Can I photograph an ice cube or similar splash shot without a specialist trigger?
He’s working full time from home, so there’s just a little extra time in his life (the saved commute 3 days a week)He's maybe got all day
That’s my fearIt's possible but could prove rather frustrating!
He’s working full time from home, so there’s just a little extra time in his life (the saved commute 3 days a week)
Trouble is if the ice is dropping into a whiskey then by the sixth take you will be p*ssed
A question.
If it triggers in 0.1 millisecond could that be too fast? Could it trigger when the moving object enters the frame and before it hits the liquid? Or is there a way to delay it firing?
It doesn't say, I suppose you would need to put the beam over the fluid surface
https://opteka.com/products/opteka-...life-trigger-for-canon-eos-nikon-dslr-cameras
Eh?Universal Credit at a guess.
You know the rules.
Trouble is if the ice is dropping into a whiskey then by the sixth take you will be p*ssed
If you are suggesting that’s what I do... I also know the rules for lots of other benefits, I may have worked for DWP at some point, and I know a lot of people who do. Also HMRC, the Home Office.Universal Credit at a guess.
You know the rules.
Well done you.If you are suggesting that’s what I do... I also know the rules for lots of other benefits, I may have worked for DWP at some point, and I know a lot of people who do. Also HMRC, the Home Office.
This would have probably been a better option than the trigger - I used a 6d and mains lighting so that wouldn't have been useful, but I could have used a 7d and an AD200 which could have done what you suggest.How many flashes can your setup do in one burst? Might be worth trying a machine gun approach using a higher ISO and lower powered flashes. That might should probably read MIGHT!!!