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Flash (photography)

A flash is a device used in photography that produces a brief burst of light (typically lasting 1/1000 to 1/200 of a second) at a color temperature of about 5500 K[citation needed] to help illuminate a scene. A major purpose of a flash is to illuminate a dark scene. Other uses are capturing quickly moving objects or changing the quality of light. Flash refers either to the flash of light itself or to the electronic flash unit discharging the light. Most current flash units are electronic, having evolved from single-use flashbulbs and flammable powders. Modern cameras often activate flash units automatically.

The high-speed wing action of a hummingbird hawk-moth is frozen by flash. The flash has given the foreground more illumination than the background. See Inverse-square law.
Video demonstration of high-speed flash photography.

Flash units are commonly built directly into a camera. Some cameras allow separate flash units to be mounted via a standardized accessory mount bracket (a hot shoe). In professional studio equipment, flashes may be large, standalone units, or studio strobes, powered by special battery packs or connected to mains power. They are either synchronized with the camera using a flash synchronization cable or radio signal, or are light-triggered, meaning that only one flash unit needs to be synchronized with the camera, and in turn triggers the other units, called slaves.

Types

Flash-lamp/Flash powder

 
Demonstration of a magnesium flash powder lamp from 1909

Studies of magnesium by Bunsen and Roscoe in 1859 showed that burning this metal produced a light with similar qualities to daylight. The potential application to photography inspired Edward Sonstadt to investigate methods of manufacturing magnesium so that it would burn reliably for this use. He applied for patents in 1862 and by 1864 had started the Manchester Magnesium Company with Edward Mellor. With the help of engineer William Mather, who was also a director of the company, they produced flat magnesium ribbon, which was said to burn more consistently and completely so giving better illumination than round wire. It also had the benefit of being a simpler and cheaper process than making round wire.[1] Mather was also credited with the invention of a holder for the ribbon, which formed a lamp to burn it in.[2] A variety of magnesium ribbon holders were produced by other manufacturers, such as the Pistol Flashmeter,[3] which incorporated an inscribed ruler that allowed the photographer to use the correct length of ribbon for the exposure they needed. The packaging also implies that the magnesium ribbon was not necessarily broken off before being ignited.

 
Vintage AHA smokeless flash powder lamp kit, Germany

An alternative to magnesium ribbon was flash powder, a mixture of magnesium powder and potassium chlorate, was introduced by its German inventors Adolf Miethe and Johannes Gaedicke in 1887. A measured amount was put into a pan or trough and ignited by hand, producing a brief brilliant flash of light, along with the smoke and noise that might be expected from such an explosive event. This could be a life-threatening activity, especially if the flash powder was damp.[4] An electrically triggered flash lamp was invented by Joshua Lionel Cowen in 1899. His patent describes a device for igniting photographers’ flash powder by using dry cell batteries to heat a wire fuse. Variations and alternatives were touted from time to time and a few found a measure of success, especially for amateur use. In 1905, one French photographer was using intense non-explosive flashes produced by a special mechanized carbon arc lamp to photograph subjects in his studio,[5] but more portable and less expensive devices prevailed. On through the 1920s, flash photography normally meant a professional photographer sprinkling powder into the trough of a T-shaped flash lamp, holding it aloft, then triggering a brief and (usually) harmless bit of pyrotechnics.

Flashbulbs

 
Ernst Leitz Wetzlar flash from 1950s
 
Flashbulbs have ranged in size from the diminutive AG-1 to the massive No. 75.
 
Kodak Brownie Hawkeye with "Kodalite Flasholder" and Sylvania P25 blue-dot daylight-type flashbulb
 
The AG-1 flashbulb, introduced in 1958, used wires protruding from its base as electrical contacts; this eliminated the need for a separate metal base.

The use of flash powder in an open lamp was replaced by flashbulbs; magnesium filaments were contained in bulbs filled with oxygen gas, and electrically ignited by a contact in the camera shutter.[6] Manufactured flashbulbs were first produced commercially in Germany in 1929.[7] Such a bulb could only be used once, and was too hot to handle immediately after use, but the confinement of what would otherwise have amounted to a small explosion was an important advance. A later innovation was the coating of flashbulbs with a plastic film to maintain bulb integrity in the event of the glass shattering during the flash. A blue plastic film was introduced as an option to match the spectral quality of the flash to daylight-balanced colour film. Subsequently, the magnesium was replaced by zirconium, which produced a brighter flash.

There was a significant delay after ignition for a flashbulb to reach full brightness, and the bulb burned for a relatively long time, compared to shutter speeds required to stop motion and not display camera shake. Slower shutter speeds (typically from 1/10 to 1/50 of a second) were initially used on cameras to ensure proper synchronization and to make use of all the bulb's light output. Cameras with flash sync triggered the flashbulb a fraction of a second before opening the shutter to allow it to reach full brightness, allowing faster shutter speeds. A flashbulb widely used during the 1960s was the Press 25, the 25-millimetre (1 in) flashbulb often used by newspapermen in period movies, usually attached to a press camera or a twin-lens reflex camera. Its peak light output was around a million lumens. Other flashbulbs in common use were the M-series, M-2, M-3 etc., which had a small ("miniature") metal bayonet base fused to the glass bulb. The largest flashbulb ever produced was the GE Mazda No. 75, being over eight inches long with a girth of 14 inches, initially developed for nighttime aerial photography during World War II.[8]

The all-glass PF1 bulb was introduced in 1954.[9] Eliminating the metal base and the multiple manufacturing steps needed to attach it to the glass bulb cut the cost substantially compared to the larger M series bulbs. The design required a fibre ring around the base to hold the contact wires against the side of the glass base. An adapter was available allowing the bulb to fit into flash guns made for bayonet-capped bulbs. The PF1 (along with the M2) had a faster ignition time (less delay between shutter contact and peak output), so it could be used with X synch below 1/30 of a second—while most bulbs require a shutter speed of 1/15 on X synch to keep the shutter open long enough for the bulb to ignite and burn. A smaller version which was not as bright but did not require the fibre ring, the AG-1, was introduced in 1958; it was cheaper, and rapidly supplanted the PF1.

Flashcubes, Magicubes and Flipflash

 
Flashcube fitted to a Kodak Instamatic camera, showing both unused (left) and used (right) bulbs
 
Undersides of Flashcube (left) and Magicube (right) cartridges
 
"Flip flash" type cartridge

In 1965 Eastman Kodak of Rochester, New York replaced the individual flashbulb technology used on early Instamatic cameras with the Flashcube developed by Sylvania Electric Products.[10][11]

A flashcube was a module with four expendable flashbulbs, each mounted at 90° from the others in its own reflector. For use it was mounted atop the camera with an electrical connection to the shutter release and a battery inside the camera. After each flash exposure, the film advance mechanism also rotated the flashcube 90° to a fresh bulb. This arrangement allowed the user to take four images in rapid succession before inserting a new flashcube.

