diyphotography.net— Here are five great techniques to boost your off camera lighting. After exploring those five you'll have a great toolbox for shooting pictures with off camera flash.
Aug 12, 2009View in Crawl 4
You can use an on-camera flash. The one case where you can get a nice shot using it is in broad daylight. However, people who would us an on-camera flash would think you are trying to pull their chain by telling them that.
Really dumb question: how do external flashes "connect" with a camera? Does it have to be an SLR? I have a bridge / superzoom, would that work?
Gary Fong has his tupperware made in China for .15 cents and sells them for $50 a piece. You could make the same thing at home for $5 at most. He's a business genius though, I'll give him that.
rossnycAug 13, 2009
Flash makes a big difference:<a class="user" href="http://bit.ly/17UEyn" rel="nofollow">http://bit.ly/17UEyn</a>
centranAug 13, 2009
You can use an on-camera flash. The one case where you can get a nice shot using it is in broad daylight. However, people who would us an on-camera flash would think you are trying to pull their chain by telling them that.
sh0rtstop00Aug 13, 2009
This is relative to my interest.
sloppychrisAug 13, 2009
Really dumb question: how do external flashes "connect" with a camera? Does it have to be an SLR? I have a bridge / superzoom, would that work?
sloppychrisAug 13, 2009
Thanks Victor.
wizzroomAug 13, 2009
Gary Fong has his tupperware made in China for .15 cents and sells them for $50 a piece. You could make the same thing at home for $5 at most. He's a business genius though, I'll give him that.