Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
brackets don't make ANY light. Your flash does. And their main purpose is to allow almost any position relative to the camera to use the best avalable surface to bounce off. In this porticular shot I would have to hold my camera upside down pressing the button with my left pinky to be able to bounce light from that fireplace mantel in the corner of the room... if I did not have my Custom bracket. And, my name is NOT Harry Houdini, you know.Brackets are lazy and make FLAT light !
It is impossible to have as much control of light in a casual setting using a flash as in a studio. When you use bounced light you have to find a spot that:(good image, nice spirit)
(in my opinion)
Too much bounce and not quite enough frontal light...
the clue is in the eyes...not enough separation between brown of
the eye and the black of the pupil.
With an off-camera cord, and a bounce device (say: the Joe
Demb-er-ator)
and the light at half-an-arm length to the left, the light rolls
over her face:
CREATING the 3D look....with the light over the camera it is a
flat(er) result.
...and the brown and black (of the eye) separate.
Without shadows, photography does not work.
Yes, the CB Jr allows shutter to be on top during flipJust to clarify - that is what the CB Jr. does
Yes, at least the one I tried did that.the Strobo flips to the right (so shutter button on bottom).
And the lack of a bracket places a giant shadow over the left shoulder of that beautiful bride . . .Brackets are lazy and make FLAT light !
1) the picture was taken with EX550 mounted on Custon bracket's bracket;And the lack of a bracket places a giant shadow over the leftBrackets are lazy and make FLAT light !
shoulder of that beautiful bride . . .
Sorry, I'm not refering to any photos posted here. Rather, my comment is directed to those who believe brackets make "flat light." If you shoot a wedding in a tall, dark room and use fill flash without a backet, you may not be happy with the results. Nor will your client.what "shadow" are you talking about?
--I have two of the quick flips. One has been going strong for over
20 years.
DIPics
You say you bought the Stroboframe; did you ever hold the CB? I'm
serving in Iraq and there aren't any camera shops to actually see
the stuff; so that's why I'm going to the forum for answers - and I
definatly couldn't get nylon screws.
--
Collector of Beautiful Things
--Camera in my right hand...flash in my left...(with Joe Demb card
thingie)
run and gun...very quick
Yes, a bracket is just a tool albeit a bad one.
Why do point-and-shoot cameras take horrid flat flash pix ?
The flash is on-axis. Flat flat flat.
without shadow all is lost.
bimthecat
Look at this: NOT FLAT ...off camera cord:
![]()
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/bnh/controller/home?O=654&A=details&Q=&sku=12972&is=REG&addedTroughType=categoryNavigationCanon's off-camera flash cord is about $ 50
It's says it's only 2 feet. 3 feet would be ideal.