The later Magicube (or X-Cube) by General Electric retained the four-bulb format, but did not require electrical power. It was not interchangeable with the original Flashcube. Each bulb in a Magicube was set off by releasing one of four cocked wire springs within the cube. The spring struck a primer tube at the base of the bulb, which contained a fulminate, which in turn ignited shredded zirconium foil in the flash. A Magicube could also be fired using a key or paper clip to trip the spring manually. X-cube was an alternate name for Magicubes, indicating the appearance of the camera's socket.

Other common flashbulb-based devices were the Flashbar and Flipflash, which provided ten flashes from a single unit. The bulbs in a Flipflash were set in a vertical array, putting a distance between the bulb and the lens, eliminating red eye. The Flipflash name derived from the fact that once half the flashbulbs had been used, the unit had to be flipped over and re-inserted to use the remaining bulbs. In many Flipflash cameras, the bulbs were ignited by electrical currents produced when a piezoelectric crystal was struck mechanically by a spring-loaded striker, which was cocked each time the film was advanced.

Electronic flash

The electronic flash tube was introduced by Harold Eugene Edgerton in 1931.[12] The electronic flash reaches full brightness almost instantaneously, and is of very short duration. Edgerton took advantage of the short duration to make several iconic photographs, such as one of a bullet bursting through an apple. The large photographic company Kodak was initially reluctant to take up the idea.[13] Electronic flash, often called "strobe" in the US following Edgerton's use of the technique for stroboscopy, came into some use in the late 1950s, although flashbulbs remained dominant in amateur photography until the mid 1970s. Early units were expensive, and often large and heavy; the power unit was separate from the flash head and was powered by a large lead-acid battery carried with a shoulder strap. Towards the end of the 1960s electronic flashguns of similar size to conventional bulb guns became available; the price, although it had dropped, was still high. The electronic flash system eventually superseded bulb guns as prices came down. Already in the early 1970s, amateur electronic flashes were available for less than $100.

A typical electronic flash unit has electronic circuitry to charge a high-capacitance capacitor to several hundred volts. When the flash is triggered by the shutter's flash synchronization contact, the capacitor is discharged rapidly through a permanent flash tube, producing an immediate flash lasting typically less than 1/1000 of a second, shorter than shutter speeds used, with full brightness before the shutter has started to close, allowing easy synchronization of maximum shutter opening with full flash brightness, unlike flashbulbs which were slower to reach full brightness and burned for a longer time, typically 1/30 of a second.

 
The built-in flash of a SLR camera, Pentax MZ-30, firing

A single electronic flash unit is often mounted on a camera's accessory shoe or a bracket; many inexpensive cameras have an electronic flash unit built in. For more sophisticated and longer-range lighting several synchronised flash units at different positions may be used.

 
Two professional xenon tube flashes

Ring flashes that fit to a camera's lens can be used for shadow free portrait and macro photography; some lenses have built-in ring-flash.[14]

In a photographic studio, more powerful and flexible studio flash systems are used. They usually contain a modelling light, a lamp close to the flash tube; the continuous illumination of the modelling light lets the photographer visualize the effect of the flash. LED lamps are replacing the previous incandescent light bulbs in new designs, modelling lights typically being proportionately variable to flash power require dimmable LEDs and suitable circuitry in the head. Multiple flashes may be synchronised for multi-source lighting.

The strength of a flash device is often indicated in terms of a guide number designed to simplify exposure setting. The energy released by larger studio flash units, such as monolights, is indicated in watt-seconds.

Canon names its electronic flash units Speedlite, and Nikon uses Speedlight; these terms are frequently used as generic terms for electronic flash units designed to be mounted on, and triggered by, a camera hot shoe.

High speed flash

An air-gap flash is a high-voltage device that discharges a flash of light with an exceptionally short duration, often much less than one microsecond. These are commonly used by scientists or engineers for examining extremely fast-moving objects or reactions, famous for producing images of bullets tearing through light bulbs and balloons (see Harold Eugene Edgerton). An example of a process by which to create a high speed flash is the exploding wire method.

 
A photo of a Smith & Wesson Model 686 firing, taken with a high speed air-gap flash. The photo was taken in a darkened room, with camera's shutter open and the flash was triggered by the sound of the shot using a microphone.

Multi-flash

A camera that implements multiple flashes can be used to find depth edges or create stylized images. Such a camera has been developed by researchers at the Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories (MERL). Successive flashing of strategically placed flash mechanisms results in shadows along the depths of the scene. This information can be manipulated to suppress or enhance details or capture the intricate geometric features of a scene (even those hidden from the eye), to create a non-photorealistic image form. Such images could be useful in technical or medical imaging.[15]

Flash intensity

Unlike flashbulbs, the intensity of an electronic flash can be adjusted on some units. To do this, smaller flash units typically vary the capacitor discharge time, whereas larger (e.g., higher power, studio) units typically vary the capacitor charge. Color temperature can change as a result of varying the capacitor charge, making color correction necessary. Constant-color-temperature flash can be achieved by using appropriate circuitry.[16]

Flash intensity is typically measured in stops or in fractions (1, 1/2, 1/4, 1/8 etc.). Some monolights display an "EV Number", so that a photographer can know the difference in brightness between different flash units with different watt-second ratings. EV10.0 is defined as 6400 watt-seconds, and EV9.0 is one stop lower, i.e. 3200 watt-seconds.[17]

Flash duration

Flash duration is commonly described by two numbers that are expressed in fractions of a second:

  • t.1 is the length of time the light intensity is above 0.1 (10%) of the peak intensity
  • t.5 is the length of time the light intensity is above 0.5 (50%) of the peak intensity

For example, a single flash event might have a t.5 value of 1/1200 and t.1 of 1/450. These values determine the ability of a flash to "freeze" moving subjects in applications such as sports photography.

In cases where intensity is controlled by capacitor discharge time, t.5 and t.1 decrease with decreasing intensity. Conversely, in cases where intensity is controlled by capacitor charge, t.5 and t.1 increase with decreasing intensity due to the non-linearity of the capacitor's discharge curve.

Flash LED used in phones

 
Flash LED with charge pump integrated circuit

High-current flash LEDs are used as flash sources in camera phones, although they are less bright than xenon flash tubes. Unlike xenon tubes, LEDs require only a low voltage. They are more energy-efficient, and very small. The LED flash can also be used for illumination of video recordings or as an autofocus assist lamp in low-light photography; it can also be used as a general-purpose non-photographic light source.

