a moodier conversation. Bump the lamp practical up one stop to keep eyes alive.

Book-Light for Ultra-Soft Coverage

For hug-your-viewer softness, aim an 80c through diffusion into a second 4’x4’ UltraBounce. Push the bounced light through a Magic Cloth frame to create a book-light. Now you can float the soft source just out of frame and still get a clean eyelight.

Storyboard-style living room plan view illustrating two Aputure 80c panels in a book light configuration
Diagram 3 – Book-light when you want sitcom-soft or heartfelt confession vibes.

Meter Readings & Ratios

  • Key: 50 fc at actor’s key-side cheek.
  • Fill (bounce or book-light): 25–30 fc for a 2:1 (one stop) ratio. For something moody, drop the fill to 12–15 fc (roughly 3:1).
  • Practical lamp shade: 20 fc to keep it alive on camera without clipping.
  • Back wall: Throw a subtle slash at 5–8 fc to keep dimensionality.

YouTube Review to Watch

Dave Symonds Productions compares the Aputure Storm 80c and Amaran 300c in “Which Light is Best for YOU?”. Skip to 2:15 for the living-room demo and look at how he balances cross-keys for interviews.

Quick Checklist

  • Aputure Amaran 80c x2, Light Dome 40, 2’x3’ softbox, and/or lantern.
  • 4’x4’ UltraBounce + bead board + floppy flags.
  • Sidus Link iPad or phone for group control.
  • Practical lamp on dimmer, 40W tungsten bulb.
  • Color meter (Sekonic C-800) or at least a grey card to double-check CC values.

Once your blocking is locked, store each look in a Sidus preset: “Warm Dialogue,” “Cross-Key Noir,” “Neutral Daylight.” That way, when the director calls for pickups a week later, you can recall the exact output, hue, and tint in seconds.