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Uneternal
5 months ago

Softer shade, the bigger your diffuser, the softer the shadow.

First picture is direct lightning. In the second picture, the lightning was directed onto a wall. Various diffusers were used for the others. Gary Fong is popular and there are many cheap China copies of it.

darkhouse
5 months ago

Yes, compared to softer shadow curves, softer contrast lines, depending on the color of the scatter disc, you have warmer light, but I use more indirect lightning upwards, looks a little more natural. Just compare yourself.

RareDevil
5 months ago

Distance and frontal light?

Diffusor/Softboxes are used laterally to get softer light (no hard shadow edges). Here, too, there are many videos and info pages with example images of the lighting effect. Frontal remains frontal. As a lightning flash quite much better as hard flashed, than my own light source still too flat… Through lateral light, just other contrasts and contours are accentuated differently… For produc photography, however, it makes sense when the light comes from the front. That’s what I remember. But it’s been a long time since I read myself in flash photography… (so about 8 years+…) Therefore, my stand may not be 100%

I can only give you the advice to inform you on div pages and videos about the effects of flashlights. This will save you a lot of questions that you are trying to clarify here in detail. The quality of information increases enormously in comparison with the individual responses listed here on each individual question…