Focal-plane-shutter synchronization

Electronic flash units have shutter speed limits with focal-plane shutters. Focal-plane shutters expose using two curtains that cross the sensor. The first one opens and the second curtain follows it after a delay equal to the nominal shutter speed. A typical modern focal-plane shutter on a full-frame or smaller sensor camera takes about 1/400 s to 1/300 s to cross the sensor, so at exposure times shorter than this only part of the sensor is uncovered at any one time.

The time available to fire a single flash which uniformly illuminates the image recorded on the sensor is the exposure time minus the shutter travel time. Equivalently, the minimum possible exposure time is the shutter travel time plus the flash duration (plus any delays in triggering the flash).

For example, a Nikon D850 has a shutter travel time of about 2.4ms.[18] A full-power flash from a modern built-in or hot shoe mounted electronic flash has a typical duration of about 1ms, or a little less, so the minimum possible exposure time for even exposure across the sensor with a full-power flash is about 2.4ms + 1.0 ms = 3.4ms, corresponding to a shutter speed of about 1/290 s. However some time is required to trigger the flash. At the maximum (standard) D850 X-sync shutter speed of 1/250 s, the exposure time is 1/250 s = 4.0ms, so about 4.0ms - 2.4ms = 1.6ms are available to trigger and fire the flash, and with a 1ms flash duration, 1.6ms - 1.0ms = 0.6ms are available to trigger the flash in this Nikon D850 example.

Mid- to high-end Nikon DSLRs with a maximum shutter speed of 1/8000 s (roughly D7000 or D800 and above) have an unusual menu-selectable feature which increases the maximum X-Sync speed to 1/320 s = 3.1ms with some electronic flashes. At 1/320 s only 3.1ms - 2.4ms = 0.7ms are available to trigger and fire the flash while achieving a uniform flash exposure, so the maximum flash duration, and therefore maximum flash output, must be, and is, reduced.

Contemporary (2018) focal-plane shutter cameras with full-frame or smaller sensors typically have maximum normal X-sync speeds of 1/200 s or 1/250 s. Some cameras are limited to 1/160 s. X-sync speeds for medium format cameras when using focal-plane shutters are somewhat slower, e.g. 1/125 s,[19] because of the greater shutter travel time required for a wider, heavier, shutter that travels farther across a larger sensor.

In the past, slow-burning single-use flash bulbs allowed the use of focal-plane shutters at maximum speed because they produced continuous light for the time taken for the exposing slit to cross the film gate. If these are found they cannot be used on modern cameras because the bulb must be fired *before* the first shutter curtain begins to move (M-sync); the X-sync used for electronic flash normally fires only when the first shutter curtain reaches the end of its travel.

High-end flash units address this problem by offering a mode, typically called FP sync or HSS (High Speed Sync), which fires the flash tube multiple times during the time the slit traverses the sensor. Such units require communication with the camera and are thus dedicated to a particular camera make. The multiple flashes result in a significant decrease in guide number, since each is only a part of the total flash power, but it's all that illuminates any particular part of the sensor. In general, if s is the shutter speed, and t is the shutter traverse time, the guide number reduces by s / t. For example, if the guide number is 100, and the shutter traverse time is 5 ms (a shutter speed of 1/200s), and the shutter speed is set to 1/2000 s (0.5 ms), the guide number reduces by a factor of 0.5 / 5, or about 3.16, so the resultant guide number at this speed would be about 32.

Current (2010) flash units frequently have much lower guide numbers in HSS mode than in normal modes, even at speeds below the shutter traverse time. For example, the flash unit has a guide number of 58 in normal operation, but only 20 in HSS mode, even at low speeds.

Technique

 
Image exposed without additional lighting (left) and with fill flash (right)
 
Lighting produced by direct flash (left) and bounced flash (right)

As well as dedicated studio use, flash may be used as the main light source where ambient light is inadequate, or as a supplementary source in more complex lighting situations. Basic flash lighting produces a hard, frontal light unless modified in some way.[20] Several techniques are used to soften light from the flash or provide other effects.

Softboxes, diffusers that cover the flash lamp, scatter direct light and reduce its harshness. Reflectors, including umbrellas, flat-white backgrounds, drapes and reflector cards are commonly used for this purpose (even with small hand-held flash units). Bounce flash is a related technique in which flash is directed onto a reflective surface, for example a white ceiling or a flash umbrella, which then reflects light onto the subject. It can be used as fill-flash or, if used indoors, as ambient lighting for the whole scene. Bouncing creates softer, less artificial-looking illumination than direct flash, often reducing overall contrast and expanding shadow and highlight detail, and typically requires more flash power than direct lighting.[20] Part of the bounced light can be also aimed directly on the subject by "bounce cards" attached to the flash unit which increase the efficiency of the flash and illuminate shadows cast by light coming from the ceiling. It's also possible to use one's own palm for that purpose, resulting in warmer tones on the picture, as well as eliminating the need to carry additional accessories.

Fill flash or "fill-in flash" describes flash used to supplement ambient light in order to illuminate a subject close to the camera that would otherwise be in shade relative to the rest of the scene. The flash unit is set to expose the subject correctly at a given aperture, while shutter speed is calculated to correctly expose for the background or ambient light at that aperture setting. Secondary or slave flash units may be synchronized to the master unit to provide light from additional directions. The slave units are electrically triggered by the light from the master flash. Many small flashes and studio monolights have optical slaves built in. Wireless radio transmitters, such as PocketWizards, allow the receiver unit to be around a corner, or at a distance too far to trigger using an optical sync.

To strobe, some high end units can be set to flash a specified number of times at a specified frequency. This allows action to be frozen multiple times in a single exposure.[21]

Colored gels can also be used to change the color of the flash. Correction gels are commonly used, so that the light of the flash is the same as tungsten lights (using a CTO gel) or fluorescent lights.

Open flash, free flash or manually-triggered flash refers to modes in which the photographer manually triggers the flash unit to fire independently of the shutter.[22]

Drawbacks

 
Flash
 
No flash
Left: the distance limitation as seen when taking picture of the wooden floor. Right: the same picture taken with incandescent ambient light, using a longer exposure and a higher ISO speed setting. The distance is no longer restricted, but the colors are unnatural because of a lack of color temperature compensation, and the picture may suffer from more grain or noise.
 
Using a flash in a museum is mostly prohibited.

