Hi,
I'm hoping someone with hands on experience reads this and is able to shed a little "light" on this for me. (pun intended
)
The way I understand it is that in the old days studio photographers would open up the front of the camera to let the light in and pop off a flash. Then they would close up the lens and the light from the flash would be the only light exposing the film. I have some old film cameras that I can not connect to my strobes, but I want to try this out.
Since it is film, I would like to keep my trial and error down to as little error as possible. I do not have a darkroom and I will be paying for processing.
I would be doing this in a dark room so the flash would be the only light.
So my thought, set the camera to bulb, manually set the strobes off, then close the shutter.
If I meter the lights to f/8 with a shutter speed of 1/125 and the light from the flash is the only light will I get a decent exposure or is it going to be over exposed because I left the shutter open too long and the flash is longer? I can't quite wrap my head around how this works, I am a hands on person.
Any help will be appreciated. If all else fails I'll just try it out with a digital camera first.
Thanks in advance!


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