Background Question
I would like to try using a background for some of my portrait shots. I will be using a shoe mount flash remotely triggered off camera. I would like to use either a white background or a black background. How do you fix the tendency of the whites to be a light grey and the blacks to be dark grey?
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Sidelighting with a single light that does not shine on the background and a black vinyl background yields this
And a gray background with a second flash directed on the background yields this...
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Wikipedia describes gobo as something that is in front of the light and creates a shadow - kind of like the bat ray that always called Batman:D
Wiki does mention further down the page the use of "flags" as gobos - opaque black curtains to create shadows - that is more in line with my use of the term I think.
Here is Wiki's take on the subject http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gobo_(lighting)
The trick in capturing white or black backgrounds, is that they need to be at least 2 stops lighter than the subject, or 2 stops darker. That is where flags/gobos come in - to prevent the studio lights from shining on the background.
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