Using on-camera flash will give a very harsh light, which results in a loss of shadows in the image, because the only lightsource is in practically the same place as the camera. Balancing the flash power and ambient lighting or using off-camera flash can help overcome these issues. Using an umbrella or softbox (the flash will have to be off-camera for this) makes softer shadows.

A typical problem with cameras using built-in flash units is the low intensity of the flash; the level of light produced will often not suffice for good pictures at distances of over 3 metres (10 ft) or so. Dark, murky pictures with excessive image noise or "grain" will result. In order to get good flash pictures with simple cameras, it is important not to exceed the recommended distance for flash pictures. Larger flashes, especially studio units and monoblocks, have sufficient power for larger distances, even through an umbrella, and can even be used against sunlight at short distances. Cameras which automatically flash in low light conditions often do not take into account the distance to the subject, causing them to fire even when the subject is several tens of metres away and unaffected by the flash. In crowds at sports matches, concerts and so on, the stands or the auditorium can be a constant sea of flashes, resulting in distraction to the performers or players and providing absolutely no benefit to the photographers.

 
Red eye effect

The "red-eye effect" is another problem with on camera and ring flash units. Since the retina of the human eye reflects red light straight back in the direction it came from, pictures taken from straight in front of a face often exhibit this effect. It can be somewhat reduced by using the "red eye reduction" found on many cameras (a pre-flash that makes the subject's irises contract). However, very good results can be obtained only with a flash unit that is separated from the camera, sufficiently far from the optical axis, or by using bounce flash, where the flash head is angled to bounce light off a wall, ceiling or reflector.

On some cameras the flash exposure measuring logic fires a pre-flash very quickly before the real flash. In some camera/people combinations this will lead to shut eyes in every picture taken. The blink response time seems to be around 1/10 of a second. If the exposure flash is fired at approximately this interval after the TTL measuring flash, people will be squinting or have their eyes shut. One solution may be the FEL (flash exposure lock) offered on some more expensive cameras, which allows the photographer to fire the measuring flash at some earlier time, long (many seconds) before taking the real picture. Unfortunately many camera manufacturers do not make the TTL pre-flash interval configurable.

Flash distracts people, limiting the number of pictures that can be taken without irritating them. Photographing with flash may not be permitted in some museums even after purchasing a permit for taking pictures. Flash equipment may take some time to set up, and like any grip equipment, may need to be carefully secured, especially if hanging overhead, so it does not fall on anyone. A small breeze can easily topple a flash with an umbrella on a lightstand if it is not tied down or sandbagged. Larger equipment (e.g., monoblocks) will need a supply of AC power.

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ McNeil, Ian (2002). An Encyclopaedia of the History of Technology. Routledge. pp. 113–114. ISBN 978-1-134-98165-6. from the original on 2018-05-02.
  2. ^ Chapman, James Gardiner (1934). Manchester and Photography. Manchester: Palatine Press. pp. 17–18.
  3. ^ Fisher, Maurice. "History of Flash and Ilford Flashguns". www.photomemorabilia.co.uk.
  4. ^ Jayon, Bill. . Archived from the original on May 4, 2015. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  5. ^ "Taking instantaneous photographs by electric light". Popular Mechanics. Hearst Magazines. 7 (2): 233. February 1905.
  6. ^ Solbert, Oscar N.; Newhall, Beaumont; Card, James G., eds. (November 1953). (PDF). Image, Journal of Photography of George Eastman House. 2 (6): 34. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 26 June 2014.
  7. ^ Wightman, Dr. Eugene P. (PDF). Image, Journal of Photography of George Eastman House. IV (7): 49–50. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 August 2014. Retrieved 4 August 2014.
  8. ^ Anderson, Christopher. "Photoflash bulbs". Darklight Imagery. from the original on 28 August 2014. Retrieved 23 October 2014. The largest flashbulb, the mammoth GE Mazda Type 75, was initially developed to be used as a source of light for night time aerial photography during world war II. The Mazda 75 measured over eight inches long and had a girth of over four inches.
  9. ^ "flashbulbs.com - philips - page 6". www.flashbulbs.com. from the original on 2 May 2018. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  10. ^ "Kodak Unveils 8 'Flashcube' Camera Types", Democrat and Chronicle (Rochester NY), July 9, 1965, pC-1
  11. ^ "Flashcube, Cameras Introduced", Chicago Tribune, July 10, 1965, p2-5
  12. ^ Ivan Tolmachev (19 January 2011). "A Brief History of Photographic Flash". Https. from the original on 25 February 2018. Retrieved 24 February 2018.
  13. ^ Stephen Dowling (23 July 2014). "Harold Edgerton: The man who froze time". BBC. from the original on 30 January 2018. Retrieved 24 February 2018.
  14. ^ For example, the Nikon Medical Nikkor Lens 2015-07-29 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Nicholls, Kyle. . Photo.net. Archived from the original on 25 January 2012. Retrieved 28 December 2011.
  16. ^ "Studio Flash Explained: Flash Duration". Paul C. Buff, Inc. Retrieved 19 November 2022.
  17. ^ (PDF). Paul C. Buff, Inc. p. 13. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 July 2013. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
  18. ^ "How fast is the Nikon 850 electronic shutter?". Jim Kasson. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  19. ^ "Fujifilm GFX 50R Specifications". Fujifilm. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  20. ^ a b Langford, Michael (2000). Basic Photography (7th ed.). Focal Press/Butterworth Heinemann. p. 117. ISBN 978-0-240-51592-2.
  21. ^ "Stobe Tips". Addendum. June 12, 2010.
  22. ^ George, Chris (2008). Mastering Digital Flash Photography: The Complete Reference Guide. Lark Books. pp. 102–. ISBN 9781600592096. from the original on 2018-05-02.

Further reading

  • Wood, Deloris (1975). The Importance of Artificial Light in the Development of Night Photography (PDF). Annual Meeting of the Association for Education in Journalism (Ottawa,Canada, August 1975).
  • Hallett, Michael (1986). "Early magnesium light portraits". History of Photography. 10 (4): 299–301. doi:10.1080/03087298.1986.10443745.
  • Davenport, Alma (1991). The History of Photography: An Overview. UNM Press. pp. 26–. ISBN 978-0-8263-2076-6.
  • Ward, Gerald W. R. (2008). The Grove Encyclopedia of Materials and Techniques in Art. Oxford University Press. pp. 490–. ISBN 978-0-19-531391-8.
  • Hannavy, John (2013). Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-Century Photography. Routledge. pp. –84. ISBN 978-1-135-87327-1.
  • Peres, Michael R. (2013). The Focal Encyclopedia of Photography. Taylor & Francis. pp. 754–. ISBN 978-1-136-10614-9.

