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DPChallenge Forums >> Tips, Tricks, and Q&A >> One way to kill shadows made by flash
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Showing posts 51 - 58 of 58, (reverse)
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01/23/2013 05:19:31 PM · #51
I found this list of home made hacks for your flash. Beamers, bouncecards, even a ring flash.

There is somewhere a list of ways to modify your popup flash. All too often I find I have left the flash at home and I need some help filling in shadows but fear the sharp shadows of the popup. #4 works indoors, but even better is using a clear film canister (the fiji type) with a slit cut in the side to slip over the flash, and you have a portable omnibounce with that softness to fill in without taking over.
01/23/2013 05:24:00 PM · #52
Originally posted by BrennanOB:

... even better is using a clear film canister (the fiji type) with a slit cut in the side to slip over the flash, and you have a portable omnibounce with that softness to fill in without taking over.

Hey, I have a couple of those sitting on top of my computer ... ;-)
01/24/2013 07:09:34 AM · #53
Originally posted by BrennanOB:

I found this list of home made hacks for your flash. ..


Does that list include bubblewrap, I wonder...:-)
01/24/2013 07:30:44 AM · #54
i dont have a popup flash... :(
01/28/2013 11:00:16 AM · #55
Ok now that photo within a photo challenge has ended, I can post an image showing the flash shadow. (Yeah I know the photo's not level, ah well) If you look at the floor in the two images you can see that I moved back only a few inches, but still was a good 6-7 feet from the wall behind me where the shadow is visible. here is the entry:

So moving forward a tiny bit might have helped but I still think the bubble-wrapped flash was the main reason I lost the flash shadow.

Message edited by author 2013-01-28 11:02:11.
01/28/2013 11:28:27 AM · #56
Originally posted by mike_311:

i dont have a popup flash... :(


I view that as a positive feature of the 5DmkII. ;)
01/28/2013 01:21:14 PM · #57
Originally posted by snaffles:

Ok now that photo within a photo challenge has ended, I can post an image showing the flash shadow. (Yeah I know the photo's not level, ah well) If you look at the floor in the two images you can see that I moved back only a few inches, but still was a good 6-7 feet from the wall behind me where the shadow is visible. here is the entry:

So moving forward a tiny bit might have helped but I still think the bubble-wrapped flash was the main reason I lost the flash shadow.


Shadows are in direct relation to the size of the light source compared to the subject. A distance closer to the subject with a smaller source can be just as effective as a very large source far away from the subject. Imagine the sun being a very large source but far away and how harsh the shadows are. But put a small flash in an umbrella close to your subject just see how soft the shadows are.

What you created with bubble wrap was a very large light source(essentially every wall in the room that wrapped the subject with light rather then being more directional from a small source.



Message edited by author 2013-01-28 13:22:05.
01/28/2013 04:59:17 PM · #58
Originally posted by MattO:

...What you created with bubble wrap was a very large light source(essentially every wall in the room that wrapped the subject with light rather then being more directional from a small source.


Yep, thatès what i figured I had to do, still get lit but break up the light source, which the little bubblewrap cells seemed to do quite nicely. Now that I can get shadowless well-lit scenes, look out world!!

*rushing off to patent office with bubblewrap flash-diffuser plans*
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