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- sello
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hi, hope you are all good. i have a quick question. what is rear curtain sync and when is it used?
If it is the course must be much better than the BTEC course my Daughter did - which hardly touched on real photography, instead concentrating on how you can play with prints to make 3D stacked images etc. I'd describe it as graphic art. Camera settings seemed to be covered in one week with nothing at all on lighting.Welcome to Talk Photography, we seem to have picked up a number of new members with technical questions, is this your photography course homework?
hi, hope you are all good. i have a quick question. what is rear curtain sync and when is it used?
Welcome to Talk Photography, we seem to have picked up a number of new members with technical questions, is this your photography course homework?
If it is the course must be much better than the BTEC course my Daughter did - which hardly touched on real photography, instead concentrating on how you can play with prints to make 3D stacked images etc. I'd describe it as graphic art. Camera settings seemed to be covered in one week with nothing at all on lighting.
Rear curtain sinc involves firing the flash just before the shutter starts to close allowing a dim picture of the preceding porting of the exposure to be finished off with a sharp flash image. It can be used to leave a visible trail behind a moving object.
As a general rule I’ll use rear curtain synch when using flash with anything moving. It looks more natural to have trails of the subject behind.
I use mine when taking photographs
Hi Sello, And welcome aboard TP. "Enjoy"
is that so?