External links

  • . PhotoNotes.org. 12 December 2010.
  • "A Minolta/Sony Alpha Flash Compendium". Fotografie.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-05-29. Retrieved 2006-09-19. (87.2 KB). Gordon McKinney.
  • List of flashbulbs models. David L. Brittain.
  • Flash comparison chart 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine. Bart Zieba Photography.

flash, photography, partial, exposure, technique, still, photography, motion, pictures, flashing, cinematography, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, . For the partial exposure technique in still photography and motion pictures see Flashing cinematography This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Flash photography news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message A flash is a device used in photography that produces a brief burst of light typically lasting 1 1000 to 1 200 of a second at a color temperature of about 5500 K citation needed to help illuminate a scene A major purpose of a flash is to illuminate a dark scene Other uses are capturing quickly moving objects or changing the quality of light Flash refers either to the flash of light itself or to the electronic flash unit discharging the light Most current flash units are electronic having evolved from single use flashbulbs and flammable powders Modern cameras often activate flash units automatically The high speed wing action of a hummingbird hawk moth is frozen by flash The flash has given the foreground more illumination than the background See Inverse square law source source source source source source source source source source Video demonstration of high speed flash photography Flash units are commonly built directly into a camera Some cameras allow separate flash units to be mounted via a standardized accessory mount bracket a hot shoe In professional studio equipment flashes may be large standalone units or studio strobes powered by special battery packs or connected to mains power They are either synchronized with the camera using a flash synchronization cable or radio signal or are light triggered meaning that only one flash unit needs to be synchronized with the camera and in turn triggers the other units called slaves Contents 1 Types 1 1 Flash lamp Flash powder 1 2 Flashbulbs 1 2 1 Flashcubes Magicubes and Flipflash 1 3 Electronic flash 1 4 High speed flash 1 5 Multi flash 1 6 Flash intensity 1 7 Flash duration 1 8 Flash LED used in phones 1 9 Focal plane shutter synchronization 2 Technique 3 Drawbacks 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksTypes EditFlash lamp Flash powder Edit Main article Flash lamp Demonstration of a magnesium flash powder lamp from 1909Studies of magnesium by Bunsen and Roscoe in 1859 showed that burning this metal produced a light with similar qualities to daylight The potential application to photography inspired Edward Sonstadt to investigate methods of manufacturing magnesium so that it would burn reliably for this use He applied for patents in 1862 and by 1864 had started the Manchester Magnesium Company with Edward Mellor With the help of engineer William Mather who was also a director of the company they produced flat magnesium ribbon which was said to burn more consistently and completely so giving better illumination than round wire It also had the benefit of being a simpler and cheaper process than making round wire 1 Mather was also credited with the invention of a holder for the ribbon which formed a lamp to burn it in 2 A variety of magnesium ribbon holders were produced by other manufacturers such as the Pistol Flashmeter 3 which incorporated an inscribed ruler that allowed the photographer to use the correct length of ribbon for the exposure they needed The packaging also implies that the magnesium ribbon was not necessarily broken off before being ignited Vintage AHA smokeless flash powder lamp kit GermanyAn alternative to magnesium ribbon was flash powder a mixture of magnesium powder and potassium chlorate was introduced by its German inventors Adolf Miethe and Johannes Gaedicke in 1887 A measured amount was put into a pan or trough and ignited by hand producing a brief brilliant flash of light along with the smoke and noise that might be expected from such an explosive event This could be a life threatening activity especially if the flash powder was damp 4 An electrically triggered flash lamp was invented by Joshua Lionel Cowen in 1899 His patent describes a device for igniting photographers flash powder by using dry cell batteries to heat a wire fuse Variations and alternatives were touted from time to time and a few found a measure of success especially for amateur use In 1905 one French photographer was using intense non explosive flashes produced by a special mechanized carbon arc lamp to photograph subjects in his studio 5 but more portable and less expensive devices prevailed On through the 1920s flash photography normally meant a professional photographer sprinkling powder into the trough of a T shaped flash lamp holding it aloft then triggering a brief and usually harmless bit of pyrotechnics Flashbulbs Edit Ernst Leitz Wetzlar flash from 1950s Flashbulbs have ranged in size from the diminutive AG 1 to the massive No 75 Kodak Brownie Hawkeye with Kodalite Flasholder and Sylvania P25 blue dot daylight type flashbulb The AG 1 flashbulb introduced in 1958 used wires protruding from its base as electrical contacts this eliminated the need for a separate metal base The use of flash powder in an open lamp was replaced by flashbulbs magnesium filaments were contained in bulbs filled with oxygen gas and electrically ignited by a contact in the camera shutter 6 Manufactured flashbulbs were first produced commercially in Germany in 1929 7 Such a bulb could only be used once and was too hot to handle immediately after use but the confinement of what would otherwise have amounted to a small explosion was an important advance A later innovation was the coating of flashbulbs with a plastic film to maintain bulb integrity in the event of the glass shattering during the flash A blue plastic film was introduced as an option to match the spectral quality of the flash to daylight balanced colour film Subsequently the magnesium was replaced by zirconium which produced a brighter flash There was a significant delay after ignition for a flashbulb to reach full brightness and the bulb burned for a relatively long time compared to shutter speeds required to stop motion and not display camera shake Slower shutter speeds typically from 1 10 to 1 50 of a second were initially used on cameras to ensure proper synchronization and to make use of all the bulb s light output Cameras with flash sync triggered the flashbulb a fraction of a second before opening the shutter to allow it to reach full brightness allowing faster shutter speeds A flashbulb widely used during the 1960s was the Press 25 the 25 millimetre 1 in flashbulb often used by newspapermen in period movies usually attached to a press camera or a twin lens reflex camera Its peak light output was around a million lumens Other flashbulbs in common use were the M series M 2 M 3 etc which had a small miniature metal bayonet base fused to the glass bulb The largest flashbulb ever produced was the GE Mazda No 75 being over eight inches long with a girth of 14 inches initially developed for nighttime aerial photography during World War II 8 The all glass PF1 bulb was introduced in 1954 9 Eliminating the metal base and the multiple manufacturing steps needed to attach it to the glass bulb cut the cost substantially compared to the larger M series bulbs The design required a fibre ring around the base to hold the contact wires against the side of the glass base An adapter was available allowing the bulb to fit into flash guns made for bayonet capped bulbs The PF1 along with the M2 had a faster ignition time less delay between shutter contact and peak output so it could be used with X synch below 1 30 of a second while most bulbs require a shutter speed of 1 15 on