On Nov 21, 2007, at 15:58, Jack Davis wrote:

> Only for the sake of discussion (actually I can't discuss the  
> question,
> only raise it), why don't two lights (540 flash units for example)  
> wash
> out or cancel each other's shadows?
> Example: one flash on either side on a plane with the camera, lighting
> a common subject.
> Must assume perfection in placement with respect to all distances and
> angles even though it's not a requirement. Offered to avoid the issue
> being raised.
> I've known for sometime that the 'wash out' doesn't happen, but the
> only answer I've ever gotten; "they just don't".
>

Can't answer the question, but I avoid the issue by doing it this way:

I use a flash in front of the subject (on camera) and a second one  
behind the subject to light up the wall behind them.

That way, the rear flash has more power (closer to the wall) than your  
head-on flash and "tada!" no shadows.

Example here (headshot for work) (warning! full-sized image!):

http://charles.robinsontwins.org/photos/2007/imgp8627_heather.jpg

This photo was taken with the camera rotated ccw, with the flash  
(af540fgz) rotated upwards and a sto-fen on top of the on-camera flash  
to smooth things out.  The Sigma EF500DG was on a table behind her  
aimed upwards at a 45-degree angle to hit the wall.

This ain't art, it's just a photo for work.  :-)

  -Charles

--
Charles Robinson - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Minneapolis, MN
http://charles.robinsontwins.org



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