On Sep 10, 2012, at 3:47 PM, Bruce Walker wrote:

> Larry, take it from me: if you are buying a macro ring flash hoping to
> do anything other than shooting small objects well lit close up, you
> are wasting your money and time.

Two things that I seem to be exceptional at.

> 
> On your musician idea: if you are shooting them any further than a
> couple of feet away, by the point that the light reaches them you'll
> hardly be able to tell the difference between light from a macro ring
> flash and a regular hammerhead flash, except that the ring flash has a
> puny light output in comparison.

The main advantage is that it stays pointing exactly where the lens is pointing.

> Just put various light modifiers,
> lenses, grids, etc. on a AF360 or AF540 (or Vivitar) and you'll get a
> light almost indistinguishable from a macro ring flash at that
> distance.
> 
> The macro ring flashes have no way to narrow the beam spread like
> their bigger brothers do either. The spread is probably 120 degrees or
> so.

good to know.

> 
> Ring flashes for studio work (portrait, fashion) are much larger in
> diameter and often have beauty-dish-like features so they are more
> focussed.

Also good to know.  Thanks.


> 
> 
> On Mon, Sep 10, 2012 at 5:33 PM, Larry Colen <[email protected]> wrote:
>> It's beginning to look like any inexpensive new ring flash I find is going 
>> to have enough shortcomings that it won't have the flexibility for me to use 
>> it for some of the things I'd want to use it for.  As such, I'm going to put 
>> getting a ring flash on the back burner in hopes that I find a good used one 
>> sometime at a price that I'll be able to afford when it is available.
>> 
>> One of the things that I'd like to try with one is gridding it to use it as 
>> a narrow spot when photographing musicians.  For composition reasons, it'd 
>> be nice if it weren't dead center, but even if it means throwing away some 
>> resolution, it would put the nominally most important subject in the 
>> sharpest part of the lens, and half, or three quarters of the time, the one 
>> third point you choose to aim the flash at would be wrong anyways.
>> 
>> I've tried gridding my AF 540, but it's always a challenge to get it to aim 
>> where I want it, with parallax and everything.
>> --
>> Larry Colen [email protected] sent from i4est
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
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> 
> 
> -- 
> -bmw
> 
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--
Larry Colen [email protected] sent from i4est





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