- Feb 22, 2001
- 3,044
- 544
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I googled "beginner off camera flash" and spent about a total of 20 minutes reading and 3 minutes of youtube and figured I knew everything I needed to know.
Those 20 minutes netted me purchasing an inexpensive flash and flash remote trigger.
Yongnuo 560 flash and trigger. Pretty sweet for being cheap.
I also purchased a $35 "Cowboy studio" stand and umbrella.
I now have off camera flash.
The 3 minutes of youtube instructed me to treat the camera as exposing for the background, and use the flash for exposing for the foreground.
Easy peasy.
So, I set my camera to something like 1/200th, f8 and the flash to 1/32nd power and bang!
OK, sweet.
Now, i'm thinking, i'll be clever. I'll set the camera to 1/400th, f5.6 (or f8) with same flash power and that'll make the background darker.... my plan is to find a fast enough shutter speed to essentially render the background black.
Uh-oh - there's something deep in my memory banks about "flash sync speed", but hell if I'm going to read about it. I'll just ask everyone here if what I'm trying to do can work.
(I also went back to 1/200, but then set the aperture to something like f11 -- which darkened eveything. Then I tried pushing the flash power up more ... but I never got a black background.)
It also surprised me that, at least with my Dad, the flash resulted in no reflections on his glasses.
Those 20 minutes netted me purchasing an inexpensive flash and flash remote trigger.
Yongnuo 560 flash and trigger. Pretty sweet for being cheap.
I also purchased a $35 "Cowboy studio" stand and umbrella.
I now have off camera flash.
The 3 minutes of youtube instructed me to treat the camera as exposing for the background, and use the flash for exposing for the foreground.
Easy peasy.
So, I set my camera to something like 1/200th, f8 and the flash to 1/32nd power and bang!

OK, sweet.
Now, i'm thinking, i'll be clever. I'll set the camera to 1/400th, f5.6 (or f8) with same flash power and that'll make the background darker.... my plan is to find a fast enough shutter speed to essentially render the background black.

Uh-oh - there's something deep in my memory banks about "flash sync speed", but hell if I'm going to read about it. I'll just ask everyone here if what I'm trying to do can work.
(I also went back to 1/200, but then set the aperture to something like f11 -- which darkened eveything. Then I tried pushing the flash power up more ... but I never got a black background.)
It also surprised me that, at least with my Dad, the flash resulted in no reflections on his glasses.

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