I’ve been reading the Strobist blog lately and going through the heaps of strobist groups on flickr. The quality and creativity of some of these images is pretty astounding.
So I decided to play around with off-camera flash. Lack of equipment was an issue to start off with. I had to get the speedlite off the camera. There are many ways to do that, and I won’t go into that here (the Strobist blog is where to look that up). I decided to go with the el-cheapo solution (hotshoe adapter and pc cable) since I’m still learning, I’ll eventually upgrade to radio triggers. For about 300SEK/30€ I managed to get an adapter and 5m of cable… yeah…that’s a lot of cable when you’re trying to work and not tripping over it was a bit of a challenge. Right there I began to see the advantages of radio triggers. You can run multiple strobes with this setup using splitter-cables but that involves even more mess.
The flash was run in manual mode and correct exposure was achieved through a now pretty much standard trial and error method. To go with the whole water theme used a blue gel. I tried several positions for the strobe. What worked best for the shots of drops was to lay the flash down almost parallel to the table but point it up just a little bit to give more light to the contours of the glass. The fill light was provided by the on-camera flash dialed 2 stops down. I’ve also tried reflecting the light off the sheet of glass that my subject was on with some pretty decent results. The wine glass was shot with the strobe dialed down to 1/32 and placed right of the glass, directly under it and looking up. The setup is in the video. On a sidenote, I really need a better video camera, the LG Viewty, even though it shoots 120fps video just isn’t enough.
Here are some images:
Things to think about:
A smooth non-reflective background is key. The cardboard I used had too much of a texture and I had to pull the blacks all the way town in LR for the black background to look smooth and black. Next time I’m gonna try a black sheet, sure it has a texture but I don’t think it’ll reflect as much.
Timing, at least for water drops, is everything. Maybe I’m just uncoordinated but using a straw as a way to drip water into a glass is tedious and inaccurate. Next time I’ll try a pipette.
This is a trivial one…wash the glass properly. The clone/heal tools work wonders but not using them saves time.
As I was failing to time my shots properly I began to think about some kind of sound trigger, where the camera would be left in complete darkness with the shutter open and the flash would only trigger when say a drop hit the water. That however is a story for another post, when I’ve had time to figure out how to build one of these triggers.
The results are mind blowing!
Man, I gotta to try this too
Thanks! The next step is to play with smoke.
Hi, cool post. I have been wondering about this topic,so thanks for writing.