User:BuckMee

Photo shoot with histogram Test Shot: Take a sheet, on the camera, turn on the histogram above (please consider 1 tip on how to read the histogram). If the residual image brightness, we have the following adjustments: way of the lights down, or scroll key light far out, or increase your speed, or close the aperture. If the image is missing portrait studio morning (you can guess): increase the capacity of the lights up, or move the flash near the back, or giãm speed on the air (but not giãm under 1/60s), or open the aperture up (but no greater than f/5.6). He Ha, I think shooting in the studio, the speed does not affect those, just fast enough to avoid blur caused by hand shake and slowly enough to sync up with the lights on. Because the light is completely dependent on flash, don't use ambient light where belching. increase/decrease in the range of 60-200/s nothing else, there is the blurry or clear Didn't know you had the correct comprehension of fumro? 4 parameters (speed, Aperture, flash, and moving lights) this "work" independently. For example, my flash 200W at 1/125s, we will have less light than at 1/60s and 1/250s than in (fixed light while the speed change will affect the "amount" of light more or less). In General, increase or decrease speed is to adjust the amount of light rather than have to ambient light (because the modeling light is only about 30W-60W while shooting speed 1/90 years are enough yellow light ACE)

Or the fumro is in the 4 parameters on the speed doesn't matter by adjusting the flash power, adjust the aperture, and moving lights (the last method is to lower the book because the lights as close as possible to "diffuse"). ...(?) I also think like you Fumro. The speed of the flash is very large (1/8000s-1/500s) to adjust the speed of the machine does not affect exposure, provided that the speed is limited to flash sync of the machine. I adjusted the lights = 3 parameter is left