X synch to keep the shutter open long enough for the bulb to ignite and burn A smaller version which was not as bright but did not require the fibre ring the AG 1 was introduced in 1958 it was cheaper and rapidly supplanted the PF1 Flashcubes Magicubes and Flipflash Edit Flashcube fitted to a Kodak Instamatic camera showing both unused left and used right bulbs Undersides of Flashcube left and Magicube right cartridges Flip flash type cartridgeIn 1965 Eastman Kodak of Rochester New York replaced the individual flashbulb technology used on early Instamatic cameras with the Flashcube developed by Sylvania Electric Products 10 11 A flashcube was a module with four expendable flashbulbs each mounted at 90 from the others in its own reflector For use it was mounted atop the camera with an electrical connection to the shutter release and a battery inside the camera After each flash exposure the film advance mechanism also rotated the flashcube 90 to a fresh bulb This arrangement allowed the user to take four images in rapid succession before inserting a new flashcube The later Magicube or X Cube by General Electric retained the four bulb format but did not require electrical power It was not interchangeable with the original Flashcube Each bulb in a Magicube was set off by releasing one of four cocked wire springs within the cube The spring struck a primer tube at the base of the bulb which contained a fulminate which in turn ignited shredded zirconium foil in the flash A Magicube could also be fired using a key or paper clip to trip the spring manually X cube was an alternate name for Magicubes indicating the appearance of the camera s socket Other common flashbulb based devices were the Flashbar and Flipflash which provided ten flashes from a single unit The bulbs in a Flipflash were set in a vertical array putting a distance between the bulb and the lens eliminating red eye The Flipflash name derived from the fact that once half the flashbulbs had been used the unit had to be flipped over and re inserted to use the remaining bulbs In many Flipflash cameras the bulbs were ignited by electrical currents produced when a piezoelectric crystal was struck mechanically by a spring loaded striker which was cocked each time the film was advanced Electronic flash Edit The electronic flash tube was introduced by Harold Eugene Edgerton in 1931 12 The electronic flash reaches full brightness almost instantaneously and is of very short duration Edgerton took advantage of the short duration to make several iconic photographs such as one of a bullet bursting through an apple The large photographic company Kodak was initially reluctant to take up the idea 13 Electronic flash often called strobe in the US following Edgerton s use of the technique for stroboscopy came into some use in the late 1950s although flashbulbs remained dominant in amateur photography until the mid 1970s Early units were expensive and often large and heavy the power unit was separate from the flash head and was powered by a large lead acid battery carried with a shoulder strap Towards the end of the 1960s electronic flashguns of similar size to conventional bulb guns became available the price although it had dropped was still high The electronic flash system eventually superseded bulb guns as prices came down Already in the early 1970s amateur electronic flashes were available for less than 100 A typical electronic flash unit has electronic circuitry to charge a high capacitance capacitor to several hundred volts When the flash is triggered by the shutter s flash synchronization contact the capacitor is discharged rapidly through a permanent flash tube producing an immediate flash lasting typically less than 1 1000 of a second shorter than shutter speeds used with full brightness before the shutter has started to close allowing easy synchronization of maximum shutter opening with full flash brightness unlike flashbulbs which were slower to reach full brightness and burned for a longer time typically 1 30 of a second The built in flash of a SLR camera Pentax MZ 30 firingA single electronic flash unit is often mounted on a camera s accessory shoe or a bracket many inexpensive cameras have an electronic flash unit built in For more sophisticated and longer range lighting several synchronised flash units at different positions may be used Two professional xenon tube flashesRing flashes that fit to a camera s lens can be used for shadow free portrait and macro photography some lenses have built in ring flash 14 In a photographic studio more powerful and flexible studio flash systems are used They usually contain a modelling light a lamp close to the flash tube the continuous illumination of the modelling light lets the photographer visualize the effect of the flash LED lamps are replacing the previous incandescent light bulbs in new designs modelling lights typically being proportionately variable to flash power require dimmable LEDs and suitable circuitry in the head Multiple flashes may be synchronised for multi source lighting The strength of a flash device is often indicated in terms of a guide number designed to simplify exposure setting The energy released by larger studio flash units such as monolights is indicated in watt seconds Canon names its electronic flash units Speedlite and Nikon uses Speedlight these terms are frequently used as generic terms for electronic flash units designed to be mounted on and triggered by a camera hot shoe High speed flash Edit An air gap flash is a high voltage device that discharges a flash of light with an exceptionally short duration often much less than one microsecond These are commonly used by scientists or engineers for examining extremely fast moving objects or reactions famous for producing images of bullets tearing through light bulbs and balloons see Harold Eugene Edgerton An example of a process by which to create a high speed flash is the exploding wire method A photo of a Smith amp Wesson Model 686 firing taken with a high speed air gap flash The photo was taken in a darkened room with camera s shutter open and the flash was triggered by the sound of the shot using a microphone Multi flash Edit A camera that implements multiple flashes can be used to find depth edges or create stylized images Such a camera has been developed by researchers at the Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories MERL Successive flashing of strategically placed flash mechanisms results in shadows along the depths of the scene This information can be manipulated to suppress or enhance details or capture the intricate geometric features of a scene even those hidden from the eye to create a non photorealistic image form Such images could be useful in technical or medical imaging 15 Flash intensity Edit Unlike flashbulbs the intensity of an electronic flash can be adjusted on some units To do this smaller flash units typically vary the capacitor discharge time whereas larger e g higher power studio units typically vary the capacitor charge Color temperature can change as a result of varying the capacitor charge making color correction necessary Constant color temperature flash can be achieved by using appropriate circuitry 16 Flash intensity is typically measured in stops or in fractions 1 1 2 1 4 1 8 etc Some monolights display an EV Number so that a photographer can know the difference in brightness between different flash units with different watt second ratings EV10 0 is defined as 6400 watt seconds and EV9 0 is one stop lower i e 3200 watt seconds 17 Flash duration Edit Flash duration is commonly described by two numbers that are expressed in fractions of a second t 1 is the length of time the light intensity is above 0 1 10 of the peak intensity t 5 is the length of time the light intensity is above 0 5 50 of the peak intensityFor example a single flash event might have a t 5 value of 1 1200 and t 1 of 1 450 These values determine the ability of a flash to freeze moving subjects in applications such as sports photography In cases where intensity is