
Badoom tish!Shoot at nightthe background is dark and totally free.......................
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Thanks, you have to balance silly advice with good, it's the Ying and Yang of posting on TP.Badoom tish!
Not a bad shout in charity shops tho....



Why do you need a black background? Black is just a lack of light. Set your camera to ISO 100, f16, 1/160 and almost any background is black, Then add light where it's needed.
Except he only needs a small one, which indicates small subjects, which would make a proper headache to get the ISL to black out the background.Why do you need a black background? Black is just a lack of light. Set your camera to ISO 100, f16, 1/160 and almost any background is black, Then add light where it's needed.
I've used a 5 in 1 reflector on occasion, as in the image below. Certainly stores easily and has myriad other uses. If you want totally black then velvet is much better than card so long as you can keep it from getting creased.
Self by balancer100, on Flickr
Sorry for the thread hijack. But how did you do that shot....(I'm a complete noob but just got 3 cheap flash heads..Oh and a SB-900)

mattyg, sorry, missed your reply. I propped the 40 inch 5 in 1 reflector, black side out, on a sofa behind me - I was sat on a dining chair. It was lit by a single Yongnuo 560III in a 24" popup softbox with grid, about 2ft back from my position behind and 4ft slightly behind me, feathered back and upwards to get the light how I wanted it. Triggered using 3 Aputure Trigmaster modules - one transmitter to serve as a remote, one transceiver on the camera and receiver on the flash. The camera was about 3 feet away from me.
Then I processed it in Silver Efex Pro and extended the background in Photoshop.
I actually took a phone shot of the setup, please excuse the mess:
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Possibly another silly question but did you have that much light when you took the shot. I've not yet experimented with my flash heads