Studio shutter speeds when shooting little uns.

Im a right breast, I was under the impression (wrongly) that it would help reduce motion blur.

It was fine when I stopped down to 1/200th, the remauning shots were all saveable!

Cheers for a great thread people!

You mean thanks for my ignorance :)
 
OK....read this with interest.

I was shooting using 1/250th at the weekend, every shot taken at that speed suffered from a black band along the bottom of the shot.

Just figured out that there is a battery in the trigger supplied with lencarta lights!

DOH!!

Any trigger that doesn't give you full max sync speed will be fine for a studio environment but would be a handicap anywhere with a bright ambient, eg, outdoors.
 
sorry to wake this interesting thread up but :
Garry's quote Because whatever shutter speed you select, the flash is faster than the shutter, the only function of the shutter is to be open when the flash fires. I was told this at college and I shot this yesterday f8 @ 1/125th hand held ISO 200.

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Looks flippin dangerous! :eek:
 
even at 1/1000th flash duration it can be difficult to freeze motion. I have looked at the Elinchrom Quadras for that reason - they have a very short duration.

My SS is also 1/125th - enough to blot out any ambient light. Some studio togs (in dark studios) shoot at 1/60th..... As stated the SS only really serves to blot out the ambient light. If in doubt I take a shot at f8 and 1/125th without the flash - just to make sure that there's no ambient in my exposure.
 
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Looks flippin dangerous! :eek:

not what it seems, sponge bat and soft ball so no damage.
They went with this one in the end but I prefer the blur.:)

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Shot on Jpeg @ f11
 
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intersting thread all. om my nikon i use 1/200th f10 as any faster the strobes fire but i get half a black screen, and my k7 wont go above 1/160th f10.

That's the sync speed of your camera - We are all limited to some degree. But you don't henerally need to be any faster than enough to blot out the ambient liught. So that's why many use 1/125th in the studio because at f8, you need a fair bit more than just indoor lighting.

Why f10?
 
Hi Dav - I've no idea - just here for the tips - but I did like your website - liked the emphasis on fun - oh and I like the bikes and car shots too!! dc
 
That's the sync speed of your camera - We are all limited to some degree. But you don't henerally need to be any faster than enough to blot out the ambient liught. So that's why many use 1/125th in the studio because at f8, you need a fair bit more than just indoor lighting.

Why f10?

thanks and f10 as thats what my meter tells me.
 
thanks and f10 as thats what my meter tells me.

Turn your lights down a little till it reads f8 as that is usually one of the sharpest apertures of most lenses. One of the reasons many use f8.
 
I use a simple and cheap 18-70mm for my studio work, that is happiest at f/9 so that's where I set my lights up for and it gives a useful DoF, unless the ambient is really bright when I go out to f/11 with no real noticable loss in sharpness but by f/16 you can just about see things are not so razor sharp. As Gary said way back in the thread set everything up then turn off your radio trigger and take a shot... if it's black great, if not close the aperture a third of a stop and wind up your lighting by a third of a stop and try again. BTW I set my shutter at 1/160th to be sure not to exceed the radio trigger sync
 
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