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FORUMS General Gear Talk Flash and Studio Lighting 
Thread started 23 Nov 2013 (Saturday) 09:57
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First Flash?

 
Titan6891
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Nov 24, 2013 08:50 |  #31

oldvultureface wrote in post #16475933 (external link)
Okay.

Aperture: The size of the lens opening that determines how much light reaches the camera's sensor. It's expressed as a ratio, f/2, f/16, etc. The smaller the denominator, the larger the lens opening. It's similar to your iris. In bright light, your iris contracts (f/16). In dim light, your iris expands (f/2).

Shutter speed: The length of time the camera's shutter remains open to let light strike the sensor. A large aperture and slow shutter speed, for the same scene, lets more light hit the sensor than a fast shutter speed and small aperture. The shutter's design limits how fast a shutter speed can normally be used with flash. That is called sync speed. At speeds faster than sync speed, only part of the sensor is exposed to the flash, leaving a dark band in the picture. A feature called HSS (high speed sync), allows taking flash pictures at speeds faster than sync speed by rapidly pulsing the flash for the time the shutter is open. The 568 can do HSS, the 468 can't.

ISO: The sensitivity of the sensor to light. That can be set by the camera automatically or manually by you. It's expressed as a number. ISO 200 is twice as sensitive to light as ISO 100.

Exposure: The combination of aperture, shutter speed, and ISO that together determines how much light is recorded by the sensor. The same amount of light can be read by the sensor with various combinations of those three variables. They are changed for creative reasons and modify the look of the picture. A large aperture shows only the subject in focus, the background and foreground are blurred. A small aperture shows much more of the scene in focus. A fast shutter speed freezes motion, a slow shutter speed shows motion as a blur.

Stop: A measure of exposure. Increasing exposure by one stop doubles the amount of light hitting the sensor. That one stop change can be made by halving the shutter speed, doubling the ISO, or by opening up the aperture from say f/5.6 to f/4.

Bouncing flash: Indoors, rather the firing the flash directly at the subject, more natural looking results can be had by rotating and tilting the flash head at a wall or ceiling (or both) off to the side or behind the camera, filling the room with light rather than directing the flash straight at the subject.

E-TTL and Manual Flash: An E-TTL compatible flash fires a weak pulse of light when the shutter button is fully pressed, the camera's light meter measures the light reflected back through the lens and tells the flash how much light to emit to properly expose the picture when the shutter does open. Manual flash is just that: you set the power on the flash for proper exposure determined by experience or by chimping, looking at the picture just taken on the camera's LCD and adjusting the power accordingly.

Fill flash: Used to augment natural light by filling in shadow areas that would normally appear too dark without flash. For instance, if the sun is behind your subject, a picture taken without flash will properly expose the background leaving your subject dark and featureless. Firing the flash brightens the subject. This is where HSS can be useful because of the higher shutter speeds in bright daylight.

Modifiers: Umbrellas, softboxes, and beauty dishes are used to increase the apparent size of the flash for softer shadows and more natural looking light. Think a sunny day and distinct shadows vs a cloudy day and soft shadows.

Oh man thats a lot of writing!
Next time just give me a link if you want to tell me that much.
When i said you use words i meant flash photography
related stuff.
Things like aperture and shutterspeed i do understand.
But hss or strobe i didnt understand but i think i won't need
them for a long time.
Thx for your time!:)




  
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oldvultureface
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Nov 24, 2013 14:39 |  #32

Titan6891 wrote in post #16476158 (external link)
Oh man thats a lot of writing!

Sorry. I had just had a cup of coffee and a cigarette. ;)




  
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Intheswamp
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Nov 24, 2013 21:43 as a reply to  @ oldvultureface's post |  #33

Remember, too,...the stronger the flash, the better the bounce. ;)

Ok, so you don't have enough models to look at already.... :) Someone may have already mentioned it, but the Yongnuo 565 series has about the same power as the 568 series but comes without the commander mode and HSS. It is a strong flash unit, I'm only considering the 568 because of the HSS capabilities and in all probability it is probably overkill for my current skill/knowledge level....the 565 would probably do me fine. The 565's run a little over $100.00, maybe $110.00.

