... it doesn't really soften anything. The only way to make a light source softer is by making it larger relative to the size of the subject ...
A diffuser, by definition, simply spreads out the light in all directions, rather than being a more direct and punchy light.
Any appearance of softening you see is simply light reflecting back off nearby objects ...
I always chuckle when I see people with stoffens mounted outdoors, trying to bouncelight off the clouds...![]()
Garden party implies outdoors...
Why was he using it? Inexperience, if there was nothing for the light to bounce off.![]()
Sadly I have a painful experience that causes me to disagree...
Once upon a time I would have agreed with the physics of your assertion that stofens are pointless when there is nothing to bounce off...I made that mistake once when I told my wife she didn't need her stofen because she had a 580 (with a catch light card). I kept my stofen on because I have a 430 with no catchlight card.
...but when we compared my direct flash (on camera) shots with hers, mine were immeasureably better. On that discovery we checked every setting on both cameras on the same subject and the only thing that made the difference was the stofen.
I don't know why it is so much better, but I wonder if perhaps it is thicker in the centre of the beam and perhaps evens out the light.
...but I do have experience and it tells me to use a stofen if ever forced into shooting direct on camera flash outside.
Sadly this experience is one that my wife won't let me forget. Oddly, she double checks any "advice" I give her now...that's 25 years of marriage for you!
You are going to get a little bounce off the ground that might help, but you'll also potentially be shooting with slightly less power , and potentially slightly warmer. Both those things make a difference.
I suspect in any case you'll do much better, with much less power wasted, using a large bounce card.
The motto is, wear a white shirt and turn yourself into the bounce surfaceIn those pics you mention shot side by side with your missus, what were you both wearing? There's got to be a reason why the Stofen was working even outside.
No, we always where dark clothes where we can in case we end up getting reflected in a subject (hate the current trend for dayglo-wearing photogs at reportage events)...but the camera body and lens would have blocked most reflection off my shirt anyway.
I don't think it is the attenuation effect that gives the benefit because we are quite aggressive on the Flash Exposure Compensation, usually shooting at -2 stops...and changing my FEC and my wife's FEC was one of our experiments. Surely if it was just say 1 stop attenuation then my wife dialling one stop less on her FEC to mine would have made both our shots look similar - which it didn't.
What do you think about the possibility of the stofen being thicker in the middle of the beam perhaps, and making the light more even across the frame?
It's a mystery.
Steve
huh?
The Lumiquest 80-20 bouncer splits it up, 20% gets bounced back directly, 80% goes through it to get bounced off the ceiling.
The stofen is supposed to evenly distribute the light in a full hemisphere in front of the flash (how accurately it manages to do this all really depends on the flash being used, it's "zoom" position, etc).
It's not a split, it's a spread. It increases the "field of view" of the flash.
In theory it should throw it evenly in all directions in front of the flash. In practise, if you've got it on the end of a flash zoomed to 200mm, then most of the light is going to be blasted forward. That's why some speedlights, such as the SB-900 automatically bring the flash head to the 11mm wide position to get as much spread as possible.
It also depends on the make of the diffuser. There are Stofens, and then there are many other manufacturers making similar products (some worse, some as good, some better), and some flashes (again, I'm picking on the SB-900 because it's what I primarily use) come with one supplied from the flash manufacturer.
When the head is angled at 45 degrees instead of 90 degrees, it just means that more light can bounce off the ceiling rather than the floor. If the flash is pointed straight up, half the light is being wasted as it's going behind the photographer (assuming it doesn't bounce back off something behind the photographer).
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No there isn't. Every possibly solution to softening your flash is situational, whether it be direct bouncing, a stofen, a softbox, a brolly, a beauty dish or whatever. It's a judgement call which you use (and how many of 'em) based upon the conditions and allowances of each individual job.