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Prom queen flashes the school crossing attendant.

94-95

hair tv

tv pits

old town

fashion valley pits 95-96

flash solo super cbn

Flash Gordon / Heft-Reihe

Das Experiment des Dr. Zarkow

art: Alex Raymond

Zeitchriftenverlag Heinz Pollischansky (Wien / Österreich; 1975)

Copyright: King Features Syndicate (N.Y.) / Bulls Pressedienst (Frankfurt / Deutschland)

ex libris MTP

www.comics.org/issue/781814/

Eu não gosto de tirar fotos normais, por isso testei no meu amigo uma técnica nova. Mandei um flash repentino em seus olhos e gostei do resultado. Ele deve estar vendo estrelas até hoje, mas ... (A propósito ele tem fotos bacanas no site dele, visitem: www.henryhingst.com/)

Experement from DIYphotography.net

Bright sunny day

Subject sat on bench

Yongnuo YN560 on the floor at full power aimed at face triggered by cheap radio trigger

Fstop 22

After three days walking past the community chalkboard with all the Flash Player fandom, I couldn't resist drawing a small comic-book Flash logo.

Flash diffusion Henry. Testing Sony A7 rig. Focus stacked using zerene

Argh the flash!

Two DIY flash modifiers I made today. One is a simple mini-softbox similar to a previous design. It differs in that it's made from foam core and uses white cloth as it diffusing material.

 

The other is a new design.

 

Alcohol bottles are a commonly used to create DIY diffusers. But this one is a little different.

 

It's a large sized round (cylinder) bottle made with the same translucent white plastic making it ideal softening/diffusing material.

 

I built this as though it were a mini-softbox, but with a round opening allowing for the severed bottle to fit snugly.

 

The "softbox" protrudes about 2.5 from the flash, and the bottle about 2 inches with a 4 inch diameter.

 

It's sized to fit to a Vivitar 285HV flash, and is held on using Velcro straps.

 

Materials used:

-empty large alcohol bottle

-black foam core

-black gaffers take

-velcro

-epoxy

-white clothe

-white paint

 

Tools used:

-matte knife

-ruler

-pencil

-cutting mat

-stapler

-Leatherman multi-tool

-paint brush

"She don't believe in shooting stars but she believe in shoes and cars."

Taken in a studio using studio flashes to freeze the action of dancers making dance forms while in the air.

 

© 2017 Trevor Ager - Brightpix Photography

6x6 negatives, fuji pro 160, Vivitar 283 flash and guide, f130.

 

Using our liquor cabinet as a filter.

flash flood waterfall in canyonlands near moab. utah. video. one hour after the video was shot there was not a drop of red colored water flowing.

flash held up on a 45 degree angle by the make up artist that i was taking pictures for in an old theatre in Glasgow

  

Taken in a studio using studio flashes to freeze the action of dancers making dance forms while in the air.

This was taken with a slow shutter to show motion.

 

© 2017 Trevor Ager - Brightpix Photography

Flash!

 

ODC TO COP A PLEA!

 

GUILTY OR NOT GUILTY?

 

Our Daily Challenge

"When I Grow Up"

 

Pictured:

 

A vintage Kodak Duaflex IV Camera.

 

A dated May 16, 1911 Sacramento Bee newspaper

 

A Fedora hat.

 

I have a newspaper from the day I was born, but could not find it today...

Flash Gordon / Heft-Reihe

Flash is back!

cover: ?

Whitman / Gold Key Publications Inc.

(New York/USA; 1978)

ex libris MTP

www.comics.org/issue/1436907/

Taken out the window of my house on Hallow'een. My favourite personal shot and quite a lucky one too! Cropped slightly for effect.

Flash durations for an ancient garden-variety thyristor flash, and, for comparison, the Pentax K100D's internal flash. Durations measured by the scope at the 20% of peak amplitude points.

  

Cash Flash

2004 S Sycamore Street, Petersburg, VA

 

This location opened in the mid 2010s; it was originally a High's Ice Cream, which opened in January 1962. It became a Little Caesars in either the late 1980s or sometime in the 1990s, which relocated here in 2012.

This is a Ruger Redhawk chambered in .44 Magnum. The Muzzle flash was so big that you can't see the gun! Not photoshopped.

The building blocks for my flash power mod:

 

One battery charger adapter cable and a random plastic part thats main shaft just happened to be the same size as an AA battery!

The charger has a 3.5mm mono plug for some reason and this adapter allows it to connect directly to the battery terminals which are the spade lug style. I had hoped to use the charger as a direct power source but for some reason it took more than 10sec's to recharge the flash (I turned it off after that time thinking something wasn't right, although it had charged it initially and fired ok).

 

Extra Strobist: Shot in my cheapo Strobist macro studio with an SB800 firing through the top/right @ 1/8 -2/3 power.

My first flash! Year! I Love it! :-) A little bit edit by Flickr filter!

pictures taken at a workshop organised by London Photographic meetup group

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