Asher Kelman
OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
Well, if you shoot sports, like this lady. Then perhaps you do! The video here!
B&H: $10,584.00
In the of the link provided by Ben, I don't understand why not choose continuous light (such as HMI) I understand the need to make this with still photography for the stop motion "look" but such a waste of energy seems a bit difficult to understand to me. Keep in mind that the last time I used a strobe light was about 20 years ago![]()
Sandrine,
A studio strobe or electronic flash does allow such dissection, that continuous light can obscure, unless very fast shutter speed is used. Of course one can up the "ISO" at the expense of degrading somewhat the image.
Asher
Well, I've 3 inexpensive Lumedyne packs on top of a super 12 volt battery capable of putting out 1200 amps and have the 3 linked together so they fire together to 3 lights simultaneously.Which system Asher, 2fps at 600w/s ain't bad at all..
But if your goal is to catch the peak expressions celebrating the end of a successful performance, I would think these peak simultaneously. If you are shooting from the front of the balcony to see down into the full extent of an orchestra on stage, I would expect that an XPan with its normal 45mm lens (and a 66mm wide image frame) would cover nicely.
Exactly! I'm slowly considering the new Pentax, but LF 8x10 film might be just glorious. I just have to get the right film!A less exotic solution would be to throw a lot of pixels at the problem -- borrow a MF digital back with 40-64MP for the occasion. Even if the picture ends being a strip with about a 2x1 format, you will still have 30-40 MPx worth of well resolved faces. Then light (only once) as required.
Lighting for dancing at an orthodox Jewish wedding -- there I agree with Beni -- that is sports action shooting!