Ed


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Titan6891
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Nov 24, 2013 21:56 |  #34

I looked at the 568 Ex II ttl which seems to be a very good one
but im not 100 percent sure it will work on rebel t5i or other rebel models
available and i do have a SX IS 10 with a hotshoe , so i hope do get one which will
work on my point and shoot cam too as an "eTTL"!
Does anyone use it on a point and shoot camera already ?




  
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Ralph ­ III
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Nov 24, 2013 22:16 as a reply to  @ Titan6891's post |  #35

Consider the Metz brand. They are equal to Canon but with more features and at a lesser cost. Yongnuo's have improved quite a bit but they still don't match Metz QC.

I've owned all three brands and numerous versions of each. You just can't go wrong with Metz.

Ralph

P.S. Get a Canon 220ex for your Sx-10. It is perfect for that camera. You'll find the other flashes are to bulky/heavy and will make that bridge camera less of a convenience.


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Titan6891
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Nov 24, 2013 22:26 |  #36

Okay




  
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Dillan_K
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Nov 29, 2013 15:33 |  #37

I just picked up a couple of the Metz 52 AF-1 flashes. They are very well appointed. I have not yet put them to any real tests yet, because I do not yet have light stands and modifiers (one thing at a time!), but they're way more versatile than my 420ex! They're more powerful than the 430ex for similar money. They're made in Germany too, which hopefully means they'll be around with me for a long time. They work perfectly with the Cactus V5 triggers that I have. They can also act as a master for the 420ex or 430ex (or 580ex flashes too) if you want to use the Canon ETTL-II system. The touch screen interface is intuitive and relatively quick to navigate. I like them.




  
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Titan6891
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Nov 29, 2013 15:38 |  #38

Got a good deal?
Ralph 3 suggested to get a 220 ex because bigger flashes might be to heavy
Have not decided yet and got no cash to buy it now anyways
Can you control your metz with on camera flash?




  
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Titan6891
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Nov 29, 2013 15:42 |  #39

Too heavy for my sx is 10!
Sorry




  
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Dillan_K
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Nov 29, 2013 22:55 |  #40

Yes, I would say it is too heavy for a point and shoot. I didn't read the entire thread. You didn't mention which camera it was for in your original post, and I assumed it was for a DSLR.




  
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Titan6891
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Nov 29, 2013 22:56 |  #41

Thx




  
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ptcanon3ti
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Dec 29, 2013 11:46 |  #42

Dillan_K wrote in post #16488770 (external link)
I just picked up a couple of the Metz 52 AF-1 flashes. They are very well appointed. I have not yet put them to any real tests yet, because I do not yet have light stands and modifiers (one thing at a time!), but they're way more versatile than my 420ex! They're more powerful than the 430ex for similar money. They're made in Germany too, which hopefully means they'll be around with me for a long time. They work perfectly with the Cactus V5 triggers that I have. They can also act as a master for the 420ex or 430ex (or 580ex flashes too) if you want to use the Canon ETTL-II system. The touch screen interface is intuitive and relatively quick to navigate. I like them.

Digging up this thread…

How are you liking the Metz 52 AF-1? Good power? Can they be controlled thru the camera's on board menus? Fired wirelessly? I have YN-622s

Thanks!


Paul
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Rodolfo ­ Lozano
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Aug 17, 2014 17:09 |  #43

Hi all,
I have a canon t5i body. I know it doesn´t do HSS with the built in flash, but does anyone know if it could do HSS with an external flash (I´m planning on getting a Yongnuo 568)?


R Lozano

  
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vengence
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Aug 17, 2014 17:30 |  #44

Rodolfo Lozano wrote in post #17102044 (external link)
Hi all,
I have a canon t5i body. I know it doesn´t do HSS with the built in flash, but does anyone know if it could do HSS with an external flash (I´m planning on getting a Yongnuo 568)?

It will.




  
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