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ok, honesty time again...
how many of you carry a small flash for rf use...but never actually use it?
joe
how many of you carry a small flash for rf use...but never actually use it?
joe
Anyone using a FONG Lightsphere? LOL. Talk about goofy.
I'd be grateful if you would tell me how to use a digital SLR as a flash meter.
It sound complicated but it is really the same as a flash meter ...
Yes, it does. My flashmeter requires only holding it up with the button pressed, then read the aperture number from the display.
To answer Joe's question: I use flash when a flash is required... regardless of camera type.
Vivitar 225, I have a few of them. They make light. Now if only the M8.2 actually had a PC plug... instead of just a hot shoe....
I shoot the subject after I've set up the lighting, make lighting adjustments. Then set the DSLR to the film ISO, have the DSLR on manual and dial in the best F stop by looking at the display on the back. I then set the manual film camera to the same settings. Of course, the shutter has to be in relation to what type of flash you are doing: ambient light, sun synch, or fill flash. So in general if you are using a focal plane RF you need a strobe with a high GN and a film with a low ISO. It sound complicated but it is really the same as a flash meter AND you have the histogram and a visual, which to me makes it better.
Two comments on that:
- Don't set your shutter speed higher than the sync speed of the slowest camera you want to be using. In other words, assume you're doing this exercise to get flash exposure for a FED-2 (supposing such a thing likely). The camera has 1/30 maximum flash sync speed, so don't shoot your test picture at 1/250 flash sync speed just because the DSLR supports it, or you might get the ratio of ambient to flash light wrong.
- Basically what you have to do is to take a picture in order to take the same picture again. This method needs special circumstances to be useful, since you've already got the picture from the DSLR.