Hi Steven
I hope you get lot's of answers to this one as I'm in the same boat. 
I've been trying several things with bouncing the flash from various
surfaces - with varied success.
I have just bought 2 meters of "DIY Diffuser" and some gold paper. The
diffuser is just translucent material from a craft shop. My idea is to line
a very large cardboard box with gold paper and crumpled aluminium foil and
use the cloth over the opening. I'll poke the flash head into the box and
put  the flash in manual mode and do the calculations for distance.
Any comments from other PDMLers?
Cheers
Simon

-----Original Message-----
From: Stephen Hoffman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Saturday, 29 June 2002 3:19 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Flash for portrait


Let me say first off that I'm new to the forum, asked my first question a
few days ago and was amazed at how helpful everyone was.  Thanks to all that
responded.

I have an AF 360 FGZ but I am new to the idea of dedicated flash.  I will be
using the flash unit on a 645NII.  When I took my first portrait photos with
straight flash not surprisingly the light was harsh and the shadows (on my
makeshift sheet as a backdrop) harsher.  I tried using a Photoflex On-Camera
XTC II softbox to soften the light.  I could tell that it did have some
effect but nowhere near as soft as I would like.  I don't have the money for
a fancy lighting system or the room to set up a studio.  I'm just trying to
find an optimum, inexpensive way to produce well lit photos without the
harshness or shadows that professional studios make.  Any and all
ideas/comments are greatly appreciated.

Stephen
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