controlled by capacitor discharge time t 5 and t 1 decrease with decreasing intensity Conversely in cases where intensity is controlled by capacitor charge t 5 and t 1 increase with decreasing intensity due to the non linearity of the capacitor s discharge curve Flash LED used in phones Edit Flash LED with charge pump integrated circuitHigh current flash LEDs are used as flash sources in camera phones although they are less bright than xenon flash tubes Unlike xenon tubes LEDs require only a low voltage They are more energy efficient and very small The LED flash can also be used for illumination of video recordings or as an autofocus assist lamp in low light photography it can also be used as a general purpose non photographic light source Focal plane shutter synchronization Edit Electronic flash units have shutter speed limits with focal plane shutters Focal plane shutters expose using two curtains that cross the sensor The first one opens and the second curtain follows it after a delay equal to the nominal shutter speed A typical modern focal plane shutter on a full frame or smaller sensor camera takes about 1 400 s to 1 300 s to cross the sensor so at exposure times shorter than this only part of the sensor is uncovered at any one time The time available to fire a single flash which uniformly illuminates the image recorded on the sensor is the exposure time minus the shutter travel time Equivalently the minimum possible exposure time is the shutter travel time plus the flash duration plus any delays in triggering the flash For example a Nikon D850 has a shutter travel time of about 2 4ms 18 A full power flash from a modern built in or hot shoe mounted electronic flash has a typical duration of about 1ms or a little less so the minimum possible exposure time for even exposure across the sensor with a full power flash is about 2 4ms 1 0 ms 3 4ms corresponding to a shutter speed of about 1 290 s However some time is required to trigger the flash At the maximum standard D850 X sync shutter speed of 1 250 s the exposure time is 1 250 s 4 0ms so about 4 0ms 2 4ms 1 6ms are available to trigger and fire the flash and with a 1ms flash duration 1 6ms 1 0ms 0 6ms are available to trigger the flash in this Nikon D850 example Mid to high end Nikon DSLRs with a maximum shutter speed of 1 8000 s roughly D7000 or D800 and above have an unusual menu selectable feature which increases the maximum X Sync speed to 1 320 s 3 1ms with some electronic flashes At 1 320 s only 3 1ms 2 4ms 0 7ms are available to trigger and fire the flash while achieving a uniform flash exposure so the maximum flash duration and therefore maximum flash output must be and is reduced Contemporary 2018 focal plane shutter cameras with full frame or smaller sensors typically have maximum normal X sync speeds of 1 200 s or 1 250 s Some cameras are limited to 1 160 s X sync speeds for medium format cameras when using focal plane shutters are somewhat slower e g 1 125 s 19 because of the greater shutter travel time required for a wider heavier shutter that travels farther across a larger sensor In the past slow burning single use flash bulbs allowed the use of focal plane shutters at maximum speed because they produced continuous light for the time taken for the exposing slit to cross the film gate If these are found they cannot be used on modern cameras because the bulb must be fired before the first shutter curtain begins to move M sync the X sync used for electronic flash normally fires only when the first shutter curtain reaches the end of its travel High end flash units address this problem by offering a mode typically called FP sync or HSS High Speed Sync which fires the flash tube multiple times during the time the slit traverses the sensor Such units require communication with the camera and are thus dedicated to a particular camera make The multiple flashes result in a significant decrease in guide number since each is only a part of the total flash power but it s all that illuminates any particular part of the sensor In general if s is the shutter speed and t is the shutter traverse time the guide number reduces by s t For example if the guide number is 100 and the shutter traverse time is 5 ms a shutter speed of 1 200s and the shutter speed is set to 1 2000 s 0 5 ms the guide number reduces by a factor of 0 5 5 or about 3 16 so the resultant guide number at this speed would be about 32 Current 2010 flash units frequently have much lower guide numbers in HSS mode than in normal modes even at speeds below the shutter traverse time For example the Mecablitz 58 AF 1 digital flash unit has a guide number of 58 in normal operation but only 20 in HSS mode even at low speeds Technique Edit Image exposed without additional lighting left and with fill flash right Lighting produced by direct flash left and bounced flash right As well as dedicated studio use flash may be used as the main light source where ambient light is inadequate or as a supplementary source in more complex lighting situations Basic flash lighting produces a hard frontal light unless modified in some way 20 Several techniques are used to soften light from the flash or provide other effects Softboxes diffusers that cover the flash lamp scatter direct light and reduce its harshness Reflectors including umbrellas flat white backgrounds drapes and reflector cards are commonly used for this purpose even with small hand held flash units Bounce flash is a related technique in which flash is directed onto a reflective surface for example a white ceiling or a flash umbrella which then reflects light onto the subject It can be used as fill flash or if used indoors as ambient lighting for the whole scene Bouncing creates softer less artificial looking illumination than direct flash often reducing overall contrast and expanding shadow and highlight detail and typically requires more flash power than direct lighting 20 Part of the bounced light can be also aimed directly on the subject by bounce cards attached to the flash unit which increase the efficiency of the flash and illuminate shadows cast by light coming from the ceiling It s also possible to use one s own palm for that purpose resulting in warmer tones on the picture as well as eliminating the need to carry additional accessories Fill flash or fill in flash describes flash used to supplement ambient light in order to illuminate a subject close to the camera that would otherwise be in shade relative to the rest of the scene The flash unit is set to expose the subject correctly at a given aperture while shutter speed is calculated to correctly expose for the background or ambient light at that aperture setting Secondary or slave flash units may be synchronized to the master unit to provide light from additional directions The slave units are electrically triggered by the light from the master flash Many small flashes and studio monolights have optical slaves built in Wireless radio transmitters such as PocketWizards allow the receiver unit to be around a corner or at a distance too far to trigger using an optical sync To strobe some high end units can be set to flash a specified number of times at a specified frequency This allows action to be frozen multiple times in a single exposure 21 Colored gels can also be used to change the color of the flash Correction gels are commonly used so that the light of the flash is the same as tungsten lights using a CTO gel or fluorescent lights Open flash free flash or manually triggered flash refers to modes in which the photographer manually triggers the flash unit to fire independently of the shutter 22 Drawbacks Edit Flash No flashLeft the distance limitation as seen when taking picture of the wooden floor Right the same picture taken with incandescent ambient light using a longer exposure and a higher ISO speed setting The distance is no longer restricted but the colors are unnatural because of a lack of color temperature compensation and the picture may suffer from more grain or noise Using a flash in a museum is mostly prohibited Using