Gandhi said:
hmmm, see, now, as soon as you said 'interiors' you sparked my inerest!
Wonder if one of these would be handy for work? Don't suppose you fancy doing a 3 shot compare of an interior for me do you? un-diffused, normal diffuser and lightsphere?
Here you go Spencer...
These three shots were taken hand held - couldn't be arsed to set up the tripod. All taken at 17mm. Metered for the room light and exposure for all three was 1/8 at f4.5, so probably not the sharpest. All jpegs, all 400 ISO. All shots were taken with the 580EX pointing straight up at the ceiling. None have been processed at all other than reduced to web size and sharpened.
1. 580EX WITHOUT WIDE ANGLE DIFFUSER.
Ugh!
2. 580EX WITH WIDE ANGLE DIFFUSER
Better - in fact it's not bad at all.
3. 580EX WITH LIGHTSPHERE AND DOME FITTED.
By far the nicer version for me, giving the least shadows and the most detail in the shot from the light thrown sideways from that large diffuser body. It's also slightly warmer, which is a tendency of the 'Cloud' (more opaque) version I opted for. In some of the baronial halls you probably have to paint with light, you might be better off with the 'normal' (clearer) version?
There is a 4th option actually, which is to use the Lightsphere without the dome but that's only recommended for unusually high ceilings.
You may not see enough difference in it for your purposes Spencer, but when I talk about wedding interiors, I'm talking about photographing people in close proximity to walls which show up harsh shadows, and try as you may, you can't always get the room you'd like between your subjects and those walls to lessen the shadows, which is where I think the lightsphere will really prove it's worth.
Hope that helps mate.
