 Welcome to the Crimson Engine. My name is Rebedium. Today we are looking at these lights. They are the IntelliTech Pocket Cannon Mini. So I've reviewed a couple of the IntelliTech products before. I've reviewed the LC120 Lightcloth. I've also checked out their Fast Frames, but they have a whole range of lights called the Light Cannon. They did a Light Cannon, a Light Cannon Pro, a Pocket Light Cannon, and these guys are the smallest one they've made, which is the Pocket Cannon Mini. They are tiny. They are sort of the size of your fist. They are a LED Fresnel chip on board light that has a really high CRI output and runs off Sony LP battery system. As you can see, even though these lights are really small and very portable, which we'll get to later, you're able to do a very nice three-point lighting setup with them. I'm able to do that because one of them actually comes with this very cute one-by-half softbox that mounts on the front of the light. The second one behind me, I have it up high on a light stand with a grid that it comes with. It's giving me this really nice rim light. And for my fill for this side of my face, I have the window open in front of me. I could shut that and you'll see what it does. See, without any ambient at all, I'm getting a much more contrasty, higher ratio image. But this isn't usually what I go for. And since I only have two lights, I'm just going to use ambient to fill in. It's also going to give me a little bit of uplight, make my face a little softer. The build quality on these is pretty great for such a small unit. They're attached by the side of the unit to a yoke that lets them rotate and tilt 360 degrees, which is really clever. They're dimmable, sort of I would say 10% to 100%. They don't go all the way down to 1% and 2%, but you're really not going to use them at that level. The ones I got were single-colored daylight, so they're not dual-color. You can't shift the chip itself into tungsten, but they do come with little diffusion shields in different colors. So you can shift to tungsten in that way. It also comes with a blue, if you want to do orange and teal effect by tilting your background blue. It also comes with a CTS, a color temperature straw filter. The two-light kit comes in a Pelican-style SKB briefcase, which is super professional, and it's very convenient to throw in your car or the truck if you think you're going to need it. The way I probably see myself using these lights is just taking the accessories that I want and putting them inside my camera bag. So I have access to two more really bright fresnels that I can use to put pockets of light on my set, or like I said, do a really simple three-point lighting setup in a way that's really compact and transportable. And it also comes with something from stills photography called a snoot that allows you to get the light in a very small pocket, and it even comes with a grid on top of that if you just want that very small pinpoint light on someone's face or an object in the distance. This is really, actually, there are a lot of much more expensive lights that don't come with nearly this many accessories. So the single pocket Canon Mini is under $200, it's $195, and it's $150 watt for now. There are a couple of different ways you can use it. Like I said, I have a softbox on this one if I take that off. You'll see it has a lot more punch, the shadow is a little bit harsher. But like I said, I got the two-light kit that comes with dual fixtures, the snoots, the mounts, the diffusion. It also includes batteries and two power adapters so that you can plug both lights into the wall. If you, for instance, were doing a multi-hour interview and you didn't want to worry about the power draw. I see two main uses that the Pocket Canon Mini is perfect for. The first one is off-the-grid and super mobile filmmaking. So you can take these lights and batteries to pretty much anywhere on the planet. They'll fit in a very small footprint and you'll always be able to do a really professional looking three-light setup by using the key, ambient and a backlight. The second main use is to have them as another sort of Swiss Army knife light in your basic lighting setup so that you can always have that extra versatile illumination when you need it. Like I said, if you're doing a background illumination or you want to create a halo around someone's head or if you want to spot out some particular thing or add an eye light, these lights are very bright, very versatile. It can be used in a soft or a hard way, either flooded or spotted. And they take up almost no room in your camera bag. There's almost no disincentive to carry them to your shoots and just have an extra tool in your toolkit for when you want to add an extra touch. That is the Pocket Cannon Mini from Intellitech. Like I said, the single light is $195. The two-light kit that I have that comes with the case with all the accessories is $528. They also sell a three-light kit, which of course comes with its own case and is perfect for doing a three-point lighting if you can't use ambient. That's around $750. Thanks very much for watching, guys. Leave your questions in the comments. As always, look at the links in the description and I will see you next time.