I've just received one of these, but it arrived without the instruction manual. Does anyone else have one? If so would you scan the bit about the C.Fn button and either post it here or email me a copy please? Thank you.
Meanwhile, I think I've sussed out the basics. This was an experiment with a 1p coin. As will no doubt be apparent I'm new to macro.
1p coin. No cropping.
VILTROX JY670C RingFlash
Looks similar to the Canon MR-14EX II. Is it a knock-off? The Canon manual may be of help.
Nikonian72 wrote:
Looks similar to the Canon MR-14EX II. Is it a knock-off? The Canon manual may be of help.
I've tried the Canon manual, I don't think it's the same, but thanks for the tip.
BTW did you add that second photo?
Wellhiem wrote:
. . . did you add that second photo?
This forum is haunted by helpful pixel pixies. One never knows what might magically appear on a thread.
Here's a couple from my first outing. It was a bit windy, so I only managed a couple.
One of the downsides of a ringflash is "flat lighting" (no light direction). With flat lighting, you loose roundness of subject. I used to use a 3/4 ringflash, which provided enough light biasing (one side bright then the other) to preserve roundness. Your snail has no shadowing, and therefore no depth. It looks flat.
Emphasizing roundness is one of the key advantages of a large softbox on a speedlight, set just off-axis from camera.
Diffusing one side of your ringflash could remedy this for you. Some ringflashes have the capability of electronically biasing light, so one side is brighter than the other.
Nikonian72 wrote:
Some ringflashes have the capability of electronically biasing light, so one side is brighter than the other.
I do have that option, I just need to play with it a bit.
BTW if anyone knows what sort of flower or snail it is, please let me know. I didn't even realise it was a snail until I focused on it. It just looked like a brown speck.
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