When you are dragging the shutter do you set the camera to rear curtain synch when using off camera flash. I am using total manual on the flash and camera.
Aug 24, 2009 10:27 | #1 When you are dragging the shutter do you set the camera to rear curtain synch when using off camera flash. I am using total manual on the flash and camera.
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CurtisN Master Flasher 19,129 posts Likes: 11 Joined Apr 2005 Location: Northern Illinois, US More info | Aug 24, 2009 11:14 | #2 How are you triggering the off-camera units? "If you're not having fun, your pictures will reflect that." - Joe McNally
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Aug 24, 2009 11:25 | #3 I am using cyber synchs to trigger the Sunpak 120J off camera. I have dragged the shutter before and never thought about using a rear curtain synch.
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PacAce Cream of the Crop 26,900 posts Likes: 40 Joined Feb 2003 Location: Keystone State, USA More info | Aug 24, 2009 11:55 | #4 Curtis N wrote in post #8514149 How are you triggering the off-camera units? You can't use 2nd curtain with the Canon wireless flash system, or with a PC cord or radio remote system. The only way I know of to use 2nd curtain off-camera is to use traditional optical slaves to trigger the remote units while a hotshoe-mounted unit is in manual mode. 2nd curtain sync is not always necessary or desirable when dragging the shutter. Tell us more about the scenario you're trying to shoot. Just to clarify, the flash mounted in the hotshoe has to be ETTL compatible, too. A non-ETTL flash sitting in the hotshoe won't fire on 2nd curtain sync, either. ...Leo
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bobbyz Cream of the Crop 20,506 posts Likes: 3479 Joined Nov 2007 Location: Bay Area, CA More info | Aug 24, 2009 12:01 | #5 If the subject is not moving, why do you want rear sync? Fuji XT-1, 18-55mm
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Aug 24, 2009 12:33 | #6 bobbyz wrote in post #8514425 If the subject is not moving, why do you want rear sync? Thats what the guy said in the video *L* He used rear curtain. Maybe it is a Nikon CLS thing.... He used a Nikon with the SB900. He really did not say why he was using rear curtain..
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Aug 24, 2009 12:34 | #7 PacAce wrote in post #8514397 Just to clarify, the flash mounted in the hotshoe has to be ETTL compatible, too. A non-ETTL flash sitting in the hotshoe won't fire on 2nd curtain sync, either.
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CurtisN Master Flasher 19,129 posts Likes: 11 Joined Apr 2005 Location: Northern Illinois, US More info | Aug 24, 2009 13:00 | #8 What Leo meant, which I neglected to specify, is that only a dedicated flash unit (E-TTL compatible) will do 2nd curtain sync. Your garden variety hotshoe flash such as a Sunpak 383 or Vivitar 285HV won't do 2nd curtain, even if it's on the hotshoe. "If you're not having fun, your pictures will reflect that." - Joe McNally
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Aug 24, 2009 13:15 | #9 YEP Got it... I thought I was missing something.
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Christina Senior Member 633 posts Joined Jan 2007 Location: Pittsburgh More info | I'm glad you asked this question - I've been meaning to look into this for some time. In one of Scott Kelby's books he has a page called something like "Rear Curtain Rocks - Why You Should Use It." He advocates setting that to be your default all the time. Christina - Pittsburgh Wedding Photographer
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CurtisN Master Flasher 19,129 posts Likes: 11 Joined Apr 2005 Location: Northern Illinois, US More info | Aug 24, 2009 14:37 | #11 MonteMama wrote in post #8514946 I would think there wouldn't be enough time to get the light from the flash to bounce off the reflector into the scene. Light travels at about 186,000 miles per second. You can estimate the distance and do the math if you want. "If you're not having fun, your pictures will reflect that." - Joe McNally
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bobbyz Cream of the Crop 20,506 posts Likes: 3479 Joined Nov 2007 Location: Bay Area, CA More info | Aug 24, 2009 14:42 | #12 MonteMama wrote in post #8514946 I'm glad you asked this question - I've been meaning to look into this for some time. In one of Scott Kelby's books he has a page called something like "Rear Curtain Rocks - Why You Should Use It." He advocates setting that to be your default all the time. Any reason he mentions to use it all the time? Fuji XT-1, 18-55mm
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CurtisN Master Flasher 19,129 posts Likes: 11 Joined Apr 2005 Location: Northern Illinois, US More info | Aug 24, 2009 15:26 | #13 As I recall McNally's reasoning, at relatively fast shutter speeds it won't matter. Canon cameras actually enable 2nd curtain at 1/30 or 1/60 depending on the model. Faster than that, and it will use 1st curtain regardless. I'm not sure about the Nikons. "If you're not having fun, your pictures will reflect that." - Joe McNally
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apersson850 Obviously it's a good thing More info | Many flash users employ 2nd curtain sync without having much of an idea regarding what it really does, thus when it really makes any kind of difference. Anders
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Christina Senior Member 633 posts Joined Jan 2007 Location: Pittsburgh More info | Aug 24, 2009 15:56 | #15 bobbyz wrote in post #8515337 Any reason he mentions to use it all the time? I read it a long time ago - but I believe it had to do with trails falling behind a moving subject instead of in front of them? Christina - Pittsburgh Wedding Photographer
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