- Joined
- Jun 13, 2015
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Welcome!
The B&W Challenge is a fun thing, no competition and no prizes
Let's get creative with slow shutter speeds, movement and flash light!
Flashes on the 1st or 2nd curtain use slow shutter speeds and mostly an external flash because the camera flash is often too limited. A flash light on the 1st or 2nd curtain is only useful if the subject is moving. By default, the flash is on the 1st curtain. In addition, the flash light comes at the beginning of the exposure moment, followed by the subject's motion blur. The subject that you see through the camera lens freezes and the motion blur then follows. With flash on the 2nd curtain, the flash will fire after pressing the shutter button, just before the shutter closes. The slow shutter speed at the start of the exposure creates the motion blur first, followed by the flash that freezes the subject. Since the 1st curtain flash fires the movement over the subject, it can produce an undesired effect. You can counteract this unwanted effect by flashing on the 2nd curtain. Flashing the 2nd curtain only makes sense if you know how the subject moves through the frame.
This is my last B&W Challenge, due to personal circumstances it's currently not possible for me to continue on the same level at TPF, perhaps at a later stage. I'd like to thank all members who enthusiastically participated in the challenges from the start and I hope everyone enjoyed it and possibly also learned something from it!
Gerard
The B&W Challenge is a fun thing, no competition and no prizes
Let's get creative with slow shutter speeds, movement and flash light!
Flashes on the 1st or 2nd curtain use slow shutter speeds and mostly an external flash because the camera flash is often too limited. A flash light on the 1st or 2nd curtain is only useful if the subject is moving. By default, the flash is on the 1st curtain. In addition, the flash light comes at the beginning of the exposure moment, followed by the subject's motion blur. The subject that you see through the camera lens freezes and the motion blur then follows. With flash on the 2nd curtain, the flash will fire after pressing the shutter button, just before the shutter closes. The slow shutter speed at the start of the exposure creates the motion blur first, followed by the flash that freezes the subject. Since the 1st curtain flash fires the movement over the subject, it can produce an undesired effect. You can counteract this unwanted effect by flashing on the 2nd curtain. Flashing the 2nd curtain only makes sense if you know how the subject moves through the frame.
This is my last B&W Challenge, due to personal circumstances it's currently not possible for me to continue on the same level at TPF, perhaps at a later stage. I'd like to thank all members who enthusiastically participated in the challenges from the start and I hope everyone enjoyed it and possibly also learned something from it!
Gerard
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