on camera flash will give a very harsh light which results in a loss of shadows in the image because the only lightsource is in practically the same place as the camera Balancing the flash power and ambient lighting or using off camera flash can help overcome these issues Using an umbrella or softbox the flash will have to be off camera for this makes softer shadows A typical problem with cameras using built in flash units is the low intensity of the flash the level of light produced will often not suffice for good pictures at distances of over 3 metres 10 ft or so Dark murky pictures with excessive image noise or grain will result In order to get good flash pictures with simple cameras it is important not to exceed the recommended distance for flash pictures Larger flashes especially studio units and monoblocks have sufficient power for larger distances even through an umbrella and can even be used against sunlight at short distances Cameras which automatically flash in low light conditions often do not take into account the distance to the subject causing them to fire even when the subject is several tens of metres away and unaffected by the flash In crowds at sports matches concerts and so on the stands or the auditorium can be a constant sea of flashes resulting in distraction to the performers or players and providing absolutely no benefit to the photographers Red eye effectThe red eye effect is another problem with on camera and ring flash units Since the retina of the human eye reflects red light straight back in the direction it came from pictures taken from straight in front of a face often exhibit this effect It can be somewhat reduced by using the red eye reduction found on many cameras a pre flash that makes the subject s irises contract However very good results can be obtained only with a flash unit that is separated from the camera sufficiently far from the optical axis or by using bounce flash where the flash head is angled to bounce light off a wall ceiling or reflector On some cameras the flash exposure measuring logic fires a pre flash very quickly before the real flash In some camera people combinations this will lead to shut eyes in every picture taken The blink response time seems to be around 1 10 of a second If the exposure flash is fired at approximately this interval after the TTL measuring flash people will be squinting or have their eyes shut One solution may be the FEL flash exposure lock offered on some more expensive cameras which allows the photographer to fire the measuring flash at some earlier time long many seconds before taking the real picture Unfortunately many camera manufacturers do not make the TTL pre flash interval configurable Flash distracts people limiting the number of pictures that can be taken without irritating them Photographing with flash may not be permitted in some museums even after purchasing a permit for taking pictures Flash equipment may take some time to set up and like any grip equipment may need to be carefully secured especially if hanging overhead so it does not fall on anyone A small breeze can easily topple a flash with an umbrella on a lightstand if it is not tied down or sandbagged Larger equipment e g monoblocks will need a supply of AC power Gallery Edit Front and back views of an Agfa Tully flash attachment for AG 1 flashbulbs 1960 Metz 171 mecablitz Compact electronic flash Made in Germany Metz Werke GmbH amp Co KG 1967 Metz 171 mecablitz compact electronic flash disassembled Bauer E 251 Compact automatic flash with built in rechargeable battery Made in Germany Robert Bosch Photokino GMBH 1969 Bauer E 251 electronic flash disassembled Front and back views of a Minolta Auto 28 electronic flashlamp ca 1978See also EditBattery capacitor flash List of photographic equipment makers Flash comparison Flashtube Through the lens meteringReferences Edit McNeil Ian 2002 An Encyclopaedia of the History of Technology Routledge pp 113 114 ISBN 978 1 134 98165 6 Archived from the original on 2018 05 02 Chapman James Gardiner 1934 Manchester and Photography Manchester Palatine Press pp 17 18 Fisher Maurice History of Flash and Ilford Flashguns www photomemorabilia co uk Jayon Bill Dangers in the Dark Archived from the original on May 4 2015 Retrieved 25 July 2014 Taking instantaneous photographs by electric light Popular Mechanics Hearst Magazines 7 2 233 February 1905 Solbert Oscar N Newhall Beaumont Card James G eds November 1953 The First Flash Bulb PDF Image Journal of Photography of George Eastman House 2 6 34 Archived from the original PDF on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 26 June 2014 Wightman Dr Eugene P Photoflash 62 Years Ago PDF Image Journal of Photography of George Eastman House IV 7 49 50 Archived from the original PDF on 9 August 2014 Retrieved 4 August 2014 Anderson Christopher Photoflash bulbs Darklight Imagery Archived from the original on 28 August 2014 Retrieved 23 October 2014 The largest flashbulb the mammoth GE Mazda Type 75 was initially developed to be used as a source of light for night time aerial photography during world war II The Mazda 75 measured over eight inches long and had a girth of over four inches flashbulbs com philips page 6 www flashbulbs com Archived from the original on 2 May 2018 Retrieved 2 May 2018 Kodak Unveils 8 Flashcube Camera Types Democrat and Chronicle Rochester NY July 9 1965 pC 1 Flashcube Cameras Introduced Chicago Tribune July 10 1965 p2 5 Ivan Tolmachev 19 January 2011 A Brief History of Photographic Flash Https Archived from the original on 25 February 2018 Retrieved 24 February 2018 Stephen Dowling 23 July 2014 Harold Edgerton The man who froze time BBC Archived from the original on 30 January 2018 Retrieved 24 February 2018 For example the Nikon Medical Nikkor Lens Archived 2015 07 29 at the Wayback Machine Nicholls Kyle Non photorealistic Camera Photo net Archived from the original on 25 January 2012 Retrieved 28 December 2011 Studio Flash Explained Flash Duration Paul C Buff Inc Retrieved 19 November 2022 Einstein User Manual Operation Instructions PDF Paul C Buff Inc p 13 Archived from the original PDF on 1 July 2013 Retrieved 5 July 2013 How fast is the Nikon 850 electronic shutter Jim Kasson Retrieved 4 December 2018 Fujifilm GFX 50R Specifications Fujifilm Retrieved 4 December 2018 a b Langford Michael 2000 Basic Photography 7th ed Focal Press Butterworth Heinemann p 117 ISBN 978 0 240 51592 2 Stobe Tips Addendum June 12 2010 George Chris 2008 Mastering Digital Flash Photography The Complete Reference Guide Lark Books pp 102 ISBN 9781600592096 Archived from the original on 2018 05 02 Further reading EditWood Deloris 1975 The Importance of Artificial Light in the Development of Night Photography PDF Annual Meeting of the Association for Education in Journalism Ottawa Canada August 1975 Hallett Michael 1986 Early magnesium light portraits History of Photography 10 4 299 301 doi 10 1080 03087298 1986 10443745 Davenport Alma 1991 The History of Photography An Overview UNM Press pp 26 ISBN 978 0 8263 2076 6 Ward Gerald W R 2008 The Grove Encyclopedia of Materials and Techniques in Art Oxford University Press pp 490 ISBN 978 0 19 531391 8 Hannavy John 2013 Encyclopedia of Nineteenth Century Photography Routledge pp 84 ISBN 978 1 135 87327 1 Peres Michael R 2013 The Focal Encyclopedia of Photography Taylor amp Francis pp 754 ISBN 978 1 136 10614 9 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Flash photography Flash Photography with Canon EOS Cameras Part I PhotoNotes org 12 December 2010 A Minolta Sony Alpha Flash Compendium Fotografie Photographic Cheat Sheet PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 05 29 Retrieved 2006 09 19 87 2 KB Gordon McKinney List of flashbulbs models David L Brittain Flash comparison chart Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine Bart Zieba Photography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flash photography amp oldid 1166586130, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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