Posted by Jon on October 26, 2009


Take care about the camera flash

Using a camera flash can be perplexing to novice photographers and many are not aware of the limits to the area its light can reach. This means that up to a positive distance the flash will be useful and having the flash on won’t do any good. Parents taking shots of their children 50 feet from the stage in a dark school auditorium are a case in point and they find out later that they’ve gotten pictures of the heads of the audience in front with the kids barely visible in the background.
This happens as the subject is too far from the photographer’s camera and Light from the flash isn’t strong enough to reach the distance. The flash illuminates just the area it can and that’s what the camera captures. Digital cameras usually have more limited flash ranges than either a point and shoot or a digital single lens reflex and of the three, the more powerful and costly DSLR has the longest flash range.
In many instances, basically putting the camera on a tripod then turning the flash off may be the most excellent course of action you can take. Rather than lighting up heads in front of you with a flash as the camera will make adjustments for the dark area it will shoot if it is set on automatic mode. Just Look up the manual if you don’t know how to turn off the camera flash and most cameras keep theirs turned on when in the automatic picture mode.

Related posts:

  1. Functions of a Memory Card Reader Memory car
  2. Uses of Memory Memory pla

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

Post a Comment


Leave a Reply