View allAll Photos Tagged flashlight
After the Uptown Christmas Party, we rifled though our goodie bags and found a LED flashlight. With a little help from my roomate, we made some cool photos.
Today, I got inspired to break out the camera and shoot an apple.
Low and behold, I was missing a battery in my flash. So, no strobe lighting here!
I used a small LED flashlight that you put on your head when you go hiking!
I also used a mirror to fill in the shadows on the opposite side of the apple.
The 50mm stopped down to f1.8. Hand held!
It's wierd cuz f1.8 doesn't keep much in focus, giving it a "painted" look. The apple being round, there is only be a few points fully in focus.
Go on... have a bite!
A wonderful melding of the work of the greats; Jeff Hanko and Steve Ku. The JHanko Reverse 3D V10R features the Veleno kit parts; 6x Tritium/Titanium electronic switch, 12x Tritium Fins and the very rare 18500 and 18650 bodies which have been reshaped by Jeff with permission from Steve.
The GTLS (Gaseous Tritium Light Source) vials in the tail have been cleverly drilled in the rear and along with a raised switch bevel create a JHanko signature 'Reverse 3D' effect never before seen!
These very decorative and functional lights take any battery chemistry from NiMh (1.2v) through LiMN (4.2V High C) in sizes from 14500, 16340, 18350, 18500, 18650. Two of these have been modified with Nichia 219 LEDs, the other two with 4000K XML LEDs. Their output ranges from dim enough to see the traces in the LEDs with your bare, night accustomed eyes through nearly 500 OTF Lumens
I took this as a lady was walking by with an LED flashlight just to see how it would turn out. I like the effect, especially how it shows the normal wave of her gait pattern. Since I have yet to buy a tripod, I had to improvise a little. You can see I used the wooden ledge to steady my camera in this picture.
Copyright Sean Buchan
Strobist info:
- Canon 430EX, camera left, with chinese nameless wireless trigger.
- Modified with softbox and CTO gel
It's the Flashlight texture created in the Filter Forge plugin. It can be seamless tiled and rendered in any resolution without loosing details.
You can see the presets and download this texture for free on the Filter Forge site here — www.filterforge.com/filters/12824.html (created by Pawprint)
To use this texture download Filter Forge 30-day trial for free here — www.filterforge.com/download/
playing with an LED flashlight pendulum. I saw one of these in a "photography tricks" group and had to try it. experiments with multiple LEDs and counter-weighting the pendulum came out too jumbled.
click here to see more of this type of thing from around flickr
A realistic illustration of a flashlight. It's made with Adobe Illustrator CS4 by tracing this photo made by vierdrie.. Here you can read a tutorial on how to make this thing.
Even at Christmas, playing with a flashlight can be more interesting than all the toys surrounding.
Fuji x100t Provia jpg
Shining a flashlight through a video projector lens that Adam gave me, onto white cardboard. I was hoping to get a vaudeville spotlight effect, instead I got this total trip-out. The pattern comes mostly from the flashlight's reflector -- I guess a diffusion screen in front of the flashlight would smooth it out. The difference between left & right sides shows I didn't have the flashlight shining straight-on into the rear of the lens.