![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
quote who= McLeod /:
The problem is the fact that you have, in effect, two exposures. I don't know whether you're shooting digital or slide or negative but with positives the area of the sky is so overexposed there is no data left anyway. Your flash exposure seems good and your ambient exposure, at least for the street and trees is already underexposed. Can you change your camera height? If you shot slightly down you would have perfect results. Or change your point of aim so there is a darker background behind your subjects. The lighter your background is the more pronounced the ghosting effect will be. Ya. I figured as much. Thanks for the reply. I have shot some pointing downwards: Not great shots, but as you can see, no major ghosting.. http://www.shampoo.ca/gallery/lachin...20_2004/image7 http://www.shampoo.ca/gallery/lachin...27_2004/image1 Same corner as where the ghosting image happened but pointing more where the trees are. http://www.shampoo.ca/gallery/lachin...27_2004/image7 Anyhow, this goes to prove your point that finding a dark background makes all the difference. Thanks for the reply, J -- Justin F. Knotzke http://www.shampoo.ca |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Justin F. Knotzke wrote:
http://www.shampoo.ca/gallery/lachin...20_2004/image7 http://www.shampoo.ca/gallery/lachin...27_2004/image1 Same corner as where the ghosting image happened but pointing more where the trees are. http://www.shampoo.ca/gallery/lachin...27_2004/image7 Anyhow, this goes to prove your point that finding a dark background makes all the difference. Is that the effect you were trying to achieve? Another thing you could try is HSS (high speed sync) or FP as it is sometimes called. Using a somewhat higher shutter speed, follow the racers and get a blurred background to convey the impression of speed. |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
quote who= Bill Tuthill /:
Is that the effect you were trying to achieve? Sadly, no. Thus the reason I made the post with the ghosting question. Another thing you could try is HSS (high speed sync) or FP as it is sometimes called. Using a somewhat higher shutter speed, follow the racers and get a blurred background to convey the impression of speed. Right: http://www.shampoo.ca/gallery/Lachin...brando4?full=1 That's without a flash. I am trying to get the same blur/pan effect but with fill flash to get their faces lit. In the above shot, I was very lucky to get the glow of light. I don't get that very often and even less so that it's getting darker.. So I like to use a bit of flash to fill in the shadows and give me some contrast. I am trying to mimic: http://www.shampoo.ca/gallery/lachin.../image9?full=1 That's about the effect I am going for. As you can see by that shot, the background are cars and not sky. I didn't realize that my problem in the original shot: http://www.shampoo.ca/gallery/lachin...image13?full=1 was the sky until Alan and others so kindly pointed it out to me. I hopefully won't make the same mistake again.. Same corner: http://www.shampoo.ca/gallery/lachin...7_2004/image12 but with the rider just in front of the trees.. Anyhow, thanks to all who have replied. If I can, I will try and get a darker background. If not, I will expose for the background, close the aperture by 1-2 stops and increase flash by 1.5 stops. I'll probably darken out some buildings and backgrounds but my subjects should come out better and not look like Casper's cousins. J -- Justin F. Knotzke http://www.shampoo.ca |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Justin F. Knotzke wrote:
for the background, close the aperture by 1-2 stops and increase flash by 1.5 stops. I'll probably darken out some buildings and backgrounds but my subjects should come out better and not look like Casper's cousins. If you increase the flash you will whiten them out and kill any color they are wearing... esp. on slide film. -- -- rec.photo.equipment.35mm user resource: -- http://www.aliasimages.com/rpe35mmur.htm -- e-meil: there's no such thing as a FreeLunch.-- |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Justin F. Knotzke wrote:
for the background, close the aperture by 1-2 stops and increase flash by 1.5 stops. I'll probably darken out some buildings and backgrounds but my subjects should come out better and not look like Casper's cousins. If you increase the flash you will whiten them out and kill any color they are wearing... esp. on slide film. -- -- rec.photo.equipment.35mm user resource: -- http://www.aliasimages.com/rpe35mmur.htm -- e-meil: there's no such thing as a FreeLunch.-- |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
quote who= Alan Browne /:
Justin F. Knotzke wrote: for the background, close the aperture by 1-2 stops and increase flash by 1.5 stops. I'll probably darken out some buildings and backgrounds but my subjects should come out better and not look like Casper's cousins. If you increase the flash you will whiten them out and kill any color they are wearing... esp. on slide film. But wouldn't the descreased exposure compensate for that? J -- Justin F. Knotzke http://www.shampoo.ca |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
quote who= Alan Browne /:
Justin F. Knotzke wrote: for the background, close the aperture by 1-2 stops and increase flash by 1.5 stops. I'll probably darken out some buildings and backgrounds but my subjects should come out better and not look like Casper's cousins. If you increase the flash you will whiten them out and kill any color they are wearing... esp. on slide film. But wouldn't the descreased exposure compensate for that? J -- Justin F. Knotzke http://www.shampoo.ca |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
quote who= Alan Browne /:
Justin F. Knotzke wrote: for the background, close the aperture by 1-2 stops and increase flash by 1.5 stops. I'll probably darken out some buildings and backgrounds but my subjects should come out better and not look like Casper's cousins. If you increase the flash you will whiten them out and kill any color they are wearing... esp. on slide film. But wouldn't the descreased exposure compensate for that? J -- Justin F. Knotzke http://www.shampoo.ca |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Justin F. Knotzke wrote:
quote who= Alan Browne /: Justin F. Knotzke wrote: for the background, close the aperture by 1-2 stops and increase flash by 1.5 stops. I'll probably darken out some buildings and backgrounds but my subjects should come out better and not look like Casper's cousins. If you increase the flash you will whiten them out and kill any color they are wearing... esp. on slide film. But wouldn't the descreased exposure compensate for that? As McLeod pointed out, you're really making a double exposure. One for metered natural light, one for the flash. By setting the aperture smaller you're choking the natural light, but the flash system will _automatically_ increase the duration of the flash for the amount of light coming back from the subject through the smaller aperture.... (eg: it will stay on longer) and you'll over expose the subject. (Again: you're #13 subject is well exposed). You have to think of both exposures seperately and then find where the aperture works for both exposures. -- -- rec.photo.equipment.35mm user resource: -- http://www.aliasimages.com/rpe35mmur.htm -- e-meil: there's no such thing as a FreeLunch.-- |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Justin F. Knotzke wrote:
quote who= Alan Browne /: Justin F. Knotzke wrote: for the background, close the aperture by 1-2 stops and increase flash by 1.5 stops. I'll probably darken out some buildings and backgrounds but my subjects should come out better and not look like Casper's cousins. If you increase the flash you will whiten them out and kill any color they are wearing... esp. on slide film. But wouldn't the descreased exposure compensate for that? As McLeod pointed out, you're really making a double exposure. One for metered natural light, one for the flash. By setting the aperture smaller you're choking the natural light, but the flash system will _automatically_ increase the duration of the flash for the amount of light coming back from the subject through the smaller aperture.... (eg: it will stay on longer) and you'll over expose the subject. (Again: you're #13 subject is well exposed). You have to think of both exposures seperately and then find where the aperture works for both exposures. -- -- rec.photo.equipment.35mm user resource: -- http://www.aliasimages.com/rpe35mmur.htm -- e-meil: there's no such thing as a FreeLunch.-- |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Battery problem with Fuji Finepix f420 | Taavi | Digital Photography | 1 | March 1st 05 01:54 AM |
Recurring problem with Kodak DX3600 | SP | Digital Photography | 6 | August 2nd 04 06:19 PM |